Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Bruce (00:05):
Welcome to the Ugly
Quacking Duck Podcast.
You have found the worstpodcast in the known universe.
Whatever dimension you arelistening to us from, just know
you are welcome to stick around.
Sunny (00:24):
We are grateful.
Yes, we are.
We're grateful that you foundus.
You've arrived and we hope youstick here for the whole episode
.
Bruce (00:37):
That was well done there,
Sunny.
Hello everyone, I'm Bruce fromthe Ugly Quacking Duck.
Sunny (00:43):
And I'm Sunny from the
Ugly Quacking Duck.
Hello everyone.
I'm Bruce from the UglyQuacking Duck and I'm Sonny from
the Ugly Quacking Duck Helloeveryone.
Bruce (00:49):
I'm glad to see you're
still dramatic today.
Sunny (00:53):
Well, Bruce, all I got to
say is I'm excited we're doing
another episode, and that reallyexcites me.
I enjoy this.
Bruce (01:04):
Well, I'm glad, sunny, I
am really gladites me I enjoy
this.
Well, I'm glad, sunny, I amreally glad.
Actually we are doing a newepisode.
We're on episode 113, believeit or not.
Sunny (01:17):
Well, I believe it.
How come we're doing an episode?
I didn't think we was going todo one.
Bruce (01:25):
Well, it is July, the 4th
weekend.
We are recording this at Sundayafternoon in our Midwest studio
and we just thought we'd taketime out to do kind of a quick
episode.
Hopefully Take time out to dokind of a quick episode,
(01:45):
hopefully Just kind of cover,you know, some basic seven-day
earthquake report, a little bitof quick weather, and let
everybody know that weappreciate our Fourth of July
celebration and the freedom thatwe do have.
There's some argumentative waysto look at it.
(02:07):
We won't do that today, but Ihope everybody had a safe New
Year's.
Hello, wow.
Sunny (02:19):
Boy, you're off the beat.
What's happening there, bruce?
Are you melting down?
Look out, that's smoke rollingout of your ears.
Bruce (02:30):
Ah, oh my gosh, you are
being dramatic.
Forgive us, everybody that'slistening.
We are just trying to say thankyou for everything and for what
freedoms we do have left, andhopefully we'll be able to gain
(02:51):
more of them back.
But this is a July 4th weekend.
We hope everybody had a goodcelebration and safe, and
usually there's a lot ofbarbecue hanging around on the
fourth weekend.
So there you go.
That's why we're here.
We're going to talk a littlebit about earthquakes.
(03:12):
The weather today is cooler.
It's only 87 degrees, so it's acold front man.
However, the humidity is reallybad.
It's about 64 degrees.
Right here, where we're at, wedo have a little bit of wind.
It's 12 miles an hour.
Air quality is about 61, sothat's kind of moderate.
(03:33):
But we always like to compareourselves to phoenix, arizona.
Um, it's 109 over there.
109 degrees today.
Woo, they got sunny.
Their humidity is only 13%.
That's why we like to compareit to them, because they have a
(03:54):
little bit different weather andit's 11-mile-an-hour winds
close to ours.
Their air quality is 34, sothey're a little bit better than
we are.
What do you think about that,sunny?
Sunny (04:09):
I think we need to find
some places cold and use that as
a comparison too well there yougo.
Bruce (04:18):
That's a good idea.
I might have to look that up,but anybody lives in the midwest
knows exactly what I'm talkingabout.
That humidity makes you feellike you're in the oven, even
though it's cooler didn't yousay you had an announcement,
bruce?
I sure did.
Sunny.
Thanks for telling me that, um,reminding me yes, for all our
(04:41):
listeners.
If you have subscribed to ourweb page but you're not
receiving any announcements, anyof our posts or anything, email
me and let me know, because Ithink we have a little glitch.
The older subscribers I don'tthink they're having any
problems.
I think they're still receivingour newsletter and our posts
(05:04):
and all that.
But it seems like anybody newlysubscribed and I went and
subscribed using one of my otheremails and I've noticed that
problem the posts are not goingout to the new subscribers.
I did a little work and tried toupdate it and I'll see if that
(05:26):
works, but I did, as of thisrecording, send out a new post
letting everybody know that weuploaded a new pdf file for our
seven day report tracking.
So if you've printed the oldone, if you want to upgrade to
(05:47):
the new one, just go on thewebpage theuglyquackenduckcom,
go to the support page, which iscalled here.
Hang on, I'll go read itdirectly to you.
It's called Support Our Podcast.
If you'll click on that, it'son the top of the page or on the
(06:09):
left side column there is somemenus.
But if you click on that andscroll down to the very bottom,
there is a PDF file.
You can just click on the printwhich is on the top right
corner and it will print a pageout.
You can also download it, whichis the left of that printer.
But the update shows it's alittle bit easier to organize on
(06:33):
that update because I got morelines drawn and white areas you
don't have to write in.
But I also included apercentage line so we can write
down the percents.
It's only got three dates, sowe do three dates and then it's
got a 30-day date which we'regoing to do at the end of the
(06:53):
month.
So you won't be using that page, that line, probably most of
the time, unless you want tofill it in with something else.
But on the episode at the endof the month we're going to use
that one.
That's why it's on there.
Hopefully that'll make it easierfor you to follow me when I do
it and we'll have a visual ofwhat's going on.
(07:16):
Now I started a chartingprogram with OpenOffice.
We'll see how that turns out,because I don't know how that's
going to look, because it's notgoing to have the chart's not
going to have numbers on it,it's just going to have the
percentage which you'll have to.
You know, I don't know, we'llsee what that works out to, but
(07:38):
I'm working on that also.
Sunny (07:41):
Well, that's cool, bruce,
that is really cool.
Well, I'm glad I got yourapproval.
Bruce (07:50):
Sunny, that means a lot
Sure, it does.
Sunny (07:54):
Well, I could say it does
.
Oh, you could say a lot ofthings, true?
Bruce (08:05):
Hey, bruce, I noticed you
changed my phone on the mic.
It's now purple.
Yes, it is.
Sunny (08:10):
I hope you like it.
Well, I do.
I'm glad you changed it.
Oh you didn't like the blackone that looks just like my
black one.
No, I like the purple one thatdoesn't look like your black one
.
Bruce (08:24):
All right, well good, one
that doesn't look like your
black one all right, well good.
And if anybody's listening andwondering what we're talking
about, the foam wind guards onthe microphones we had.
Both of them had black or bothof them are mod uh pod mic
microphones and I had an extrauh foam cover for one of them
(08:45):
and it was purple, so I switchedthe other one out and now he's
got a purple one.
Sunny (08:52):
Yeah.
Bruce (08:53):
Yeah, Okay, All right, I
got a quick news short for you
before we go into the seven-dayearthquake report, and then
we're just going to cut it off.
I'm not going to do too muchthis weekend.
Hopefully, when you hear thisduring the week, you'll have a
(09:14):
little bit of time to listen toit and appreciate it.
But anyhow, I want to read alittle bit about the pesticide
ban in Europe.
They have started a ban inEurope and they're aiming it to
reduce chemicals by up to 50% by2030.
This article is talking notjust about the ban but how this
(09:40):
global shift towards naturalsolutions is creating a
billion-dollar global market,and Med-X is one of the leading
developers in this.
So I, you know, was curious andI looked them up and I looked
(10:01):
up their website and theyactually actually have a video
and we're going to play thatvideo for you and it's not a
commercial for them, it's foryou to appreciate what they're
saying.
So if they do what they'resaying, I look forward to seeing
some of their work.
So here you go.
Speaker 3 (10:24):
We're surrounded
right now by all types of
poisons, all types of chemicals,and we've seen a lot of cancer
and other issues in our familyof employees and it's been
pretty severe over the years.
And there had to be another wayand we focused on this and then
(10:46):
, during that development,recognized something about
essential oils that nobody elsehas discovered From the
essential oil world that worksjust as good as chemicals that
you would find from the bigchemical companies and there is
no harm at all with theseproducts.
You know, sometimes natureneeds a little science.
(11:08):
And now we've got one of thefastest growing products in all
of professional pest control,and now the consumers are
catching on, with hundreds, nowthousands, of operators using
our products all over thecountry and now moving into
other places around the world.
It's a very unique andinteresting position we have
here.
Join us in creating a greenerand healthier future for all.
(11:32):
Invest in Med-X and let's dothis together.
Bruce (11:36):
All right, that was Med-X
, that's spelled M-E-D-X, and
that was not a commercial, paidor otherwise.
It was a commercial they haveon their website.
But I'm not advertising forthem.
I just thought that was aninteresting bit of information
(11:57):
that that gentleman gives.
Now they're wanting you toinvest in their company and if
they do as they said they'regoing to do, that sounds like a
really good way.
But you know you hear a lot ofgood words when they're wanting
to sell you a product.
But is that product going to bethat good?
(12:19):
Let's hope it is, because, man,that would change the world.
Because pesticides are horriblefor living things, are horrible
for living things Whetherthey're spraying it on your
plants or on your bugs or on you.
It is not healthy for you atall.
It causes cancer and all kindsof things.
(12:40):
And yeah, you can tell I don'treally like pesticides.
Anyhow, we'll go back to theshow and leave you alone on that
, but we really do hope they dowell.
Sunny (13:07):
All right, Bruce, there
we go.
We are on board.
Now we're going to talk aboutearthquakes, right?
Bruce (13:16):
You are so right, sonny.
We are going to talk aboutearthquakes, so if you haven't
printed that paper, you don'thave it in your hand.
Print it off.
Pause this, go, print it.
Go to theuglyquackandackingduckcom and go to our support
page.
Once you print it off and youhave a chance, go back and read
(13:38):
the value for value listing thatwe have on that page.
Take a moment to support us,and whether you do it by
emailing us and telling us whatyou think of the show and giving
us ideas, or if you support usfinancially or support us by
sharing the show, anything ishelpful.
(13:59):
We definitely would like tohear from you, though, because
it lets us know people are outthere, they're wanting to spend
time with us and they want toparticipate, and that's really
what we hope for.
We are doing this for fun of it, but the fun costs money, so if
you want to financially supportus there's three different ways
(14:23):
on there you can do that.
We'd really appreciate it, butfor now we are are going to the
part where we're going to talkabout the earthquakes.
We do a report.
We try to do it every two weeks.
We write it down every week sowe can report on it when we do
an episode and what we report.
(14:45):
If you haven't heard thisbefore this is your first time
we do a seven-day report.
What that means is we look upthe earthquakes on their website
and we back it up seven daysand we give that report of how
many earthquakes there are indifferent magnitude earthquakes
(15:06):
and that's what we're going todo now.
Different magnitude earthquakesand that's what we're going to
do now.
So if you've got that paper onyou, all right.
What I forgot to tell you is, ifyou have not printed more than
one off, do two, because we'regoing to go back and add a
couple dates on the last one.
I looked those up too, and whatI've done and this is a change
(15:30):
we were looking up 2019, let melook.
I forgot now 1999.
So what we was doing, we wasdoing this year's date.
Whenever I looked it up, wewent back to 1999 and 2019.
(15:52):
However, I got to researchingand it looks like 2018 and 2019
were bigger numbers, so I'mgoing to start looking those up,
because the other ones justfell apart.
Basically, I wouldn't call itnormal, but they were lower.
(16:13):
So I'm going to give you thenumbers for last week's
seven-day report, and I alreadygave you 2019, but just in case
you missed it and you wasn't onthat episode, let me give you
(16:35):
all over again.
All right, so get your paper andon the top date where it says
earthquake seven-day report andit says date write 6-29-2018,
and then move over to allmagnitudes.
That total is 7,894.
There you go.
(16:55):
That's what I'm talking about.
If you've been following us,that number is huge.
Go over to 2.5.
That's the next level they doand it's 2,459.
That number is comparative tomost of the other year's total,
(17:18):
but this is 2.5.
And then the 4.5 magnitudewrite down 128.
And then over at the 6.0 andover.
That column is where we writedown anything that's 6 and over
magnitude, because they show themost damage, and then we write
down the location beside that.
(17:38):
So on this report, there was nohear me out no zero, just zero
on the 6.0 and over.
Just zero on the 6.0 and over.
Now you go back to allmagnitudes and if you look that
square underneath 7,894, whichyou just wrote, is blank.
(17:59):
You don't put nothing there.
The next one over, and we'relooking to the right of the
percent sign.
The next one over is 31.2percent.
That's how many 2.5 magnitudeearthquakes of the 7894 there
was, and it was 31.2 percent.
(18:20):
Next column because there was 0, 6, and over.
If you go all the way down thatcolumn until you get to the
bottom and look to the left,there's the percent sign, so
write 0% there and there youhave it.
(18:42):
That's 6-29-2018.
Go down on your date column onemore date and you're going to
write 6, 29, 19 and that's whatthat's the next year.
That's a year I started writingdown to begin with because what
I noticed is the all magnitudeswere higher somewhat, but the
(19:05):
six and over totals were more,and so we go over to the 2980
for all magnitudes, go over onecolumn and the 2.5 and over
magnitudes were 562.
Drop down one box and it's18.9% for that number, then the
(19:28):
4.5 in magnitudes.
The next column over is 200.
And drop down one box and it's6.7% of the 2,980.
That 200 was 6.7%.
Now the 6 and over.
We had 1, 2, three, four, five,six of those Write down 6.2.
(19:57):
That's the first one and it wasin Panama.
So you write down Panamalocation and if you need to
pause this while you write itdown, so I won't leave you do
that.
And the next one now the nextone's a 6.3, and it's in the
Chromatic Islands.
(20:17):
You can look this up later onbecause the last one I gave the
locations better, I'm justzipping through these.
And the next one is another 6.3and it was in russia and that
was the tip edge of russia onthe east side, next to alaska.
(20:40):
And then 6.4 is the next one.
It's in the maug islands and Ihope I say, say that right
M-A-U-G Islands.
And then the next one down is a6.4, and it was also in Russia,
the same location as the otherone.
And then the next one is a 7.3.
(21:02):
Yeah, you heard me right, 7.3.
It's in the Banda Sea.
So that gave.
If we wanted to figure thepercentage of the total
magnitudes, it only gave a 0.20%.
But them numbers actually comeout of the 204.5 magnitude
(21:24):
earthquake.
So I took it and figured thatpercentage.
So it come out at 3% of that200.
All right.
And then the next one was6-29-2025.
If you look at the all magnitudethat week, it was 2,584.
(21:44):
2584.
Of the 2.5 magnitudes was 422,which is 16.3% of the 2584.
And then over to the right ofthat is a 4.5 magnitude.
(22:06):
There's 136 of those and thatwas 5.3% of the total 2584.
And we had four 6.0 and overearthquakes, the first one being
a 6.1, and it was in thePhilippines, the next one being
a 6.2, mid-atlantic Ridge that'sout there on the islands and
(22:26):
then a 6.2 again in thePhilippines, and then a 6.6 in
the Scotia Islands no, ScotiaSea, I'm sorry.
So I took that 4, and first ofall, I divided it into the 25.84
to get a 0.15 percent, and thenI took it by the 136, which is
(22:54):
really where they come from.
So, out of those 136 4.5magnitude earthquakes, there was
6.04 of them, which totaled a2.9 percent of the 136.
So there you go.
That brought you up to speed onthat uh, last week's
(23:18):
earthquakes, and now I did thisthis week.
We're going to do the same thing, so hopefully you followed
along.
How to fill that out?
We're going to start on7-6-2018.
2018.
Now, ready for this big number.
The all magnitude numbers was7,676.
(23:46):
Then the 2.5 magnitudes.
The column to the right of thatis 2,194.
Notice that those numbers arewell, you haven't seen all of
them that I have seen, but mostof the years are around that
2,000, mark, 3,000, some of them.
(24:07):
Very few years show up as highas this one and as high as the
other one.
Strange, very strange.
And the percentage on the 2.5is 28.6%.
Move over to the next rightcolumn 8.6%.
Move over to the next rightcolumn 129 is a 4.5 and over
(24:32):
magnitude earthquakes 129.
And the percentage is 1.7% ofthe total.
Now, they had that year, thatweek, which is 7-6, we back it
up seven days.
So that week in 2018, they hadone 6-and-over earthquake, which
(25:00):
was a total 6.1, and it was inRussia.
I'm not even going to try topronounce that town, it's
O-Z-E-R-N-O-V-S-K-I-Y.
You can try to figure out howto pronounce that, I'm not good
at language, but that was inRussia.
So that total, if you do itover the whole earthquake total,
(25:24):
it's only 0.01% earthquaketotal, it's only 0.01 percent.
But if you do it over the 1294.5 magnitudes, it's a 0.78
percent.
Almost a total of one percentbecause there's one earthquake,
right?
Okay, all right, next line.
Now, next date line is 7.6 2019.
(25:48):
This is the year we started outwith.
Now I had to look this up twicebecause I could not believe the
total For this week.
Now, this is just one week.
The total magnitudes was 9,944.
Yeah, 9,944.
(26:09):
The 2.5 magnitudes was 2050,2050.
Which is 20.6% of all magnitude.
Now see the magnitude totalpercent goes down if the all
(26:29):
magnitude goes up, so it's goingto kind of fluctuate.
It's going to be hard to seewhen I put it on that chart if I
just include the percentages,unless you've got this paper to
you know.
Kind of check what the numbersare actually doing, not just the
percentage.
The next column over 4.5 192total earthquakes, and that was
(26:54):
1.9 percent of the all of themand on this date we had six,
four, we had four 6.0 and overearthquakes we had a 6.0, and
I'm not even sure what this townis, but it was in
L-U-G-A-N-V-I-L-L-E and it wasin V-A-N-T-U-A-T-U.
(27:21):
Wow, I didn't have time to lookit up and try to figure out how
to pronounce it, but if youwant to write that down and
figure it out.
And then we had a 6.2, and itwas west-northwest of Port
McNeil, canada, and then thenext one down is a 6.4.
(27:42):
It was in Ridge crest,california, and then wait for it
there was a 7.1, which was inridge crest, california.
So that's the reason I picked2019 to go back and look at the
numbers.
When I first picked a year and Ilooked at these numbers, it
(28:06):
come up like that on one of theother weeks that I did and I was
blowed away because, you know,everybody always says the
earthquakes are getting worse,they're getting worse.
So I went back a few years tosee you know what the total was,
expecting it to be really lowand expecting the 6.0
(28:27):
earthquakes to be really low,and I'd say, yeah, yeah, they're
getting a lot worse, yeah.
But I hit this year 2019, and Igot them numbers and I went
wait a minute, that's not right,what's going on here?
So I went back that's only sixyears from this year.
Uh, if you know my seven year,seven day theory, I figured the
(28:54):
seven year theory would be thesame.
So I went back and it was onlysix years and I thought, well,
let me go back seven years.
So I went, went back seven yearsand so far, most of the
all-magnitude numbers are higheron 2018, which is seven years
prior to this year, but the 6.0are lower.
(29:17):
Which kind of makes sense,because if it's seven years,
what my thought was, which kindof makes sense?
Because if it's seven years,what my thought was seven days
you have a high magnitude totalfor all magnitudes for one week
and then the next week it goesdown lower, but the big
(29:37):
earthquakes raise.
Like you know, they're buildingup.
You get a bunch of of littleones and then you have a bunch
of big ones.
Well, I thought maybe that'swhat's going on now.
So we're in the seven yearperiod, which it seems to be a
little bit strange.
(29:59):
It's just strange.
I don't know what's going on.
We're gonna have to do moreweeks and see how it looks, but
anyway, um, we had four of those6.0 and over on 2019.
So if you take all of them andbreak them into the total 9944,
(30:21):
that's only 0.04 percent.
But, like I said, that numberthe 9,944 is higher.
So we got four 6.0 earthquakes,which is kind of routine for
2019.
I'm not going to say normal,it's just what we see a lot.
So it it would be a higherpercentage, except for that
(30:45):
number is high, theall-magnitude number, so it
brings it down.
Now, if I take it over the 1924.5 magnitude earthquakes and
break it into that, you'relooking at 2.1%.
So that number is higher thereif you go that route.
(31:06):
Now let's go down to this yearthis week.
The seven-day report for thisyear this week is 1,950
all-magnitude earthquakes.
Earthquakes 2.5 magnitudes are302, which is pretty common for
(31:32):
what we're having right now inthis year, but it's really low
compared to the 2019 and the2018.
And the 4.5, wait a minute 2.5%is 15.5%.
It's high because that allmagnitude number is low and the
2.5, you know, kind of high.
(31:53):
And then the 4.5 magnitude is119, which is 6.1%, which, again
, 1950 is kind of a low number.
So it brings that percentage up.
Now, however, the 6.0 and overearthquakes out of that, 119 is
(32:15):
zero.
Last week we had 06.0earthquakes.
Sunny (32:24):
Are you sure about that,
Bruce?
That sounds low.
Bruce (32:29):
Yeah, I double-checked it
.
I thought that's not right.
But yeah, we had zero, which isstrange, but they had zero the
week before in 2018.
So I don't know if we're seeinga pattern or not.
We're going to have to trackthat.
But what I've noticed seems tobe holding out on these seven
(32:53):
days.
It's six or seven years,according to these two years.
It's almost like somethinghappened in the universe in 2018
or 2019.
Well, it would have been 2018to bump up these earthquakes for
the next two years, or maybe itwas at the end of 2017.
(33:15):
I don't know.
We may have to check thatnumber out as we get farther
into the year, but somethingweird's going on.
I don't know what to think themnumbers are really high and it
seems like there's a lot of 7.1or 7 earthquakes during that
(33:36):
2019 period too, and I'm I'mshocked.
I really am.
I did not expect to see thenumbers high like that on those
years.
I feared we were building upand building up, but if the
seven-day thing actually movesinto a yearly thing seven years
(33:57):
then we're looking at 2026 and2027 being huge earthquake years
.
But you know, I don't know ifthat's going to work out that
way or not.
It's kind of weird.
Anyway, that's the seven-dayreport.
I hope you downloaded the newreport spreadsheet so you could
(34:21):
write them down with me.
I'm going to continue to dothat.
I hope you're not too bored.
Let me know what you guys think.
That's the plan.
We're going to continue thisfor a while until I get bored of
and go on to something else and, uh, move to a different uh
(34:43):
tracking thing.
We're still tracking the sidreceiver and I'm telling you
what.
We've got a signal.
I don't know what that is.
I've got a minute or two.
Yeah, I'm gonna have to clickit here really quick.
So, um, we'll talk about that alittle bit next week, but I'm
I'm picking up some weirdsignals on it.
I'm going to track it and seeif it continues and next week
(35:08):
I'll give you a report on that.
And I'm still watching theflares.
We're still getting a lot ofsolar weather that's hitting and
buffeting the Earth'satmosphere and that's causing a
lot of problems, but we're stillmonitoring that too.
We're just not reporting on itbecause I don't want to take up,
(35:29):
you know, three hours of yourtime.
But if anything, anybody wantsto hear more of anything or less
of anything, you're going tohave to email me so I'll know
what's going on.
So email me at the uglyquacking duck at gmailcom.
Go to our web page, the uglyquacking duckcom.
You can find a place that youcan subscribe.
(35:51):
Go to the home page.
Go all the way down.
At the bottom there's a placeto put an email in, hit
subscribe.
Uh, let me know if yousubscribed by email.
No, let me rephrase thatSubscribe and then send me an
email.
Tell me you did, in case I'mnot getting those, because I'm
(36:14):
going to have to do more workbecause my newsletter
subscription thing seems to beglitchy.
I don't know what's going on.
I uninstalled it andreinstalled it and hopefully
that fixed it, but if it did notget a hold of the company, um,
we'll go from there.
But anyway, guys, I thank youfor checking in today on our
(36:35):
episode, this episode 113.
I'm bruce I'm sunny and weappreciate you being part of
this show.
We hope you enjoyed some of it,all of it, most of it, but I
hope you enjoyed the july 4thweekend and we were gonna be
(36:57):
here next week, as all thingswork out well.
Anything you want to say, sonny?
Sunny (37:03):
Nope, you pretty well
said it.
I thank everybody for beinghere.
Bruce, thank you for letting mebe part of this.
You are great.
Well, I'm not going to go thatfar, but thank you.
Bruce (37:16):
Okay, I'm glad you didn't
carry that too much farther.
Sunny (37:21):
Well, I don't want people
to think I'm blowing smoke.
Bruce (37:25):
Oh, nobody's going to
think that, sonny, they know it.
Yeah, you're probably right.
All right, guys, we're going tosay goodnight, goodbye 73 to
everybody.
May the Father's blessing bewith you.
And Sonny, you want to do ittogether?
Yes, sir, all right, here we go.
Sunny (37:47):
Bye everybody.
Bruce (37:54):
One minute there, folks.
I'm sorry I jumped back in hereand I hope you haven't shut the
episode off, but one thing thatoccurred to me earlier when I
was recording then I forgot toput it in, so I'm dubbing this
in at the end.
But there was very heavyrainfall in texas and it swelled
(38:17):
up the river the ones goinginto new, into mexico and there
was a whole lot of flooding intexas and mexico.
Uh, very disastrous.
People lost their life, peopleare missing, homes are gone.
It's very bad and I just want totake a moment to ask you once
(38:40):
again for your prayers for thosepeople, not just in the States,
but in Mexico and anywhere else, that's been affected by this
storm.
Pray for their families, theirmaterial possessions, homes and
such.
We ask you to pray for, uh, ifyou don't believe in praying, we
(39:06):
ask you to be positive thanking, and we believe in positive
thanking man.
I'm telling you it works wonder.
So do either one of those forthose people that have had
problems during this storm, andwe just wanted to take a moment
(39:26):
out to say that, because weforgot and we feel bad, and may
the Father's blessing be withyou for helping them out.
Thank you, have a good week.