One of the rarest moons of the decade is rising over Earth tonight.
On May 30–31, the second full moon of the month will grace the sky, creating what is known as a Blue Moon. This uncommon event occurs only about once every two and a half years. After this weekend, the next monthly Blue Moon will not appear until December 2028.
This year’s Blue Moon is especially spectacular because it coincides with a beautiful planetary lineup. Before sunrise, Mars and Saturn will shine low in the eastern sky. After sunset, Venus and Jupiter will glow brightly in the west as the full moon dominates the night.
Despite its name, a Blue Moon is not actually blue. The term simply describes the second full moon to occur within a single calendar month. Since the Moon takes roughly 29.5 days to orbit Earth, squeezing two full moons into one month is unusual but not impossible.
The best time to view this Blue Moon may surprise you. Although it reaches peak fullness in the early hours of May 31, many skywatchers prefer to observe it rising on the evening of May 30. As it lifts above the horizon near sunset, the Moon often appears larger and takes on striking deep orange and golden hues.
This warm coloring is caused by the same atmospheric effect that creates colorful sunsets. Near the horizon, moonlight travels through more of Earth’s atmosphere, scattering shorter blue wavelengths and allowing longer red and orange wavelengths to reach our eyes.
The four bright planets sharing the sky with the Blue Moon are not actually close to one another. Jupiter, for example, is currently about 365 million miles (588 million km) from Earth. They only appear grouped together from our perspective here on the ground.
Environmental activist Erin Brockovich has launched a national campaign and crowdsourced map to track the explosive growth of AI data centers across the U.S. She aims to empower local communities facing the massive environmental and infrastructural footprints of these facilities.
12 nuclear scientists are mysteriously found dead and/or missing. Then, a few days ago, the DOE announces it's working deals to sell 20 tons of weapons grade plutonium from cold war nukes to five private companies. NOTHING TO SEE HERE FOLKS.
I followed the money on the five companies. Then mapped connections to the missing/dead nuclear scientists, the companies, their leadership, and this deal. Oh, and Pam Jo Bondi. Deep dive is on my Substack (link in bio).
It's WILD. Enjoy :)
🚨BREAKING: There is NO water in The Rio Grande?!
I’m standing here in New Mexico and the river is completely DRY.
Nearby AI data centers are consuming massive amounts of water to keep their systems cool.
Meta’s Los Lunas facility alone has reportedly been tied to roughly 75 million gallons of water usage per year connected to Rio Grande resources and it’s only ONE of many projects expanding across the state.
People can argue over the exact numbers, but one thing is undeniable… these facilities require enormous amounts of water and there are more data centers across the country being built as we speak.
This is starting to look like an environmental disaster in plain sight.
We need to put pressure on local representatives and the President to examine this environmental crisis before it’s too late.
This guy is telling the 1000% truth about the greys! It is the only species I am allowed to research and he is telling the verbatim truth!!!
#ufox#uapx#greys#disclosure