Greg Reese Report - Directed Energy Weapons Burning Homes to Ash Aired: 2025-01-15 Duration: 05:26 === Trees Burning From Within (05:20) === [00:00:06] Starting after the Paradise Fire of 2018, many with a memory started noticing things that didn't seem normal. [00:00:13] And the media told us climate change. [00:00:17] With over 40 years of experience, forensic arborist Robert Brom has been investigating the damage from these suspicious fires since paradise. [00:00:26] Based on his evidence, these fires are being caused by some sort of directed energy weapon. [00:00:33] As many of us suspected, the trees in these recent forest fires are not burning as they should be. [00:00:40] This is common for a horrific firestorm. [00:00:43] This is what's left. [00:00:44] They all look like this. [00:00:45] There's nothing left. [00:00:46] The twigs, the needles, the branches, even the trees will burn down sometimes to a low stump or even a hole in the ground. [00:00:52] Not like this one. [00:00:54] This was the big coffee park fire in Santa Rosa, where 4,700 homes were turned to white ash. [00:01:01] And look at the trees. [00:01:03] Why aren't they missing along with the houses? [00:01:06] Many of these are pine family relatives. [00:01:09] Eucalyptus against that road there or whatever that is against the road. [00:01:12] Those are eucalyptus back there, the round ones. [00:01:14] Those are so flammable. [00:01:17] A cigarette lighter in your hand can light those on fire. [00:01:19] A green leaf, light them right on fire. [00:01:21] The forest is primarily a valley oak, blue oak, and California Bay, which is a very combustible leaf. [00:01:28] I can light them on fire again with a cigarette lighter. [00:01:30] They didn't burn. [00:01:31] There's a bay tree right there. [00:01:32] The bottoms will always be burned right at ground level. [00:01:35] No reason for that. [00:01:35] Grass couldn't do that. [00:01:36] Uh-uh. [00:01:37] It'll take a lot of flames to do that. [00:01:39] No, they're being cooked right where they're at. [00:01:41] This was an entire bay forest, and I couldn't find one leaf burned. [00:01:45] And somehow the leaves turned black. [00:01:47] You notice the bottoms of these little suckers here. [00:01:49] They're black. [00:01:50] Almost every tree here is a bay. [00:01:52] They didn't burn, but the ground did. [00:01:54] It's only a grass fire here. [00:01:56] You can tell this was just grass, and it might have even been kept up. [00:01:59] I don't see one burned tree. [00:02:00] There's ponderosa pine, black oak, white oak. [00:02:04] Well, there's a Diodar cedar to the left there a little bit. [00:02:08] That's pine family from the Himalayas. [00:02:10] And a digger pine on the left, the big multi-branched one. [00:02:13] Nothing wanted to burn that day, just the house. [00:02:16] Ponderosa pine forest. [00:02:18] Little short ones and everything where the flames are in the needles. [00:02:21] They refuse to ignite. [00:02:23] Here's your eucalyptus. [00:02:24] It's down in the flames. [00:02:25] Refuse to burn. [00:02:26] Upper foothill or lower pine belt here. [00:02:29] Very flammable areas. [00:02:30] And no, they're not burning. [00:02:32] And look in the background. [00:02:33] Chunks of metal everywhere. [00:02:35] The physics of a natural fire does not explain the way aluminum and glass have been melting. [00:02:42] The two fire captains told me in their combined 60 years, they've never, ever seen a window melt out. [00:02:48] Incidentally, every fire I've been to, all these 120 trips, not one window has been intact. [00:02:54] Every single one has melted out. [00:02:56] No exceptions. [00:02:58] There's your aluminum. [00:02:59] What's melting it this far away? [00:03:02] What's keeping it flowing? [00:03:03] These things will flow 20 or 30 feet from a car when there's nothing on the ground to keep them melting. [00:03:10] That's a high temperature, but they keep flowing right across the dirt. [00:03:15] The fires are breaking out in the metallic materials. [00:03:19] Here's a fence line. [00:03:19] They all look like this. [00:03:21] Burn at the nails, burn at the ground. [00:03:23] The only place they burn is at the ground and wherever the metals were. [00:03:26] What fire does that? [00:03:26] A normal fire would burn the post from the bottom up, not skip spots. [00:03:30] You know, they favor the metals, of course. [00:03:32] This is a tall post, perhaps five or six feet high, and way up high, high level, just the nail area burned. [00:03:38] Here's this board. [00:03:39] What really burned? [00:03:40] The nails on that board. [00:03:42] This little guardrail is a park guardrail, and actually it's all wood. [00:03:44] There's no metal here. [00:03:46] The cross member, the long ones, and the post are all wood. [00:03:50] And each one was burned like this, where the screws were. [00:03:53] And trees are burning from the inside out. [00:03:57] Many trees are cooking from the inside out. [00:04:00] They're burned on the inside, and there's no hole to get a flame in there. [00:04:03] This thing was about four feet in diameter in a spring, burned from the inside out, and not one leaf burned. [00:04:09] When you look at the cuts, this is very important. [00:04:11] These are 90% dead. [00:04:14] They should not have that heartwood. [00:04:15] The dark, dark areas, the heartwood. [00:04:17] It shows me these things were cooked from the inside out. [00:04:20] There are many anomalies to be found in these fires. [00:04:23] And here's a soil bag. [00:04:24] It still had soil in it. [00:04:26] That was there. [00:04:26] The tennis shoe was there. [00:04:28] And you see the black. [00:04:29] There's black everywhere. [00:04:30] A cushion for your chair. [00:04:31] I see this chainsaw in the back of this pickup truck. [00:04:34] The window melted out at 2,500 degrees. [00:04:37] All the tires burned completely, leaving the slinky-like steel belts. [00:04:42] That plastic should be gone completely down to the metals. [00:04:45] Didn't happen. [00:04:46] There's so much white ash in some of these photos. [00:04:49] It looks like the heat would have been really intense. [00:04:52] However, it didn't reach very far. [00:04:54] Why is that? [00:04:54] Why is everything reduced to white ash versus? [00:04:57] Well, I'm going to have to say it's because of the extreme heat. [00:05:01] It's a different kind of flame. [00:05:03] To me, these are microwave-based flames. [00:05:06] Greg Reese reporting. [00:05:21] The Reese report is now fully funded by my Substack subscribers.