The video provides a sobering synthesis of geological data and social urgency, highlighting that New Orleans' survival requires more than just levees. It is a necessary call for long-term strategic planning in the face of an inevitable geographic shift.
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Tulane Just [Warned] New Orleans ResidentsAdded:
And you already know on this channel, we hold this racist system accountable because if we don't, who will? And if you don't like it, get to stepping because it ain't going to stop. Now run the tape.
>> A new study finds from two lane that people from Plaeman's Parish to New Orleans should start planning to relocate farther north.
>> As Ton Trung reports, researchers are laying out a very stark future for the region.
>> It's inevitable. New Orleans and much of coastal Louisiana will be taken over by the Gulf of Mexico. That's according to a new study out of Twolane University.
>> Ultimately, the main message of the study is New Orleans is not forever and we have to plan for our future and we have to start planning now.
>> Dr. Torbjorn Tornquist is a geology professor at Tulain and lead author of the study. A key discovery of that study goes back roughly 125,000 years when according to researchers the Gulf reached the so-called Ponchatula ridge located about 30 mi north of Lake Pont Train. Tornquist says because of the increasing rate of sea level rise combined with subsidance or the rate of sinking land, the Gulf will one day reach that ridge again, putting much of southeast Louisiana underwater. you know, whatever is just north of that old shoreline could become the new uh, you know, coastal re real estate, if you will, right? That is sitting right on the future uh shoreline. That's right.
>> And everything south of it is going to be ocean. Yeah. Tornquist says there's no exact timeline and when the Gulf would basically swallow the Southshore, but he does say that sea level rise is happening along coastal Louisiana faster than any other place in the world because the land is subsiding relatively fast here. So, we are looking at maybe three times the global average in in terms of rate of sea level rise. I think there's still plenty of good reasons to stay here. I plan to stay here.
I I have no plans to leave. Uh so, you know, we're not talking about like, oh, this is all going to happen in the next 10 years.
>> But it will happen, he says. And he's urging local governments and residents not to panic, but to plan for relocation.
>> To lane, researchers warned that rising sea levels, hurricanes, and Louisiana's sinking land are putting New Orleans in serious danger long term. Scientists say the state may eventually need to begin relocating people and infrastructure further north as flooding and coastal loss continue getting worse. Make that make sense. And I told y'all over and over and over again. Anytime the media pushes fear, do not believe them, bro.
These people say New Orleans may not survive the century. What you talking about, Willis? Look, I'm from Louisiana, bro. I know the games they play, but we'll talk about that later on in this video. So before I spaz out, all these scientists are bought and paid for. And the scientists that really expose the system, they end up, you know what, just run a tape.
>> The White House is actively working, they say, with the FBI and other agencies investigating the deaths or disappearances under very strange circumstances in many of these, of scientists who were very deeply involved in our defense, nuclear, and space programs. Fox News Digital reports that some of them have ties to UFO or UAP as they call it research. President Trump says he has a had a meeting about this yesterday and that we could have some answers in the next week and a half calling it quote pretty serious stuff.
With that, we bring in Chris Swcker, former assistant director of the FBI's criminal investigative division and an attorney. Chris, thank you very much for joining us here. Um, these are very disturbing stories of how all of these people disappeared. Tell us, you know, how you got interested in this story, what you've learned as you've kind of followed and dug in to what happened to all these different people.
>> Well, I I started to get calls from media outlets asking about, you know, what what at the time was seven scientists. Well, originally it was General McCasslin uh went out went off hiking, left all his personal items at home and never returned. And then that kind of expanded to seven scientists missing or or died mysteriously. Now it's up to 10. So it's really the media that's making these connections. What I said is the most likely scenario in some of the cases, particularly General McCasslin and uh Monica Chavez, is that they, you know, they worked on very sensitive technology. China, you know, China and Russia and other uh hostile foreign intelligence services are after that information all the time, day in and day out. There's a cat and mouse game that takes place and these scientists are targeted at Los Alamos, at the Jet Propulsion Lab, at Air Force sensitive air force facilities out west, and it's a it's an everyday occurrence.
The FBI briefs them all the time and tells them what to look out for. So, what may be happening here in some of these cases is uh modern-day espionage.
>> Warnings about New Orleans flooding and sinking land go back to the 1920s through 1940s. After the Great Mississippi flood, scientists and engineers were already warning that hurricanes, levies, disappearing wetlands, and a city being below sea level could threaten South Louisiana's future long before modern climate change debates. Make that make sense. And in the words of Johnny Taylor, I'm running out of lies, lies, lies. Getting hard to think of an alibi. These people running out of lies, bro. Guess.
Guess who blew up the levies during the great Mississippi flood? They did.
Guess.
Guess who blew up the levies during Hurricane Betsy?
They did. Guess who blew up the levies during Hurricane Katrina?
They did. And I can go on and on. And the cold part is, bro, the hurricanes are healthy for the land. And planet Earth always heals itself, but we'll talk about that in a few. In the meantime, let's travel back in time right quick. Check this out. Tool University has historical ties to slavery through early southern donors and leaders connected to slave ownership. The school also recently made headlines after research monkeys linked to two lane escaped in Mississippi during a transport accident, raising controversy over animal testing. Make that make sense? So you want me to believe a school that was named after a slave owner?
You want me to believe a school that purposely crashed a truck with sick lab tested monkeys in it in a black area in Mississippi? too lane. You big dummies.
And how ironic. New Orleans is majority black American. That's why they want you to leave so they can turn New Orleans into Nola. If you know, you know. For decades, oil canals, chemical plants, and industrial projects destroyed South Louisiana wetlands, and cypress swamps that once helped protect New Orleans by weakening hurricanes and slowing flood waters. Make that make sense. And in the words of Lil Wayne, but they talked their freedom at us and didn't even leave a ladder. Damn, these scientists want to blame the hurricane so bad. No.
No. The real problem is racist Caucasian people in position of power.
The real problem is greed.
The real problem is capitalism. And if I'm lying in my comment section, tell me I'm lying. They want you to leave so they can build more data centers.
They want you to leave so they can build more chemical plants.
They want you to leave so they can build Bayou Phoenix and many more so their people can enjoy. They want you to leave so they can build more hotels for the NFL Super Bowl. And I can go on and on, bro. Like I told y'all earlier, they want to turn New Orleans into NOLA by any means. If you know, you know. South Louisiana continues expanding chemical plants and industrial projects in 2026, especially along the Mississippi River corridor. Critics warned that more industrial expansion could destroy additional wetlands and natural storm barriers, increasing pollution, flooding risk, and hurricane damage for future generations. Make that make sense. And y'all already know before I end this video, I have to always speak from my heart. Before I end this video, I have to always speak from my heart. Look, do not let these news outlets push fear into y'all, bro. New Orleans ain't going nowhere, no time soon. And yeah, I said nowhere, no time soon. What you going to do about it? I told y'all, bro, it's all about justification.
It's all about the Benjamins. I'm out, bro. But before I go, I'mma let a real scientist explain to y'all it's not the hurricanes.
While hurricanes are important in the Everglades, I'm a scientist that did research in the Everglades. And the wind and water from hurricanes help to disperse seeds and nutrients across the landscape, increasing both plant productivity and growth. Fallen trees and debris also creates microhabitat for wildlife. and the rainfall or fresh water from hurricanes help to battle against the effects of climate change, specifically saltwater intrusion. Now, this is a part of a larger process known as ecological succession, specifically secondary succession, in which a landscape changes over time. Everything is destroyed, but it regrows, making the ecosystem more stable, healthy, and biodiverse in the long
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