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Deadly Texas Floods Are Called ‘Karma’ by Climate Activists: Political Blame Game Erupts as Death Toll Rises

By The Blogging Hounds TEXAS — As the Lone Star State reels from unprecedented flooding that has already claimed over 100 lives, a political firestorm has erupted online. In the wake of the tragedy, climate activists, celebrities, and left-leaning commentators have rushed to frame the disaster as “karma” for Texas electing conservative, climate-skeptic leaders. While…

By The Blogging Hounds

TEXAS — As the Lone Star State reels from unprecedented flooding that has already claimed over 100 lives, a political firestorm has erupted online. In the wake of the tragedy, climate activists, celebrities, and left-leaning commentators have rushed to frame the disaster as “karma” for Texas electing conservative, climate-skeptic leaders.

While grieving families search for loved ones and rescue crews battle floodwaters to reach the stranded, the national conversation has turned vicious, with critics blaming Republican policies for the storm’s severity—even though the actual cause may be far more complicated, and possibly not natural at all.

Social Media Erupts: “You Get What You Vote For”

Following the catastrophic rainfall—described by meteorologists as a 1,000-year flooding event—users on X (formerly Twitter), TikTok, and Instagram began flooding social media with posts blaming Texas voters and leaders for the disaster.

  • “Texas gets karma for denying climate change. Elections have consequences,” one post read.
  • “This is what happens when you ignore science and elect people who love oil more than life,” another claimed.
  • Hashtags like #ClimateKarma and #TexasFloods2025 began trending within hours.

These comments have sparked outrage from conservatives and independent observers, who see them as callous politicization of a tragedy—and a dangerous oversimplification of complex weather systems.

“We’re burying our neighbors and they’re tweeting smugly from New York lofts,” said Fort Worth resident Amanda Blake, whose family lost their home. “This isn’t karma. This is a disaster.”

Is It Really Climate Change—Or Climate Engineering?

While mainstream media blames “climate change,” independent meteorologists and geoengineering watchdogs point to highly anomalous patterns in radar and satellite data. Multiple experts note the stationary nature of the storm system over Texas, as well as strange chemical markers in the rainfall, including reports of a bluish tint—which often points to stratospheric aerosol injection or geoengineering experiments.

“The idea that carbon dioxide in Texas caused this flood in two days is absurd,” said Dane Wigington of GeoEngineering Watch. “What we’re likely seeing is manipulated weather—floods by design, blamed on politics.”

Atmospheric anomalies were reported in the days leading up to the flood, including unusual aircraft activity and heat dome breakdowns—both hallmarks of weather warfare techniques that some say are already being tested on American soil.

Agenda-Driven Messaging?

The labeling of the flood as “karma” fits into a broader narrative pushed by globalist climate institutions: that any extreme weather is the direct result of human behavior—and therefore requires behavioral control in response.

That’s where climate lockdowns, 15-minute cities, ESG scoring, and central planning come into play. In essence, if every weather disaster is political, then political conformity becomes a climate solution.

This is a dangerous precedent.

“The idea that God punishes people for their votes is not only unbiblical, it’s being used to justify tyranny,” said Pastor Jack Hibbs of Calvary Chapel Chino Hills. “We are seeing floods of deception, not just water.”

Prophetic Overtones: Floods in the Last Days

The Bible warns of environmental upheaval in the end times—but not as a result of CO₂ or elections. In Luke 21:25, Jesus foretold that “there shall be signs in the sun, and in the moon, and in the stars; and upon the earth distress of nations, with perplexity; the sea and the waves roaring.”

We are witnessing that now. But rather than turn to God, the world turns to finger-pointing, technocracy, and blame. The politicization of disaster is not only cruel—it’s prophetic.

Conclusion: Tragedy, Not Triumph

The people of Texas don’t need lectures. They need help. As they mourn, rebuild, and seek answers, the last thing they deserve is to be vilified for how they vote.

Whether this flood was natural, manipulated, or divinely allowed, it is a time for reflection—not retribution.

Shame on those who cheer from the sidelines as others drown. And shame on those who see tragedy as a tool for control.

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