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HELL AFTER HELENE: Military-style Blackhawk helicopter commits “rotor wash” destruction on Cajun Navy supply staging area in NC

The Cajun Navy ran into some problems this week trying to deliver aid to the Hurricane Helene-struck areas of western North Carolina after a military-style Blackhawk helicopter hovered over the staging area causing food and other supplies to whirl around like a hurricane all over the parking lot.

In what was clearly an attempt at preventing aid from reaching the victims, the helicopter flew right over the staging area and just sat there while the propellers whipped things up off the ground and sent them flying all over the place – WATCH:

(Related: Did you know that the Biden-Harris regime is stooping so low as to arrest good Samaritans in western North Carolina for trying to help their fellow man recover from Hurricane Helene?)

Why is the U.S. military blocking aid to Hurricane Helene victims?

Some of the volunteers who were on site at the time of the helicopter assault texted their friends and other volunteers to show what the helicopter looked like up close:

Gen. Michael Flynn responded to the above tweet by confirming that the helicopter is, in fact, “a military aircraft,” based on his knowledge and expertise.

“It’s CLEARLY an Army UH-60 Blackhawk,” also confirmed Army veteran and firefighter Wes Perry, though Perry believes that what happened was due to “a lack of awareness, not malicious intent.”

“Yes they blew tents and supplies around, but I would be [sic] a years salary this was unintentional.”

The United Cajun Navy responded to Perry by explaining that Blackhawk pilots “are the Top Guns of the rotary wing” and “don’t lose situational awareness.”

“They don’t make mistakes,” the Cajun Navy added. “This was not a combat situation, this was a flex. The pilot did what he intended to do. We said what we said.”

Others tried to push the same ideas as Perry to suggest that this fiasco was due to a situational awareness problem rather than malintent, but the Cajun Navy is not budging from what it says definitely happened that day.

Since the helicopter is clearly from the U.S. military and is not one of the private helicopters trying to help Helene victims, whoever was piloting the aircraft that day should have known not to get below 500 feet.

Apparently, the same type of thing is happening down in Greenville, S.C., another area that was hit hard by Helene. The man in the following video explains that FEMA helicopters are blocking Greenville-Spartanburg International Airport (GSP) to prevent aid and supplies from reaching Helene victims.

“FEMA came in and halted all that operation,” the man explains. “When there’s 1,000 of pounds of supplies over there that could be taken, they’re just sitting there doing nothing and blocking the runway with however many helicopters.”

If you are interested in learning more about how weather modification works, be sure to check out Geoengineering.news.

Sources for this article include:

X.com

NaturalNews.com