The Inferno Agenda: How the California fires were engineered to incinerate a city and a nation's trust
- The fires were not natural disasters but acts of man, driven by Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass cutting the fire department budget by $17.6 million—money that would have kept 100 fire engines maintained—while she attended a "climate justice" conference in Ghana. A secret memo also proposed closing twelve fire stations in high-risk areas.
- The destruction was enabled by choices to prioritize DEI programs, homeless services and environmental protections (like saving a three-inch fish, the Delta smelt) over fire prevention and water reserves, while insurance companies like State Farm fled the state.
- Laboratory analysis of the ash revealed a chemical nightmare—dioxins, asbestos and heavy metals—that official air monitors failed to detect because they were placed away from fire zones and never tested for dioxins, with citizen scientists finding levels the government refuses to acknowledge.
- The false "climate change" narrative is being used by globalist elites to purchase devastated land at discounted prices, using fires, insurance collapse and foreclosures as tools for a hostile takeover of American sovereignty.
- The book concludes with an empowering guide for survival, including building a "go bag," creating an emergency fund in gold and silver, forming community emergency response teams, and cultivating spiritual resilience, with the warning that "when the system fails—and it will—your savings and your preparedness are the only true safety net."
Mike Adams's latest exposé, "
The Inferno Agenda: California's Fire, Fraud, and the Fight for America's Future," is not a dry policy analysis or a finger-wagging lecture from some East Coast academic who's never smelled smoke. This is a surgical dissection of a catastrophe that was anything but natural—a meticulously documented case that the firestorm that consumed Los Angeles in January 2025 was not an act of God, but an act of man.
Adams, known to millions as the Health Ranger, brings his scientist's precision and his activist's fire to a subject the corporate media has tragically mishandled. While mainstream outlets served up the same tired "climate change" platitudes, Adams did what real journalists do: he went to the source. He collected ash samples. He ran laboratory tests. And what he found should make every American furious.
The $17.6 million betrayal
The book opens with a staggering detail that sets the tone for everything that follows. Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass cut the fire department budget by $17.6 million—money that would have kept 100 mechanics employed maintaining 100 pieces of fire apparatus. Those 100 fire engines and pumps were sitting idle when the Palisades and Eaton fires erupted simultaneously. Meanwhile, the mayor was in Ghana attending a "climate justice" conference. The optics are damning, but Adams goes deeper: he reveals a secret memo proposing the closure of twelve fire stations in high-risk areas, an additional $44 million in cuts that were only stopped because the fires themselves broke out first.
The pattern is unmistakable. This is not incompetence. It is what Adams rightly calls "malign negligence"—a systematic choice to prioritize DEI programs, homeless services and international junkets over basic public safety. The water reservoirs were kept low to protect a three-inch fish called the Delta smelt. The brush was left uncleared because environmental lawsuits blocked controlled burns. The insurance companies, led by State Farm, had already begun fleeing the state, leaving homeowners with the underfunded FAIR Plan—a "last resort" that now faces $20 billion in claims with only $1 billion in reserves.
The toxic cover-up
But the most chilling section of "The Inferno Agenda" deals not with what burned, but with what remained. Adams's laboratory analysis of the ash reveals a chemical nightmare the authorities have desperately tried to suppress. When a city burns—not a forest, but a city—the smoke contains dioxins from PVC pipes, asbestos from old buildings, flame retardants from electronics and heavy metals from paints and batteries. The official air monitors, as Adams documents, were placed far from the fire zones and never tested for dioxins. Independent citizen scientists, using their own equipment, found levels that the government refuses to acknowledge.
This is where the book transcends mere investigative journalism and becomes a spiritual call to arms. Adams argues that the false "climate change" narrative is being weaponized by globalist elites who want to purchase devastated land at discounted prices. The fires, the insurance collapse, the foreclosure wave—these are not accidents. They are the tools of a hostile takeover of what remains of American sovereignty.
The path forward
What sets this book apart from other disaster exposes is its practical, empowering conclusion. Adams doesn't just leave you in despair. He gives you a roadmap. He explains how to build a "go bag" and a document box. He walks you through creating a true emergency fund—not just cash, but silver and gold that have "no counterparty risk." He shows how to form community emergency response teams, how to practice evacuation routes and how to cultivate the spiritual resilience that no government program can provide.
The book's final chapters draw a direct line from the California fires to the broader fight for America's future. The 2024 election, Adams argues, represented a nation waking from a dark cloud. But the battle is far from over. The same forces that cut fire budgets and ignored warnings are still in power in the blue states. The Trump administration, with figures like Kash Patel at the FBI and RFK Jr. at HHS, offers a chance for accountability—but only if citizens refuse to surrender their self-reliance.
"The Inferno Agenda" is not an easy read. It will make you angry. It will make you want to check your own preparedness. It will make you look at your elected officials with new, unblinking eyes. But that is precisely the point. As Adams writes, "When the system fails—and it will—your savings and your preparedness are the only true safety net."
This is a book for our time: brave, uncompromising and desperately needed.
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Watch the video below, where
Health Ranger Mike Adams interviews Dan Golka on California's catastrophic fires, political failures and possible state bankruptcy.
This video is from the
Health Ranger Report channel on Brighteon.com.
Sources include:
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