South Asia’s Climate Disaster Fallout Exposes Dangerous Infrastructure Blind Spots
Floods in Nepal devastate critical infrastructure, revealing globalist failures to protect vulnerable regions and underscoring the urgent need for smart, sovereign rebuilding that prioritizes real risk over outdated models.
When a swollen Bhotekoshi River surged through Nepal this July, sweeping away the main bridge to China and damaging vital hydropower dams, it was no mere natural tragedy—it was a glaring warning about how globalist planning fails to safeguard key infrastructure against the new realities of climate change. For American policymakers watching from afar, the lessons resonate loudly: without bold, America First approaches to infrastructure resilience and border security, we risk repeating these vulnerabilities at home and abroad. Why Are We Rebuilding Infrastructure at Known Risk Sites? The destroyed Sino-Nepal Friendship Bridge wasn't just a crossing point; it’s a lifeline...
This is Exclusive Content for Subscribers
Join our community of patriots to read the full story and get access to all our exclusive analysis.
View Subscription Plans