Preacher man, your fairy, if the magical thing was real (it's bullshit), wouldn't care if this hurricane wiped out the Florida Panhandle and everyone in it.
The Christian cult sells the idea that this planet was magically created for human apes and they can do anything they want to it, including destroying Earth if it's lucrative to do that.
This storm is more powerful than previous hurricanes because the Gulf of Mexico is much hotter than it should be. The problem is human-caused global warming and you Christian fucktards deny the whole thing just like you deny evolution. Science makes you Christian assholes cry.
New York Times - Hurricane Michael Live Updates: Category 4 Storm Lashes Florida
New York Times - Hurricane Michael Live Updates: Category 4 Storm Lashes Florida
The storm is the worst ever to hit the Florida Panhandle. Rising ocean temperatures have fueled some of the most devastating storms in recent years. |
By Richard Fausset, Patricia Mazzei and Alan Blinder
October 10, 2018
PANAMA CITY, Fla. — A frighteningly powerful Hurricane Michael made landfall on the Florida Panhandle on Wednesday, with the Category 4 storm unleashing a blitz of rain, wind and storm surge that forecasters feared would ravage parts of the South.
The storm had maximum sustained winds of 155 miles per hour, and its center reached Mexico Beach, Fla., just before 1 p.m. local time, the National Hurricane Center said.
The hurricane center said the storm was “potentially catastrophic,” and officials in Florida said they were prepared for widespread devastation.
“This is the worst storm that our Florida Panhandle has seen in a century,” Gov. Rick Scott warned. “Hurricane Michael is upon us, and now is the time to seek refuge.”
Here’s the latest:
• The eye of Michael is expected to track northeast across Georgia and the Carolinas on Thursday before moving off the Mid-Atlantic coast on Friday.
• Weather forecasters and government officials are particularly worried about a storm surge, which they said could reach 13 feet in some areas, in a relatively flat region that is particularly vulnerable to it.
• Flash flooding is also a concern. The Florida Panhandle and Big Bend region, southeast Alabama and parts of Georgia could receive four to eight inches of rain, with some spots getting as much as a foot.
• The governors of Alabama, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina have all declared emergencies for at least parts of their states, encompassing tens of millions of residents.
• The authorities said about 375,000 people live in areas covered by evacuation orders, but it was not clear how many had chosen to flee. The American Red Cross said that about 4,000 people slept in shelters on Tuesday. Here’s where to find shelter from Hurricane Michael.
• With the hurricane hitting in the month before a general election, for politicians “it’s a chance to show leadership, but it’s also a chance to fail at leadership.” Read more here.
• Follow New York Times journalists on the scene: Patricia Mazzei in Tallahassee, Richard Fausset in Panama City and Alan Blinder in Atlanta.
October 10, 2018
PANAMA CITY, Fla. — A frighteningly powerful Hurricane Michael made landfall on the Florida Panhandle on Wednesday, with the Category 4 storm unleashing a blitz of rain, wind and storm surge that forecasters feared would ravage parts of the South.
The storm had maximum sustained winds of 155 miles per hour, and its center reached Mexico Beach, Fla., just before 1 p.m. local time, the National Hurricane Center said.
The hurricane center said the storm was “potentially catastrophic,” and officials in Florida said they were prepared for widespread devastation.
“This is the worst storm that our Florida Panhandle has seen in a century,” Gov. Rick Scott warned. “Hurricane Michael is upon us, and now is the time to seek refuge.”
Here’s the latest:
• The eye of Michael is expected to track northeast across Georgia and the Carolinas on Thursday before moving off the Mid-Atlantic coast on Friday.
• Weather forecasters and government officials are particularly worried about a storm surge, which they said could reach 13 feet in some areas, in a relatively flat region that is particularly vulnerable to it.
• Flash flooding is also a concern. The Florida Panhandle and Big Bend region, southeast Alabama and parts of Georgia could receive four to eight inches of rain, with some spots getting as much as a foot.
• The governors of Alabama, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina have all declared emergencies for at least parts of their states, encompassing tens of millions of residents.
• The authorities said about 375,000 people live in areas covered by evacuation orders, but it was not clear how many had chosen to flee. The American Red Cross said that about 4,000 people slept in shelters on Tuesday. Here’s where to find shelter from Hurricane Michael.
• With the hurricane hitting in the month before a general election, for politicians “it’s a chance to show leadership, but it’s also a chance to fail at leadership.” Read more here.
• Follow New York Times journalists on the scene: Patricia Mazzei in Tallahassee, Richard Fausset in Panama City and Alan Blinder in Atlanta.
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