Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
OP here.
Not in front of my computer right now, but major flooding at landfall, as expected, and sadly 6 fatalities already.
How?
Anonymous wrote:
OP here.
Not in front of my computer right now, but major flooding at landfall, as expected, and sadly 6 fatalities already.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel sad for the people of FL. Have they even recovered from the last hurricane yet? The news hasn't covered much at all. I have no idea if people are still out of power.
I do and I don't. These people choose to live in a state with a massive risk for yearly catastrophic weather. They don't pay a state income tax and my federal tax dollars go to bail them out again and again. There are 49 other nice states to live in. I'm so sick of the entitlement. People want to talk about government handouts? How much does rebuilding Florida three times a year cost us?
None of the 49 other states ever got federal tax dollars for a weather event?
I do agree that people should not be living directly on the coast-I say this as someone who lives several miles inland.
What other state has predictable, life and property ravaging weather events EVERY YEAR?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel sad for the people of FL. Have they even recovered from the last hurricane yet? The news hasn't covered much at all. I have no idea if people are still out of power.
I do and I don't. These people choose to live in a state with a massive risk for yearly catastrophic weather. They don't pay a state income tax and my federal tax dollars go to bail them out again and again. There are 49 other nice states to live in. I'm so sick of the entitlement. People want to talk about government handouts? How much does rebuilding Florida three times a year cost us?
None of the 49 other states ever got federal tax dollars for a weather event?
I do agree that people should not be living directly on the coast-I say this as someone who lives several miles inland.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
OP again.
Milton's IKE has increased to 78 TJ.
Prior to landfall, here are the IKE measures of other hurricanes and storms:
Hurricane Charley 2004 was 12 TJ.
Hurricane Helene 2024 was 100 TJ.
Hurricane Katrina 2005 was 120 TJ.
Superstorm Sandy 2012 was 330 TJ.
As a reminder, Integrated Kinetic Energy, or IKE is the measure of the destructive potential of a hurricane or storm.
Why do you keep posting these details? You sound like AI.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
OP again.
Milton's IKE has increased to 78 TJ.
Prior to landfall, here are the IKE measures of other hurricanes and storms:
Hurricane Charley 2004 was 12 TJ.
Hurricane Helene 2024 was 100 TJ.
Hurricane Katrina 2005 was 120 TJ.
Superstorm Sandy 2012 was 330 TJ.
As a reminder, Integrated Kinetic Energy, or IKE is the measure of the destructive potential of a hurricane or storm.
Why do you keep posting these details? You sound like AI.
DP. I appreciate the updates. I have family in Florida and friends in Tampa, as do many people I know. We're very concerned.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel sad for the people of FL. Have they even recovered from the last hurricane yet? The news hasn't covered much at all. I have no idea if people are still out of power.
I do and I don't. These people choose to live in a state with a massive risk for yearly catastrophic weather. They don't pay a state income tax and my federal tax dollars go to bail them out again and again. There are 49 other nice states to live in. I'm so sick of the entitlement. People want to talk about government handouts? How much does rebuilding Florida three times a year cost us?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
OP again.
Milton's IKE has increased to 78 TJ.
Prior to landfall, here are the IKE measures of other hurricanes and storms:
Hurricane Charley 2004 was 12 TJ.
Hurricane Helene 2024 was 100 TJ.
Hurricane Katrina 2005 was 120 TJ.
Superstorm Sandy 2012 was 330 TJ.
As a reminder, Integrated Kinetic Energy, or IKE is the measure of the destructive potential of a hurricane or storm.
Why do you keep posting these details? You sound like AI.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
OP again.
Milton's IKE has increased to 78 TJ.
Prior to landfall, here are the IKE measures of other hurricanes and storms:
Hurricane Charley 2004 was 12 TJ.
Hurricane Helene 2024 was 100 TJ.
Hurricane Katrina 2005 was 120 TJ.
Superstorm Sandy 2012 was 330 TJ.
As a reminder, Integrated Kinetic Energy, or IKE is the measure of the destructive potential of a hurricane or storm.
Why do you keep posting these details? You sound like AI.