June 17, 2025

5 thoughts on “How Climate Change has effected Hurricane Season

  1. There’s so much to be angry about right now. But set all that aside for a second and consider the weather. It’s rained here in Virginia for several days, with several more days of rain to come. Crops are waterlogged, and a general gloom has settled over my city, which hasn’t seen the sun in days.

    Trump has rolled back environmental protections that would stop, reverse, or even lessen the impact of global climate change, making severe weather events like excessive rainfall, floods, hurricanes, fires, and even earthquakes all more frequent. So, not only will we have to look forward to living in an authoritarian regime, we can do it in gloomy weather or searing heat, fighting to protect our homes. We'll be saying goodbye to our blue-sky vacations, our safe sunny spots, our gardens, our clean air, and our water. Trump means hell on Earth, people.

  2. Hurricanes used to be measured at 30 ft above the ground as close to the shore as possible as the storm came ashore. That has changed to being measured at 30,000 ft as airplanes fly through the eye wall using tiny pitotubes and GPS to guesstimate the wind speed at 30,000 ft, with no relation whatsoever to the actual wind speed at 30 ft on the ground. This is an artificial hockey stick, the same as the artificial hockey stick when Bush Jr closed all of the rural weather stations, and temperatures became based on Urban heat zones. Seattle National Weather Service climate Center is located on 23,000 Acres of smoking asphalt and concrete. Documented 10° to 14 degrees hotter in summer then the green suburbs around it. So hot that Seattle created a women minority Urban Heat Equity reparations fund, that nobody admits they created because it blows up the myth of CO2

Leave a Reply to @Republic4ever714 Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *