mamooth
Diamond Member
You'll have to excuse Frank and Dave. Being that all denialists are lunatic political cultists, the recent political news has left them a touch cranky. And, as was mentioned, that leads to them drinking heavily.
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You'll have to excuse Frank and Dave. Being that all denialists are lunatic political cultists, the recent political news has left them a touch cranky. And, as was mentioned, that leads to them drinking heavily.
Goebbels warming wants to shove granny over a cliff to pay for tax cuts to jillionaires and squillionaires!
You'll have to excuse Frank and Dave. Being that all denialists are lunatic political cultists, the recent political news has left them a touch cranky. And, as was mentioned, that leads to them drinking heavily.
Since the other 'tard ran away, you get to do his homework for him:
Assume that no one has ever denied man-caused global warming.
How would Sandy have been averted?
Would Gaea, upon seeing all of us holding hands and singing Michael Jackson's "Earth Song", have relented and chosen not to punish us for our sins? Would the world socialism demanded by AGW supporters have removed the eeeevil CO2 from our atmosphere and changed weather patterns? Would the High Priest of the Church of the Warming Globe, Al Gore, have prayed away the deadly storm on behalf of us mere mortals?
How, exactly, is the blood of Sandy on deniers' hands?
Or you could save time and just admit you're a fucking idiot.
Dave, I'm flattered, but I really don't need a drunk stalker.
And no, I'm not wasting time on your shit-stupid questions. You're too retarded to understand the answers anyways, and it would just give you more excuses to lie and pout.
What I'd like to speculate about is why most denialists are such whiners on a pathological scale. Did their mommies not hug them enough? What prompts such constant sissified behavior from supposedy grownup men?
Never saw a hurricane this late in the season with so much power
How many more before we see the Global Warming flat earthers concede global warming?
Never saw a hurricane this late in the season with so much power
How many more before we see the Global Warming flat earthers concede global warming?
![]()
This could of made it to long island as a cat2 if it was about 100 miles east trackwise.
Never saw a hurricane this late in the season with so much power
How many more before we see the Global Warming flat earthers concede global warming?
Interesting historic info on November hurricanes… « FOX News Weather BlogNever saw a hurricane this late in the season with so much power
How many more before we see the Global Warming flat earthers concede global warming?
![]()
This could of made it to long island as a cat2 if it was about 100 miles east trackwise.
Woulda, shoulda....key is that it didn't
Like most hurricanes, it did not make it north of North Carolina. The problem with Hurricanes is that they need warm water for power. There didn't used to be warm water in the north this late in the season
Conservatives claim it is a natural anomaly. How many more do we need till they admit we have a problem
Never saw a hurricane this late in the season with so much power
How many more before we see the Global Warming flat earthers concede global warming?
Yes, you have:
Hurricanes in History
Hurricane Mitch 1998
This powerful hurricane began developing over the southwestern Caribbean Sea on 22 October. It drifted westward and became a tropical storm later that day, then turned northward and became a hurricane by the 24th. Mitch then turned westward again and rapidly strengthened, becoming a Category 5 hurricane with a central pressure of 905 mb on the 26th. After passing over Swan Island on the 27th, a weakening Mitch moved slowly southward near the coastal Islands of Honduras. It made landfall over northern Honduras on the 29th as a Category 1 hurricane. Mitch gradually turned westward after landfall, and the surface center dissipated neat the Guatemala-Honduras border on 1 November.
The remnant circulation aloft reached the Bay of Campeche on 2 November and began developing again. The re-born Mitch became a tropical storm on 3 November, then moved northeastward across the Yucatan Peninsula on the 4th. Mitch crossed south Florida as a tropical storm on the 5th and then became extratropical later that day. The extratropical cyclone remained strong as it crossed the Atlantic, eventually affecting the British Isles and Iceland on the 9th and 10th.
Mitch ravaged the offshore islands of Honduras with high winds, seas, and storm surge. However the greatest impact was widespread heavy rains and severe floods in Honduras, Nicaragua, Guatemala, and El Salvador. Mitch caused an estimated 9,000 deaths in Central America with another 9,000 missing. Thirty-one people died when the schooner Fantome sank as it encountered the high winds and seas associated with the hurricane. Two people died in the Florida Keys when a fishing boat capsized. Mitch caused tremendous property, infrastructure, and crop damage in Central America, and an additional $40 million in damage in Florida.
Interesting historic info on November hurricanes… « FOX News Weather Blog![]()
This could of made it to long island as a cat2 if it was about 100 miles east trackwise.
Woulda, shoulda....key is that it didn't
Like most hurricanes, it did not make it north of North Carolina. The problem with Hurricanes is that they need warm water for power. There didn't used to be warm water in the north this late in the season
Conservatives claim it is a natural anomaly. How many more do we need till they admit we have a problem
November 7, 2008 | 10:26 PM ETYou should probably stop digging your hole deeper.
Interesting historic info on November hurricanes...
From Dr. Jeff Masters of Weather Forecast & Reports - Long Range & Local | Wunderground | Weather Underground
Historically, only about 5% of all Atlantic tropical storm activity occurs after November 1. Between 1871 and 2007, 60 tropical storms formed in November. Of these, 29 became hurricanes, and four of these, major hurricanes. There have also been two major hurricanes that formed in October and continued on into November. On average, one tropical storm forms in November every other year, and we can expect a November hurricane about one year in five.
The six major November hurricanes were Hurricane Michelle of 2001 (Cat 4, 140 mph); Hurricane Lenny of 1999 (Cat 4, 150 mph); Hurricane Kate of 1985 (Cat 3, 120 mph); Hurricane Greta of 1956 (Cat 4, 140 mph); Hurricane 10 of 1932 (Cat 4, 135 mph); and Hurricane 7 of 1912 (Cat 3, 115 mph). There have been no major hurricanes in the months December through April.
You said:Never saw a hurricane this late in the season with so much power
How many more before we see the Global Warming flat earthers concede global warming?
Yes, you have:
Hurricanes in History
Hurricane Mitch 1998
This powerful hurricane began developing over the southwestern Caribbean Sea on 22 October. It drifted westward and became a tropical storm later that day, then turned northward and became a hurricane by the 24th. Mitch then turned westward again and rapidly strengthened, becoming a Category 5 hurricane with a central pressure of 905 mb on the 26th. After passing over Swan Island on the 27th, a weakening Mitch moved slowly southward near the coastal Islands of Honduras. It made landfall over northern Honduras on the 29th as a Category 1 hurricane. Mitch gradually turned westward after landfall, and the surface center dissipated neat the Guatemala-Honduras border on 1 November.
The remnant circulation aloft reached the Bay of Campeche on 2 November and began developing again. The re-born Mitch became a tropical storm on 3 November, then moved northeastward across the Yucatan Peninsula on the 4th. Mitch crossed south Florida as a tropical storm on the 5th and then became extratropical later that day. The extratropical cyclone remained strong as it crossed the Atlantic, eventually affecting the British Isles and Iceland on the 9th and 10th.
Mitch ravaged the offshore islands of Honduras with high winds, seas, and storm surge. However the greatest impact was widespread heavy rains and severe floods in Honduras, Nicaragua, Guatemala, and El Salvador. Mitch caused an estimated 9,000 deaths in Central America with another 9,000 missing. Thirty-one people died when the schooner Fantome sank as it encountered the high winds and seas associated with the hurricane. Two people died in the Florida Keys when a fishing boat capsized. Mitch caused tremendous property, infrastructure, and crop damage in Central America, and an additional $40 million in damage in Florida.
Do you realize where Honduras is vs New Jersey?
I'm just showing that the "ZOMG there's never been another storm hit so late in the year!!" hysteria is bullshit.Interesting historic info on November hurricanes… « FOX News Weather BlogWoulda, shoulda....key is that it didn't
Like most hurricanes, it did not make it north of North Carolina. The problem with Hurricanes is that they need warm water for power. There didn't used to be warm water in the north this late in the season
Conservatives claim it is a natural anomaly. How many more do we need till they admit we have a problem
November 7, 2008 | 10:26 PM ETYou should probably stop digging your hole deeper.
Interesting historic info on November hurricanes...
From Dr. Jeff Masters of Weather Forecast & Reports - Long Range & Local | Wunderground | Weather Underground
Historically, only about 5% of all Atlantic tropical storm activity occurs after November 1. Between 1871 and 2007, 60 tropical storms formed in November. Of these, 29 became hurricanes, and four of these, major hurricanes. There have also been two major hurricanes that formed in October and continued on into November. On average, one tropical storm forms in November every other year, and we can expect a November hurricane about one year in five.
The six major November hurricanes were Hurricane Michelle of 2001 (Cat 4, 140 mph); Hurricane Lenny of 1999 (Cat 4, 150 mph); Hurricane Kate of 1985 (Cat 3, 120 mph); Hurricane Greta of 1956 (Cat 4, 140 mph); Hurricane 10 of 1932 (Cat 4, 135 mph); and Hurricane 7 of 1912 (Cat 3, 115 mph). There have been no major hurricanes in the months December through April.
How many of those storms hit north of North Carolina?
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