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BlackChampagne -- no longer new; improvement also in question.: Yet Another Hurricane



Wednesday, October 19, 2005  

Yet Another Hurricane


So Tropical Storm Wilma turned into Hurricane Wilma in record time, and was the strongest Atlantic Hurricane ever measured yesterday, before weakening a bit while still remaining a category five storm. As the numerous articles on the subject point out:
Wilma was the 21st storm of the Atlantic hurricane season, tying a record set in 1933. It was also the 12th hurricane and tied the record for most hurricanes in a season set in 1969.

The season still has six weeks to run but has already spawned three of the most intense hurricanes on record -- Katrina, Rita and Wilma. Hurricane experts say the Atlantic has swung back into a period of heightened storm activity that could last another 20 years. Climatologists also fear global warming could be making the storms more intense.
Seriously, it might be time to stop trying to live along the US Gulf Coast, or at least the southern tip of Florida. First of all, it's way too hot and humid for humans who don't want to survive a jungle simulation, but now with global warming you're going to get hit by a devastating hurricane every few weeks. Imagine if there were a massive earthquake in California every month? Who would tolerate that? How long would it be before every insurance company pulled up stakes and the rest of the country began to rebel at paying federal loan and bail out money for the inevitable losses suffered?

The funny part is that all the news stories talk about how hurricane X and Y might hit the US, and how much damage they might do here... meanwhile, every single one of them rips the hell out of Cuba, Trinadad/Tobago, Haiti, the Bahamas, the Yucutan Peninsula, etc. Either a direct hit that scours their shacks to flat heaps of corrogated aluminum, or a glancing blow that still drops half a meter of rain and causes massive mud slides that bury an isolated village or two. But since those aren't actual US states, no one in the US media gives a shit.

On a similar theme, I've enjoyed the sporadic US reporting on the recent earthquake in Pakistan. Remember when Katrina hit New Orleans and killed maybe 1000 people, and it was like the end of the world? Well, the earthquake has killed up to 80,000 people, with scores of villages and towns basically shaken flat and tens of thousands more stuck out in the mountains in their own Superdomes of isolated helplessness. And it gets a below the fold mention here, if it's mentioned at all. Eight times worse than Katrina, but hey, we've got our own problems in the US of A. Plus there's no good video of the actual shaking, unlike the Katrina flooding, and it's really the eye candy that sells news on US TV. If everyone in Pittsburgh woke up dead tomorrow morning, I'm talking 500,000 mysterious overnight deaths, a car crash downtown would still get more media coverage, if there was color video footage of the vehicles impacting and the resultant fire.
Comments:

"meanwhile, every single one of them rips the hell out of Cuba, Trinadad/Tobago, Haiti, the Bahamas, the Yucutan Peninsula, etc."

--Just a note here, I live in Trinidad, hurricanes barely do any damage. They usually go north of us and destroy Grenada or something..

Of course, I'm moving to Grenada soon, so call me crazy.


 

To respond to your comment about people along the gulf coast needing to pull up stakes and move away, if people did that, 3/4 of the US would be completely empty. The entire east coast is vulnerable to hurricanes, the Mississippi river floods out that area of the US on a nearly yearly basis, and tornadoes regularly ravage the mid west. You west coasterners live on no less than 3 major fault lines that'll break eventually, plus you seem to get raging wildfires pretty regularly. Where else is there to live that isn't a life threatening area in one way or another? There's a strip of land directly west of the Appalachians that isn't at or near a major 'danger zone' that we could all cram into, but I'll live downstream of danger, thanks.


 

Yes, but there's a difference between potential for disaster, and the certainty of it, which seems to be the case for the gulf coast over the next decade or two. Not that we can count on every year being as destructive as this year was, forecasts of continued global warming and ocean currents aren't exact enough for that.

I seem to recall some towns in the midwest basins being abandoned a few years ago, after the Mississippi flooded like 3x in 5 years and completely inundated the same towns every time, but no one really wanted to live there anyway. As you say, people are going to live where they enjoy living, and simply continue to hope natural disasters strike someone else. And if somewhere is desireable enough, like the Florida Keys apparently are, they'll return there even if they have to abandon their boarded up homes 3 or 4x every fall. I wouldn't do it, but I guess they think it's worth it.


 

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