Interesting. It seemed like there were going to be a lot of hurricanes early in the season, but not much going on during the late summer and fall, when most of the major hurricanes occur. Probably part of the same weather pattern that gave us a major drought.
Oh, wait, they didn't?
hmmm
I blame global warming.
And Bush, this started during his presidency.
Bragging about record lengths of time between natural disasters is sort of like bragging about unsinkable ships. I wouldn’t do it.
What about Katrina, Rita, and Ike? Wouldn’t they fall in this time period? And hurricane season ends on Nov. 30, not Dec. 1.
Now, algore glumly stares into his pablum, shedding tears over Durban and wondering where it all went wrong.
Not that property & casualty insurers will lower their rates because of this news. They’re loving the 100% rate hike the Hurricanes from 2004 got them (despite the fact they weaseled out of every claim they could).
“As the oceans get warmer, storms get stronger... there is now a strong, new emerging consensus that global warming is indeed linked to a significant increase in both the duration and intensity of hurricanes.” Nobel Prize Winning Charlatan and Failed Presidential Candidate Al Gore.
Has anything this clown predicted ever come true?
An argument between global warming hoaxsters and real estate antis. Irrelevant. We’re in an extended solar minimum with increased volcanism, polar shift and resulting weak defense against geomagnetic storms. There will be unusual storms and temperature fluctuations more noticeable in about 3 years or so—an adventure but nothing to panic about. My place saw a temperature variation of 57 degrees (F) between yesterday afternoon, and early this morning.