DWQA Questions › Tag: food pricesFilter:AllOpenResolvedClosedUnansweredSort byViewsAnswersVotesThinking back about the hurricane history of the Florida Gulf Coast, I remember 20 years ago reassuring my mother, who lived in Fort Myers, Florida, that, unlike the east coast, the western, Gulf side of southern Florida had not had a hurricane during our lifetimes. Then came Hurricane Charley in 2004, and Irma in 2017. She had roof damage both times, with water pouring in from a hurricane-spawned tornado from Charley, and her condo was totally gutted by Irma. She passed two years ago and we sold her condo, and now Ian, the largest hurricane ever to hit Florida just passed directly through Fort Myers. This has the environmental activists in a tizzy, blaming the hurricane on climate change. Can you give us a tutorial to remind us about the true origin of tornados and hurricanes and what we can expect going forward?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • Extraterrestrial Agenda176 views0 answers0 votesIs there any significance to both Florida Hurricanes, Charley and Ian, first making landfall at the same spot on the coast, tiny Cayo Costa island?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • Extraterrestrial Agenda200 views0 answers0 votesCommentators have reviewed the hurricane statistics to point out that their frequency has not increased compared to such storms recorded a hundred years ago, although the severity has increased measurably, but only about 5%. Is that an accurate picture? Hurricane Ian is the largest to have ever hit Florida, and has been termed a once in 500 years occurrence. Is there a planned ramp-up of hurricane severity now that they have climate change as a cover story?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • Extraterrestrial Agenda170 views0 answers0 votesWas the flooding in Pakistan that displaced over 33 million people due to natural causes, human-caused climate change, or was there extraterrestrial weather manipulation involved to cause intentional harm?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • Extraterrestrial Agenda167 views0 answers0 votesAccording to news accounts: “Locust invasion is the biggest in Ethiopia and Somalia in 25 years, and the biggest in Kenya in 70 years. When rains arrive in March and bring new vegetation across much of the region, the numbers of the fast-breeding locusts could grow 500 times before drier weather in June curbs their spread, the United Nations says. They are now heading toward Uganda and fragile South Sudan, where almost half the country faces hunger as it emerges from civil war. Uganda has not had such an outbreak since the 1960s and is already on alert. The locusts also are moving steadily toward Ethiopia’s Rift Valley, the breadbasket for Africa’s second-most populous country, the UN says. Even before this outbreak, nearly 20 million people faced high levels of food insecurity across the East African region long challenged by periodic droughts and floods.” Is there a sinister orchestration behind this development and its timing?ClosedNicola asked 4 years ago • Extraterrestrial Agenda307 views0 answers0 votes