It
turns out that Hurricane Florence may not have been the storm of a lifetime but
it definitely wreaked havoc with extensive flooding along the coast of the
Carolinas and further inland. Although Florence has passed, we must remember
that the hurricane season is far from over and that more devastating storms are
on the way including this one recently identified by the National Weather Service:
NATIONAL
WEATHER SERVICE
National
Hurricane Center – Storm Advisory for Hurricane Donald – Extreme
Warning
We continue to track Donald ever since it
achieved hurricane status back in November of 2016. What was once predicted to
be simply a minor tropical storm that would blow itself out in 2015 has
unexpectedly continued to gain strength and now threatens not only coastal
regions but the entire continental United States.
Although some hurricanes like Florence
move westward at a very slow pace, Donald is truly exceptional in that it has
moved very little in the past two years. In fact, the eye of the storm remains
centered over Washington, D. C. with particularly disruptive winds and storm
surges in the specific area of the White House.
Since its inception, Donald has left
significant damage and destruction in its path. Puerto Rico was one of its
early major victims but the damage caused has been widespread and extensive.
The storm has managed to destroy innumerable regulations, cause significant
harm to healthcare reforms and add immeasurably to the national debt.
Those residing in lower income areas are
urged to evacuate as soon as possible. Although Donald consistently promised to
bring economic gains to all, to date, it has limited such results only to upper
income neighborhoods.
While Donald primarily attacks liberal
coastal areas, it causes damage wherever it tracks. Even if your region appears
to be safe, be advised that Donald creates dangerous subsidiary weather patterns
such as unceasing campaign-like rallies and unpredictable Twitterstorms. It has
even been known to become embedded with local tornadoes like the recently
identified Stormy Daniels.
Donald has yet to be accurately or
adequately categorized. Once thought to be simply an annoying tropical depression,
it has since surprisingly continued to jump categories beyond our standard
measuring determinants to the point where, at this point, we can only call it
an uncategorized storm.
It continues to be difficult to predict
the path and strength of this hurricane. Although we anticipated on several
occasions that Donald would essentially self-destruct, it appears that whatever
erratic and unstable action the storm takes only seems to strengthen it more.
We are cautiously optimistic, however,
that by early November, we will see Donald’s power lessened significantly by
strong midterm election weather patterns emanating from the House and possibly
the Senate. Yet given Donald’s unpredictability and penchant for achieving
increased volume as well as the electorate’s historical absence of voter
turnout, it may actually increase in strength and achieve the previously unassigned
storm status of a Windbag 1.
If Donald should persist beyond the
upcoming election season, it may not blow itself out until 2020 unless, of
course, it is intercepted by Typhoon Mueller.
1 comment:
Strangely, despite the incredible speeds of the winds emanating from Hurricane Donald, meteorologists believe that it is not entirely gaseous but in fact at least 35% spittle.
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