Probably not. The worst hurricanes are late August/Early September. There's only so much cloud seeding and HAARP can do when it's 100-105 degrees every day.
You notice exactly the patterns I see say in and out. Only so much rain they can over saturate, only so much seeding they can do at peak temps etc.
WHO REMEMBERS 9/11/01 a massive hurricane was heading straight for the coasts of NYC towards Manhattan….
Funny enough every news anchor in the days leading up/morning of make no mention of it. They talk about clear sunny skies, clear weather, mild weather etc.
There are even compilations of news reporters talking about the nice weather while footage of radar shows the massive swirling hurricane heading directly towards NYC morning of 9/11
Oddly enough right at the last second this hurricane makes a complete 180 and decides to turn around and backtrack the way it came…..
The rest from there is history.
Did they know something we didn’t? Doesn’t the news usually drone on and on and harp on every possible formation of a hurricane or tropical storm? Who gave the orders to pretend this one wasn’t hurdling towards NYC?
The right turn of the hurricane was actually typical. Cold fronts coming down always push a storm to the east. It's when no cold front is approaching that hurricanes can make landfall in the NE.
Why did every news reporter ignore the massive swirling hurricane though? There’s footage of them actually showing the hurricane heading straight for nyc and they completely ignore it.
I remember tons of coverage of it as it approached NYC. What made me mad is so much of the damage could have easily been prevented (blocking up subway station entrances, moving equipment on ground levels up one floor). My office had a field station on the water, and could have moved their computers and other equipment up fairly easily, but did nothing, and lost everything. The water was about 4 feet high in the building at the height of the surge. If the storm had not hit at high tide, it would have caused minimal damage (tide range of about 6 feet).
It's June.
Probably not. The worst hurricanes are late August/Early September. There's only so much cloud seeding and HAARP can do when it's 100-105 degrees every day.
SPOT ON w the “only so much seeding” comment.
You notice exactly the patterns I see say in and out. Only so much rain they can over saturate, only so much seeding they can do at peak temps etc.
WHO REMEMBERS 9/11/01 a massive hurricane was heading straight for the coasts of NYC towards Manhattan….
Funny enough every news anchor in the days leading up/morning of make no mention of it. They talk about clear sunny skies, clear weather, mild weather etc.
There are even compilations of news reporters talking about the nice weather while footage of radar shows the massive swirling hurricane heading directly towards NYC morning of 9/11
Oddly enough right at the last second this hurricane makes a complete 180 and decides to turn around and backtrack the way it came…..
The rest from there is history.
Did they know something we didn’t? Doesn’t the news usually drone on and on and harp on every possible formation of a hurricane or tropical storm? Who gave the orders to pretend this one wasn’t hurdling towards NYC?
The right turn of the hurricane was actually typical. Cold fronts coming down always push a storm to the east. It's when no cold front is approaching that hurricanes can make landfall in the NE.
Why did every news reporter ignore the massive swirling hurricane though? There’s footage of them actually showing the hurricane heading straight for nyc and they completely ignore it.
I remember tons of coverage of it as it approached NYC. What made me mad is so much of the damage could have easily been prevented (blocking up subway station entrances, moving equipment on ground levels up one floor). My office had a field station on the water, and could have moved their computers and other equipment up fairly easily, but did nothing, and lost everything. The water was about 4 feet high in the building at the height of the surge. If the storm had not hit at high tide, it would have caused minimal damage (tide range of about 6 feet).
I can attest to this as I live in the Coastal Plains of NC.