I think you need to understand that even ONE day of (silly little) raindrops a year is unusual in this part of the world.
I grew up in Qatar and literally people would start rushing around buying stocks of tea and nuts to huddle at home, when the clouds gathered on the horizon. It would be a once-in-the-two-years event. If it rained (drizzle), people would go outside and experience the water on their face. Mainly what we dealt with re: weather events, was the incessant dust storms that would F up the aircon, and create piles of fine sand in the piano, and in any open jars of sugar or flour. I mean school lunch would grit the teeth, literally.
I think you need to understand that even ONE day of (silly little) raindrops a year is unusual in this part of the world.
I understand that completely. I get that this is a "big deal" in the context of where it is. What it isn't is "The Wrath of God." It's a minor inconvenience on the scale of these things. For people who are used to such things (Gulf of Mexico region e.g.), you see a couple of these a year. this is a minor event in that scope.
The worst part of this presentation is the narrative overlay. It plays it like it's HUGE, like it really is the wrath of God. It's not even close. It's just aberrant weather, probably brought on by someone with too much power over the weather (HAARP e.g.), wanting to bring a little rain to the very rich desert to make people believe in "Climate Change." It's not destroying anything but a few Mercedes Benz carpets and maybe a drowned cat or two. It's no big deal, but the propagandists (like this click bait video) can sell it as whatever they want to sell it as, even though it's actual damage is minimal.
I think you need to understand that even ONE day of (silly little) raindrops a year is unusual in this part of the world.
I grew up in Qatar and literally people would start rushing around buying stocks of tea and nuts to huddle at home, when the clouds gathered on the horizon. It would be a once-in-the-two-years event. If it rained (drizzle), people would go outside and experience the water on their face. Mainly what we dealt with re: weather events, was the incessant dust storms that would F up the aircon, and create piles of fine sand in the piano, and in any open jars of sugar or flour. I mean school lunch would grit the teeth, literally.
I understand that completely. I get that this is a "big deal" in the context of where it is. What it isn't is "The Wrath of God." It's a minor inconvenience on the scale of these things. For people who are used to such things (Gulf of Mexico region e.g.), you see a couple of these a year. this is a minor event in that scope.
The worst part of this presentation is the narrative overlay. It plays it like it's HUGE, like it really is the wrath of God. It's not even close. It's just aberrant weather, probably brought on by someone with too much power over the weather (HAARP e.g.), wanting to bring a little rain to the very rich desert to make people believe in "Climate Change." It's not destroying anything but a few Mercedes Benz carpets and maybe a drowned cat or two. It's no big deal, but the propagandists (like this click bait video) can sell it as whatever they want to sell it as, even though it's actual damage is minimal.
Sure.