God sure as hell creates all the rain where I live, and we get a lot. You never heard of "flash floods"? Texas has the same problem with them as California. One of the first things I saw on a trip to San Antonio was a very large and dry drainage canal, about the size of a 4-lane road.
Why do you think they are called "floods"? Have you seen how high we build levees to contain a flooding river? I have seen rivers high up to the brim of the levee. Very eyebrow-raising. After that, the whole countryside is at jeopardy.
In my home county, the Nooksack River would seasonally flood the flatlands of its drainage, particularly the Lummi indian settlements in Marietta. Due to their status as wards of the government, they would decamp elsewhere, the flood would ruin their households, and they would receive replacement goods from the government upon subsidence of the floods. Farther upstream, in Lynden, the Dutch farmers settled on a highland and built dikes along the river to keep their fields from being flooded.
The flood canals I have seen in California and Texas are at least in the depth range you are talking about, but width also counts, as the two relate to total flow capacity.
Rainmaker is probably being honest. But this raises the question: IF RAINMAKER DIDN'T CAUSE THE FLOODS, WHO DID? (And please don't say "God".)
Well they said they did not operate in the affected areas. Did they operate anywhere adjacent to those areas? Wind blows and all that..
Also, the response states, "Rainmaker did not operate in the affected area on the 3rd or 4th...."
Maybe on the 2nd?
So, we have three more questions, who, where and when.
Upriver?
theres 5+ dams upriver, check on google maps
All here perfectly knows that it is not God, the creeps are controlling everything even time.
God sure as hell creates all the rain where I live, and we get a lot. You never heard of "flash floods"? Texas has the same problem with them as California. One of the first things I saw on a trip to San Antonio was a very large and dry drainage canal, about the size of a 4-lane road.
killerspacerobot, are your flash floods generally in the range of 18 to 34 feet in depth of water?
Why do you think they are called "floods"? Have you seen how high we build levees to contain a flooding river? I have seen rivers high up to the brim of the levee. Very eyebrow-raising. After that, the whole countryside is at jeopardy.
In my home county, the Nooksack River would seasonally flood the flatlands of its drainage, particularly the Lummi indian settlements in Marietta. Due to their status as wards of the government, they would decamp elsewhere, the flood would ruin their households, and they would receive replacement goods from the government upon subsidence of the floods. Farther upstream, in Lynden, the Dutch farmers settled on a highland and built dikes along the river to keep their fields from being flooded.
The flood canals I have seen in California and Texas are at least in the depth range you are talking about, but width also counts, as the two relate to total flow capacity.