A slow motion hydrogen bomb went off in Texas.

It wouldn't surprise me one bit to learn that the way these SIFs HFTs are written, there is a section of code that says: oh look, RBOB.1 is up, that means more economic activity! Buy ES.1!

You cannot short SIFs until the stock market opens. When humans were in charge you could.
 
"A slow motion hydrogen bomb"? If that were the case there would be 3 million dead, not 3. What we have is a little better than average sized hurricane that hit and stalled out. The continuing rains will be problematic for residents in the general area. They have my prayers and sympathies. For the rest of us, get a grip, it's a weather event. I doubt economies will collapse worldwide, we have Wall Street geniuses to engineer that.
 
As of now, 11 Trillion gallons of water deposited on Houston and surrounding areas. Already this is disastrous. But it is the next expected 10 to 15 Trillions of gallons that may... :(
 
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It's called the sun. But no one wants to really believe that storms are getting stronger due to the trapping of Co2 gases in the atmosphere.

How many more of these 100 year storms that come every ten years, how many more lives ruined or lost, will it take before we take action?

On Monday, billions of dollars will be wiped off the stock market with insurance companies at the top of the list. Oil prices are going to be bid $2 higher on the open, along with it's derivatives also being bid higher.


Nation's 4th-largest city is facing epic flooding

View attachment 177214

http://www.cnn.com/2017/08/27/us/texas-harvey-latest/index.html

You claim the Sun is a slow motion hydrogen bomb. The Sun is not going in slow motion.
 
It's still not as big as the Galveston Hurricane that happened in 1900 that killed 12,000 people.

or the Great Hurricane of 1780 that killed 22,000 people

In fact, if you go by the worst hurricanes ever, they actually seem to be getting milder and killing less people.
 
It's still not as big as the Galveston Hurricane that happened in 1900 that killed 12,000 people.

or the Great Hurricane of 1780 that killed 22,000 people

In fact, if you go by the worst hurricanes ever, they actually seem to be getting milder and killing less people.

thanks mainly to weather tracking systems I would assume. Those 22,000 killed in Galveston probably didn't even know what a hurricane was back in 1780, let alone that they were about to get pummeled by one until it was too late.
 
thanks mainly to weather tracking systems I would assume. Those 22,000 killed in Galveston probably didn't even know what a hurricane was back in 1780, let alone that they were about to get pummeled by one until it was too late.

exactly.
 
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