LMAO .



Quote from prophet:
Speaking of hurricanes:
http://www.gfdl.noaa.gov/~tk/glob_warm_hurr.html
http://www.washtimes.com/upi-breaking/20040912-080434-9518r.htm
While the experts are divided on whether hurricane frequency is increasing, most agree that rising ocean temperatures will at least increase hurricane severity. The same effect occurs with land based storms and tornados. Storms are in general driven by warm, humid surface air.
I just spent a month in St. Croix. I was shocked at how warm the ocean water was. In some places it was as warm as bathwater, 90 to 95 degrees F. I lived on St. Croix from '75 to just before Hugo in â89. Never was the water that warm. It was never more than 80 - 85 degrees.
In the 13 years I lived there we needed our shutters for just three storms, David and Fredrick in â79, then Hugo in â89 which was devastating. The â90s saw a strong hurricane every 2 to 3 years. This yearâs season is scary. Jeanne surprised everyone at how fast it strengthened. One day it was a tropical wave with 30mph winds and no one cared. The next day people were crowding the supermarkets and putting up their shutters, preparing for 60+ mph winds. The storm hit that night. Some got caught unprepared. Thatâs never ever happened before.