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re: VIDEO: Large tornado confirmed in Lower Ninth Ward

Posted on 3/23/22 at 7:04 am to
Posted by MBclass83
Member since Oct 2010
10124 posts
Posted on 3/23/22 at 7:04 am to
So is this a hate crime?
Posted by MorbidTheClown
Baton Rouge
Member since Jan 2015
73821 posts
Posted on 3/23/22 at 7:05 am to
completely removed the roof from my niece's house. Did the same for one of my friends. both live in Arabi.
Posted by Icansee4miles
Trolling the Tickfaw
Member since Jan 2007
31885 posts
Posted on 3/23/22 at 7:07 am to
Remember when all the dinosaurs were killed off by coal fired power plants?

When I was growing up, all the gloom and doom was that we were about to enter another ice age. There’s a reason the enviros quit with their global warming shrills and switched to climate change. They will be right, the climate WILL change. It has since the Earth was formed. Long before anthropogenic contributions were present.
Posted by Swagga
504
Member since Dec 2009
18786 posts
Posted on 3/23/22 at 7:09 am to
quote:

The constant severe weather in NOLA is becoming almost as off putting as the high crime. Not sure how much longer I can take living in the area.




The weather doesn’t bother me here, as there’s really nowhere you can go to avoid severe weather. At least tornadoes here are rare. They bother me more than hurricanes.
This post was edited on 3/23/22 at 7:10 am
Posted by LSUfan4444
Member since Mar 2004
56646 posts
Posted on 3/23/22 at 7:12 am to
Does anyone have a good image of the suspected path?
Posted by Naked Bootleg
Premium Plus® Member
Member since Jul 2021
3288 posts
Posted on 3/23/22 at 7:14 am to
Jesus.

Was there a tornado watch in effect? Did y’all have any warning on this?
Posted by LSU Coyote
Member since Sep 2007
56294 posts
Posted on 3/23/22 at 7:16 am to
Yes, stout in the video page, page 4

This post was edited on 3/23/22 at 7:18 am
Posted by MrWhipple
West of the Mississippi
Member since Jun 2016
1138 posts
Posted on 3/23/22 at 7:18 am to
See page 4 for path
Posted by alterego55
baton rouge
Member since Apr 2016
1524 posts
Posted on 3/23/22 at 7:20 am to
i saw the video last night on twitter . so sad. glad you ok owl
This post was edited on 3/23/22 at 7:22 am
Posted by LSUFanHouston
NOLA
Member since Jul 2009
40247 posts
Posted on 3/23/22 at 7:32 am to
quote:

Hear from a good friend source there's more fatalities to report later this morning


sadly that would not be a surprise. That area has a number of elderly residents. Also, some people are saying they heard the classic train sound, but others are saying they did not. Seemed to really pop up fast.
Posted by LSUFanHouston
NOLA
Member since Jul 2009
40247 posts
Posted on 3/23/22 at 7:34 am to
quote:

Was there a tornado watch in effect? Did y’all have any warning on this?


There was, and a warning issued about 11 min before it hit Arabi.

Seems like a lot of people did not get the warning / know it was coming.
Posted by deltaland
Member since Mar 2011
100575 posts
Posted on 3/23/22 at 7:34 am to
Tornadoes and hurricanes have ravaged the southeast for decades.

It only seems worse because the southeast and the coasts the past 20 years have exploded in population and development so that means it’s more likely there is damage and fatalities.
Posted by Strannix
C.S.A.
Member since Dec 2012
52914 posts
Posted on 3/23/22 at 7:35 am to
quote:

Tornadoes and hurricanes have ravaged the southeast for decades.


For thousands of years
Posted by LSUFanHouston
NOLA
Member since Jul 2009
40247 posts
Posted on 3/23/22 at 7:36 am to
quote:

I would like to hear a serious, non-partisan debate about the role a warming planet plays in the rise in severe storms in this region.



Changing climate patters absolutely change weather patterns.

Now, the thing is... is man 1) causing these changes and 2) able to do anything about it, other than react and adjust?

I mean not too far from here, apparently thousands of years ago there were pyramids in the middle of the Chandelieur Sound, which was supposedly land.
Posted by OysterPoBoy
City of St. George
Member since Jul 2013
43136 posts
Posted on 3/23/22 at 7:51 am to
quote:

Was anyone else noticing the little circles she kept making with her finger


Gets me every time.
Posted by Tarps99
Lafourche Parish
Member since Apr 2017
11601 posts
Posted on 3/23/22 at 7:54 am to
quote:

Margaret Orr pretty much had an orgasm live on WWL. This is obviously the most excitement she has had in a while.


WDSU Live Tornado Video

Is this the clip?
This post was edited on 3/23/22 at 7:59 am
Posted by Crisprdestroyer
Member since Sep 2017
712 posts
Posted on 3/23/22 at 7:56 am to
Exactly but we lump anything associated with climate change in the same boat. Prevention of and resiliency to climate change should not be bound together. We should always be doing the later. We dont cause to do the second then people think you are agreeing that the first should be done also.
Posted by llfshoals
Member since Nov 2010
20571 posts
Posted on 3/23/22 at 8:07 am to
quote:

Now, the thing is... is man 1) causing these changes and 2) able to do anything about it, other than react and adjust?
The biggest problem as I see it is both sides of the argument are using scientific data.

The fear mongers focus all their attention on a micro fraction of the data which supports their position. Because the government funds this approach (because governments gain power from fear) you see them only focus on this infinitesimal slice of the data.

When you broaden the scope of the time frame their arguments fall apart.

Most proponents of “climate change” couldn’t tell you we’re in a cool phase and at some point the planet will significantly warm up and there’s not a solitary thing man can do to prevent it.
Posted by BottomlandBrew
Member since Aug 2010
29298 posts
Posted on 3/23/22 at 8:07 am to
quote:

Tornadoes and hurricanes have ravaged the southeast for decades.

It only seems worse because the southeast and the coasts the past 20 years have exploded in population and development so that means it’s more likely there is damage and fatalities.


Statistically, tornadoes are occurring more frequently in the south. LINK

quote:

Both tornado reports and environments indicate significant decreasing trends in frequency over portions of Texas, Oklahoma, and northeast Colorado. Agreement in the sign of the Theil-Sen slope is also noted for significant increasing trends in portions of Mississippi, Alabama, Arkansas, Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, Tennessee, and Kentucky.
Posted by Jake88
Member since Apr 2005
78157 posts
Posted on 3/23/22 at 8:22 am to
I've read that Tornado Alley has shifted east.

How much of the increase in numbers is due to better detection of rotation now compared to 30 years ago?
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