Build Noah's Ark!!!!

Oh geee.. not another... Oh please, I pray God.. I beg pretty please save all people popluation and doesn't want see them die for no reason due flood or other kinds happending.... *sigh*...

If I'm suppose I would jump into the noah ark ship and saved lives and more listen to God!
 
DeafSCUBA98 said:
japan is having hurricane right now...

by the way.. how can forecasters be right that the tropical storm maria won't become a hurricane? what's the chance they're right or wrong?

TS Maria did become a hurricane, but she's also not going to affect anybody in the United States. Please everybody stop worrying about Hurricane Maria. It's not worth getting upset about.

Hurricanes also happen in the Far East. It's a part of nature, guys. Those people who live in tropical climates see these storms. It's apart of life, and we deal with it.
 
Miss*Pinocchio said:
i think this maybe the end of the world :-o

No, it's not. Hurricanes happen. Tornados happen. Earthquakes happen. All these things are apart of nature and happen. It doesn't mean that the end of the world is near.
 
There is Hurricane Nate is coming, I don't know if that is Hurricane or Tropical Storm. :dunno:
 
Miss*Pinocchio said:
i think this maybe the end of the world :-o

How old are you? Please remember your age from my asking. In future, you ask yourself: Is this end of the world. The answer is either killed in accident or died from your long aging period.
 
Act my age?

Well frankly I ain't the dummiest person in USA...
I mean come on... everybody knew New Orleans was not safe
to live on... and they ignored that...
And oh no Hurricane flooded the place and many people killed.

People talked badly about Memphis being boring, and think got rednecks and all....
But look at Florida, California, and other towns...

Would you rather live in Memphis than New Orleans, Los Angeles, and New York City?
 
I still think building a Noah's Ark is a good idea for New Orleans....
Since water is running over levees. :shock:
 
This is not new since 1978's.

Many expert-scientists have tried to warn every president and senators that the weather are affected by creating harmful such as heat waves, hurricanes, torando, and etc. The real problem is that in South American, we know that hundreds of thousands of jungles were destroyed by man-made lumbers. Idiots and uneducated men in South Americans have no respect our Earth environment. That's where it causes to change the weather in upper sphere (North America, Europe, etc) In other words, the Earth needs a balance between upper and lower spheres. In fact, auto exhausts and free-ons (old frigerators) are also involved to change the weather, too.

For oil, it is very difficult for me to explain it to you. We do not need a fossil for our heat homes. I learned about it a couple of years ago. This fossil is purpose for our Earth to around its axis in order to balance for its strength such to prevent an earthquick, tide-waves, etc. The more we drain out of the oil and less oil in the underground that create problems. We still have plenty of oil in our Earth. (Another issue - think about our earth's shape - it is not circle - it's nearly oval shape.)

In other words, our blood circulation run our body, and the weight is normal like 140 lbs. If our body died or relax our body, then our weight become heavier like 170 lbs. It is similar idea for our Earth's oil to be stable. It is hard for me to think of how we could deal with our heating if we don't use the oil. Something that God gave us to provide solar energy, and it did not bring up about the oil. I feel that we are the fleas that drain our Earth's oil blood. Isn't that interesting?
 
Billion of people use oil, even in the middle east, why they don't have hurricane and tornado?
 
Miss*Pinocchio said:
Billion of people use oil, even in the middle east, why they don't have hurricane and tornado?

Indeed, they have heat waves and windstorms. Our soliders were stuck in the windstorm with sands in the air that they cannot see and even worst for them to breathe.

I think the middle east used to be jungles hundreds of years ago. They would have used solar powers and windpowers instead of oil because it is a perfect location. It is less harm to human. Yesterday, I stopped at a Firestone store for changing my truck's oil. A 35-years old man mechanic looks sick from coughing awhile working on my truck. I know him for 3 years working at the garage. A motor oil isn't good for us because it is considered to be a least toxic. How about if we could make a salad with delicious motor oil for our lunch? :naughty: :barf:
 
Heavy Rains Prompt Widespread Hawaii Flooding

:shock:
Farmers Fear Smaller Harvest

POSTED: 10:15 am EST February 22, 2006
UPDATED: 10:45 am EST February 22, 2006

HONOLULU -- The National Weather Service placed Kauai, Oahu and Molokai under several weather alerts on Tuesday as heavy rains pounded the area.

Heavy rains flooded homes and farms on Kauai on Monday and shut down the only road into and out of Hanalei.

People who live in Hanalei said it's the worst flooding they've seen there in more than five years. The wettest spot on the island got about 18 inches of rain in a 24-hour period.

Hanalei Valley was covered with floodwaters. There were only a few spots where some of the taro grown there was still visible.

At mid-afternoon on Tuesday, the 24-hour rainfall total for Hanalei River was 8 inches and Mount Waialeale above it, the wettest spot in the world, recorded more than 18 inches of rain in the last day.

Hanalei taro farmers said the floods will stunt their crops, meaning a smaller harvest.

"It's going to go down -- the yield. As far as how much, I cannot say. I cannot say how much it's going to affect the market; the supply of taro for poi," farmer Rodney Haraguchi said.

"After a flood, maybe a few days later, you look at the leaves. They look like they're all burned because they don't have any oxygen. They're underwater. They're drowning," farmer Christine Kobayashi said.

Police blocked access to the Hanalei Bridge because the highway flooded nearby.

"(That) strands all of the Hanalei community, about 4,500 people up in that community, that rely on the one roadway to come out of there," said Mark Marshall of the Kauai Civil Defense.

Hanalei Elementary School never opened on Tuesday. Up the road, traffic on Kalihiwai Bridge was reduced to one lane.

"Driving through Kalihiwai was particularly treacherous. They have landslides and boulders on the road," Princeville resident Jaana Makipaa said.

A gushing waterfall occasionally brought down big pieces of debris just a few feet away from traffic. Police closed the lane closest to the waterfall.

On the south side of the island, two or three homes were flooded near Koloa, when a dike broke along Waikumu Stream. Civil Defense officials said the families did not evacuate.
 
Well, it's been raining like pitchforks (is that a phrase?) today; much more and I'll be needing something......
 
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