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Extreme Weather Hits US in Night of Tornadoes
5 dead, many injured, severe weather may continue
Up to 121 tornadoes swept through much of the US over the last 24 hours. At least 5 are dead including 2 children, and many injuries have been reported. Survey teams headed out at dawn to investigate and determine the number of actual tornadoes, high winds, and the width and length of their paths. The tornadoes and large storms touched down in Oklahoma, Kansas, Iowa, Nebraska, and other states. The worst damage occurred throughout Oklahoma.
A fire burns in the Pinaire mobile home park in Wichita, Kan. Photo: Travis Heying, AP The Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Okla. warned of a "high-end, life-threatening event" nearly two days before the storms hit. This was the second time in U.S. history that the center issued a high-risk warning more than 24 hours in advance.
The U.S. tornado season started early this year. Tornadoes have taken the lives of at least 62 people in 2012. 2011 was the deadliest tornado season in a century, and this year looks as though it may continue the pattern.
Forecasters are warning that more tornadoes may touchdown through the country before the day is over.
A man listens for the sound of trapped people at the Pinaire mobile home park in Wichita, Kan. Photo: Travis Heying, AP
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Associated Press: Midwest tornadoes: 5 dead, 29 injured in Okla.
Tornadoes raking communities across the Midwest and Plains left five people dead and at least 29 injured in Oklahoma, damaging a hospital, homes and other buildings as a vast severe weather front plunged eastward Sunday across the nation's midsection.
Oklahoma emergency officials said five people died after a tornado touched down at 12:18 a.m. Sunday in and around the northwest Oklahoma town of Woodward, the high winds damaging homes, toppling trees and downing power lines about 140 miles northwest of Oklahoma City. The brunt of the damage was reported on the west side of the town of about 12,000 and its outskirts, where search teams scoured the rubble for hours for any still trapped or injured.
Storms also were reported in Kansas, Iowa and Nebraska as a wide-ranging storm system lumbered its way across the nation's midsection Saturday and Sunday. Lightning, large hail and heavy downpours accompanied the system, which was so large that it still posed a severe weather threat from Minnnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan in the north to eastern Texas and Louisiana hundreds of miles to the south. [...]
A deputy director in Cain's office, Michelann Ooten, told AP that emergency crews remained very much in search and rescue mode at first light, hours after they began operations in darkness.
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Reuters: At least five dead in Oklahoma as tornadoes pound Plains
The U.S. tornado season started early this year, with twisters already blamed for 62 deaths in 2012 in the Midwest and South, raising concerns that this year would be a repeat of 2011, the deadliest tornado year in nearly a century.
Some 550 people died in tornadoes last year, including 316 killed in an April outbreak in five Southern states, and 161 people in Joplin, Missouri, the following month.
As of early Sunday morning, the National Weather Service website said it had received preliminary reports of 121 tornadoes across four states over the previous 24 hours. Some could be duplicate reports of the same tornado and it usually takes experts at least a day or so to confirm if they were tornadoes.
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71 Comments so far
Show AllIt is not so much stupidity, it is greed.
You would think the sheep of America would go "Hmm, maybe there is something to this Climate Change thing afterall..."
But, nope, you're still as thick as a plank and would rather believe the Corporate propaganda.
And the truth is, I don't see any other countries that burn coal like we do developing geothermal and solar power. Of course ~Anthoney Watts~ is an American, the Heartland Sociwety is American, Exxon is American, the Koch Bros are Americans. GE is American, and we have 535 elected Americans in our congress who are by the most part stupid... I believe the Hey Duck 2000 is an American..... So saying ALL is not far off I suppose.
We live in interesting times.
The record breaking climate/related disaster are never ending now. The term, "climate change," is completely ingrained into the world now. The deniers cannot hold back the recognition of it and I don't believe they'll be able to hold back the legislation to slow it down or reverse it, much longer. It's not financially possible for countries to keep denying it as it gets worse and costs them billions. And, yeah, I realize it's already likely too late.
Where we live if a home is not within 5 miles of a full time fire station, no fire insurande from a brush or forest fire.... Of cours we can't hardly blame them, they aren't in business to lose money.... They're actually a bunch of high roller gamblers who keep the odds in their favor.
1. Fukushima -- world radiation danger.
2. Dramatic increase in Japanese earthquakes near Fukushima confirmed.
3. Magnetic poles drift at increasing speeds.
4. South Atlantic magnetic field anomaly signifies deep magma current flux.
5. Melting poles means less ice weight and more earthquakes.
6. World switches to dirtier fuel promising more emissions, not less.
7. World cannot keep Copenhagen CO2 promise of just a few years ago.
8. Spain is the new Greece, but much larger and more consequential.
9. After 10 years of war in Afghanistan, the U.S. is seriously wounded.
10. Drought, floods, storm intensity, grapefruit hailstones, fires and tornadoes.
Rio +20 is business as usual. Utopian fantasies have been in vogue since Karl Marx, along with the reality of the economic imperative. The media summits are an increasingly absurd travesty of jets, hotels and electronic media conventions with laughable success. Natural collapse supersedes our cultural narrative. Our electronic devices rape, plunder and pillage the earth and it's poor yet allow us to delude ourselves in precise detail. People will upload video of their tears for the earth in Rio while while Fukusima's fuel pool spin like plates on broken sticks threatening the northern hemisphere. Rio is a joke because, if Fukushima's fuel pool spills open we'll be lucky to survive the next few years, let alone manage the next 20. Another post for another subject? Not really.
http://64.250.116.201/downloads/ES_120411_Show_LoFi.mp3
We're inching towards the abyss. They call that progress.
Will we recoil in extremis? There are at this point no signs of such an occurrence.
How many nuclear power plants with their unprotected spent fuel rod ponds are located in Tornado Alley?
like the fountains in the gardens of versailles to demonstrate once and for all the king's power over Nature.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/23/realestate/commercial/23kansas.html?pa...
I mean, how else are they going to get to their slave jobs so they can buy big-macs? You don't expect them to get off their fat lazy asses and walk do you?
We're Americans! We're special. Hell, we're number one!!!
As an American patriot I have but this to say, "Give me gasoline or give me death!"
I was just perusing "A Separate Reality" by Carlos Castaneda. (ca 1968)
The book was in the 'New Age / Occult' section of the bookstore.
Yet Don Juan Matus, the Yaqui "man of knowledge", lived and learned to follow a "path with heart" - and no other. Although Mescalito (peyote) was one of his conduits to truth, and though none other than Aldous Huxley wrote an entire novella about peyote's active ingredient, mescaline, in "The Doors of Perception", reality today, and yesterday, is taken to mean a belief in the fantasy world known as religion.
And so denial of manmade climate change, of the ongoing Sixth Mass Extinction Event, of evolution, of the viability of nuclear power, of the safety in nuclear weapons, and of many other forms of "doublespeak" - masquerade as reality.
Meanwhile - scientists, i.e., modern day "men and women of knowledge", travel their own paths of heart, and their cries of warning fall on deaf ears.
Orwell, in his dissertation on Ghandi, stated that one had effectively to choose between Man and God - or, to put it another way, to choose the path of fantasy and superstition, or the path of knowledge and reality.
Adam dared to follow the path of knowledge - and damned not only himself, but an entire species.
It is now time to grow up - and embrace the only path with heart - the path of knowledge.
Until we do this - we will simply move from disaster to disaster - until we propel ourselves headlong into the abyss.
Manysummits
========Elizabeth - there are many many others. Look up Freeman Dyson, for example, think of Carl Sagan, Rachel Carsen, Sylvia Earle... I could bore you to tears with the scientists of heart that I know of.
I would go so far as to say that Aristotle was right when he stated that "the mark of the philosopher is the sense of wonder."
Because science-speak is couched in often arcane lingo, and because the rules of logic are most assiduously followed, it is easy to falsely characterize the professional scientist as a logical nerd.
Nothing could be further from the truth.
=======readytotransform
Of course scientists are human, and many stray from the path.
But I was struck by a Chinese proverb, which I first saw here on Common Dreams - to wit:
"To know and not to do is the same as not to know."
Since contemplating this in depth, I have revised my thinking, which was the same as yours, that knowledge and wisdom are separate.
As for the heart, I agree - as did the Yaqui "man of knowledge" Don Juan.
Thus knowledge and wisdom are one after all - and part of knowledge and wisdom is knowing that a path without heart is no path at all - at least not one worthy of mankind.
The Yurok on the West Coast have the brush dance ceremony, wherein "being true to oneself, which is the one and only Yurok Law, often means giving your best to someone in need."
We are not a fallen species - we are a work in evolutionary development. Grandparents and Diamond's "Great Leap Forward" apparently happened roughly simultaneously - pause for thought!
Today, we are far behind the technological eightball. Our thinking and cultures have not caught up - but they can - and if we are to survive - they must.
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