Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
September 2, 2016
Bad flooding along banks of Steinhatchee River. Boats washed onto roads. Lots of debris. Hurricane #Hermine. pic.twitter.com/PVEJBixMc1
— Vic Micolucci – WJXT (@WJXTvic) September 2, 2016
Hurricane season wouldn’t be so much of a problem if it wasn’t for the behavior of non-Whites during crisis situations.
They immediately revert to full-feral mode. That was the entire issue with Katrina.
Storm surge is most damaging part of a hurricane or tropical storm, says @noaaocean https://t.co/s5YsnFg5OJ #Hermine pic.twitter.com/SzB2r4Rccv
— UN Climate Action (@UNFCCC) September 2, 2016
This situation in Florida is likely to be pretty rough.
RT:
Hermine, a Category 1 hurricane, rocked Florida early Friday, bringing winds of 130kph and up to 12cm of rain in some areas.
Some 70,000 households in Tallahassee, the state capital, were left without power, Reuters reported, adding that thousands more households across the state were affected, too.
“It is a mess…we have high water in numerous places,” Virgil Sandlin, the police chief in Cedar Key told the Weather Channel. “I was here in 1985 for Hurricane Elena and I don’t recall anything this bad.”
The National Hurricane Center warned that the storms may cause some 3 meters of flooding in some areas. The center also issued a tornado warning and predicted that the storm will dump 51cm of rain in some parts of the state.
“Hurricane Hermine is strengthening fast and it will impact the majority of our state,” Florida Governor Rick Scott said. He told reported that the storm “is life-threatening.”
“You can rebuild a home, you can rebuild property, you cannot rebuild a life,” Scott said. “We are going to see a lot of flooding.”
Towns and cities are getting ready for the storm, preparing shelters and drinking water.
See the latest satellite imagery for #Hermine at https://t.co/9K5eNW1Tds pic.twitter.com/HdihcKWBii
— NWS (@NWS) September 1, 2016
Good morning,#Hermine. Hurricane is weakening, likely to drop back to Tropical Storm status later this AM. #FCNstorm pic.twitter.com/p9E6W9giwb
— Lauren Rautenkranz (@WeatherLauren) September 2, 2016
Any Stormers in Florida should give reports in the comments below.