Die #BBC hatte ein kleines Anzeigeproblem in Ihrer App. 🤪
(#Windgeschwindigkeiten von 20.000 km/h und #Nachttemperaturen von 404 Grad Celsius)
#HurricanMilton #Wettergrafik #Großbritannien #Sturm #HurrikanKirk
Die #BBC hatte ein kleines Anzeigeproblem in Ihrer App. 🤪
(#Windgeschwindigkeiten von 20.000 km/h und #Nachttemperaturen von 404 Grad Celsius)
#HurricanMilton #Wettergrafik #Großbritannien #Sturm #HurrikanKirk
As we continue to cover the aftermath of Hurricane Milton, we speak with Manuel Ivan Guerrero, a freshman at the University of Central Florida and an organizer with the Sunrise Movement, who says young people are extremely worried about the impact of the climate crisis on their communities. “This just has me more scared for what the future’s going to look like in Florida,” he says. “We’re having these thousand-year storms every three, four years now.” We also speak with David Wallace-Wells, a writer for The New York Times opinion section and a columnist for The New York Times Magazine, where he frequently writes about climate. He says the popularity of conspiracy theories during extreme weather events shows that many people are retreating “into little cocoons of disinformation and paranoia, and that scares me in some ways even more than the weather itself.”
12:30am: fewer gusts, more sustained, less potent wind. Continuous rain, flash flood warning. Have power and internet.
Going to try to sleep a couple of hours.
Central Florida, Greater Orlando area
Brandon is using his big ol' truck to push some debris off the road. I can see how you could make a video game out of this.
Most of the neighbourhoods now seem out of power, power flashes in the distance. Not a soul on the road.
Per NBC2 News Florida: Lee County (Ft. Myers) issues full "shelter in place" warning, says 911 WILL NOT be answered until the storm has gone through.