Posted on 05/28/2019 11:05:15 AM PDT by Kaslin
RUSH: Just a couple things here before we go to the break. At last count, five million people without power in Ohio. Fifty-one tornadoes I saw on the Drudge Report. Nearly half of the population of Ohio is without power early today, including a large and dangerous tornado that was northwest of Dayton. The destruction pictures are devastating. Theyre shocking.
This is not that difficult to relate to if youve been through any kind of a disaster where there has been significant damage to your home or dwelling. It is unnerving. It is disruptive like nothing else is. And in a wide area of devastation like this where there is nowhere else to go, everybody pretty much in the neighborhood has suffered the same thing.

Our Hearts Go Out to the People of Ohio
May 28, 2019
RUSH: Just a couple things here before we go to the break. At last count, five million people without power in Ohio. Fifty-one tornadoes I saw on the Drudge Report. Nearly half of the population of Ohio is without power early today, including a large and dangerous tornado that was northwest of Dayton. The destruction pictures are devastating. Theyre shocking.
This is not that difficult to relate to if youve been through any kind of a disaster where there has been significant damage to your home or dwelling. It is unnerving. It is disruptive like nothing else is. And in a wide area of devastation like this where there is nowhere else to go, everybody pretty much in the neighborhood has suffered the same thing.
I mean, here your home, your dwelling, maybe your biggest investment and everything in it that constitutes the life you and your family have lived is just gone, ripped to sleds. Man, its tough to see, and imagining recovering from it is depressing. It just overwhelms.
You know, with hurricanes, we live in Hurricane Alley here, a portion of it. At least you have days warning that a hurricanes coming and make plans to either ride it out, split the scene or what have you. Tornadoes oftentimes you dont get enough warning, and even if you do get some, its not enough to really get out of the way. You can outrun them, but youd have to stay on the ground to be able to do that. A tornado is just devastating as it can be and our hearts go out to everybody in Ohio and throughout the other states that have had this happen.
Now, as is predictable as the sun coming up in the morning, these tornadoes are being blamed on climate change. Yes indeed, global warming and climate change made to order. There are actually people out there that are happy with devastation like this because it allows them in their warped minds to advance their warped political agenda.
But I have a little paper here that was submitted to the Fox website from the official climatologist here at the EIB Network, Dr. Roy Spencer, who has weighed in on this. And his paper is devoted to the premise, why are there so many tornadoes this year? And his answer is cold air, not warm air. You cannot have massive squall lines, thunderstorms like this without a lot of cold air being met by warm air. Warm air alone cannot do this.

So things warming up, the planet heating up, so forth, which is I dont even like saying that because it tends to accept the premise. The climate may be warming and heating up, but its not being caused by man and carbon dioxide. But with the tornadoes fresh in everybodys mind, Dr. Spencer says its useful to examine exactly why climate change, global warming has produced fewer, not more of these events. And the simple answer is that tornado formation requires unusually cool air. Very few thunderstorms produce tornadoes. In the hot and humid tropics, they are virtually unheard of.
We dont get that many tornadoes down here. Were right smack we get waterspouts out there over the ocean. We dont have a whole lot of tornadoes. We get some, but none like they get in the Midwest: Oklahoma, Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, because you have to have a large mass of cold air, which kind of thwarts the entire premise, climate change and all that.
A sad fact of life in my birthplace. We were good for about 3 close calls a year the last time I lived there.
Ping :...(
Prayers.
How horrible.
This has been a very difficult spring for the midsection of our country.
Smokin’ Judas!
...meanwhile Oklahoma and Arkansas are having record flooding; my hometown of Ft. Smith is almost isolated, bridges closed, more rain expected tomorrow...
Weatherwise, 2019 has sucked here in Iowa. The absolutely brutal low temps earlier, late snowstorms followed by seemingly endless rains that don't allow anything to dry out or rivers to go down...
No damage here, fifty miles north of Dayton.
It’s been horrible. We watch the weather channel often, One of the facts that was mentioned was that there were somewhere around 100 more tornados this spring than average. That’s shocking.
I love Rush, but some of the numbers have been wildly exaggerated.
At it’s peak, there were about 60,000 without power.
The Dayton area tornado was an EF3. About 60 total injuries, most of them mild. Two people in the ICU at a local hospital.
Up in Celina, there was one fatality where an elderly man died when the tornado hurled a parked car into his home. I haven’t heard yet how that tornado has been classified.
I have no idea where the 51 total tornados came from, the actual figure is much lower than that.
The damage to businesses is as extensive as it is to homes. Several schools were also damaged, including one new high school.
The 51 was the total nationwide during yesterday’s outbreak.
We have tje same problem in Kansas, too. I planted tomatoes, but I’m worried about early blight.
I havent planted squash and mellons out of concern of a cold summer and they may not ripen properly..
Hazardous Weather Outlook
National Weather Service Wichita KS
259 PM CDT Tue May 28 2019
KSZ032-033-047>053-067>072-082-083-091>096-098>100-292000-
Russell-Lincoln-Barton-Ellsworth-Saline-Rice-McPherson-Marion-Chase-
Reno-Harvey-Butler-Greenwood-Woodson-Allen-Kingman-Sedgwick-Harper-
Sumner-Cowley-Elk-Wilson-Neosho-Chautauqua-Montgomery-Labette-
259 PM CDT Tue May 28 2019
This hazardous weather outlook is for portions of Central Kansas,
South Central Kansas and Southeast Kansas.
.DAY ONE...This Afternoon and Tonight
Severe storms capable of producing very large hail up to tennis
ball size, damaging wind gusts and a tornado or two are possible
late this afternoon and evening. The greatest risk will be from the
Flint Hills westward across central and south central Kansas.
Widespread river flooding, some of which is significant continues
across much of the region. Be prepared for highway closures,
especially across southeast Kansas. See latest river flood warnings
for more details.
Like Superstorm Sandy - what made it so strong and huge despite being remnants as a tropical depression, was hitting a *cold* front.
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