Feels very reminiscent to the Facebook IPO, which was cut more than cut in half in the weeks after the IPO open day, even though it’s been something like a 40x return since then.
Who is responsible for letting people build homes there, in what is essentially a sand dune, but then not allow any beach erosion deterrents or replenishments. This would happen all up and down the east coast if the same rules or lack of protections were in place.
‼️ HOMES UNDER THREAT: FOX Weather Correspondent @thekatiebyrne reports from Buxton, North Carolina, where a renewed coastal threat is putting homes in danger as rough surf and strong winds persist. This comes after countless homes were destroyed last year.
#Northcarolina#Ocean #Beaches #FOXWeather
We accept that the sea has risen 400 feet since the last ice age. We accept that humans have always lived on coastlines.
But the idea that anything important drowned is treated as fantasy.
Setting aside Sunday showers, rain chances are grim; DC is in a rain hole!
Today is the sixth straight rain-free day in the DC area, and that streak will probably grow to nine before showers return on Sunday. Then another dry stretch is possible — bad news for the region's drought.
Even Sunday's rain may not amount to much. The front passing through is not particularly strong, and models project only about 0.01 to 0.1 inches of rainfall.
The predicted rainfall from a blend of computer models over the next nine days shows a pronounced rain hole over the DC area.
Once Sunday's front exits, high pressure builds back in, and rain chances may not return until sometime between June 14 and 18.
It has been 800 days since Philadelphia experienced 2" or greater rainfall on a single calendar day (March 23, 2024). Typically, this occurs about 2 days per year on average. #PAwx
These huge subsurface anomalies do signal a big event, but the subsurface anomalies do not move to the surface and express themselves as hot water, you have to look at the absolute temperatures not the anomalous temperatures to understand what would happen if that water was brought to the surface. Typically when you see strong subsurface anomalies, those subsurface waters are about the same temperature as the water above them at the surface. We don't need hyperbolic climate variability communication in the same sense that we don't need hyperbolic climate change communication. We need to be honest and understand things accurately.