Hurricane Ian: One for the history books



Four days after Hurricane Ian made landfall in Florida, and then again in South Carolina on Friday, there are dozens dead, millions without power, and billions in damage. Correspondent Kris van Cleave reports on the aftermath of the catastrophic storm.
#hurricaneian #florida #hurricane

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39 thoughts on “Hurricane Ian: One for the history books”

  1. Meanwhile, after this storm every Republican member of the House and Senate, from Florida, voted against FEMA funds going to Florida, except for Marco Rubio. Marco didn't bother to show up.
    Where is Marco?

    Reply
  2. you move to Florida you expect this no one helps us when we hav tornados here and when f 4 hit us here we survived it and built from there sorry about thier lives and loss but you r told never to by water even people by lake Michigan who buys the lake surge of water is terrible

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  3. Florida is already fudging the numbers with the death toll. A day ago, we reached over a hundred dead. Since last night, the number is going back down. Just like with Covid, the insane Florida officials will do everything they can to cover up their horrible incompetencies.

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  4. I hate the way broadcasters, media and politicians treat things like this as little more than some drama; seemingly void of any understanding of the cost in lives and the trauma to the souls who endured this.

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  5. If you think that the path of this was natural…you weren't paying attention.
    And it just happened to take out a huge fertilizer facility. And citrus crops.
    War on our food supply.

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  6. Unfortunately, storms are expected to get worse in the next 30-50 years because Florida is listed as the number one worst state to live in in the future.

    Prayers for those who lost lives & property 🙏🏼

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  7. Who does DeSantis think is going to rebuild Florida? It will be illegal Latin American workers who should pack up and leave Florida as per what DeSantis wants. Leave those right wingers to fend for themselves. Let's see how many Anglos and Black people are willing to work in the heat and humidity to rebuild Florida.

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  8. But where do you go to escape natural disasters? Everywhere seems to be under threat for something – fires, tornadoes, flooding, extreme winters and even volcanoes. Where do you find a peaceful place to live these days?

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  9. As sea levels rise and the intensity and frequency of weather is magnified by anthropological climate warming building back within 50 km of coast is ludicrous. FEMA and flood insurance will quickly be bankrupt as the oceans can dish out way more than man can resist. Geraldo Rivera did a documentary on this with his own beachfront house showing the absolute folly of beach housing and the insurance black hole. Not to mention the East coast WILL meet it's first 50 meter tsunami and the fossil evidence is there.

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  10. I’m in Fort Myers. Still no power. It’s so sad, everyone here is devastated, you see the sadness in people’s face. Even the people who didn’t lose their homes or a loved one is mourning. We are all mourning!

    We will never be The same!

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  11. Regarding the guy that lives (sorry, lived) on his boat at 3:50, I don't understand his predicament. The storm was forecast for weeks beforehand. The strength, path, and potential destructiveness was known by everyone well in advance. If you live in something that moves, why leave it where the storm can destroy it? I would have started up the motor and proceeded north or south until the danger was past. Perhaps there were factors involved of which I am unaware, but if I had the chance to move my home away from the storm, I certainly would have entertained the idea.

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  12. 1st of all, my condolences to all victims ya 🙁
    Although my country is typhoon free , Malaysia is near the equator but, our yearly monsoon season brought floods & casualties too but, in smaller scale than lan except last Nov 2021 when ST Rai hit southern Phillipines, dumping non-stop drizzling rain that lasted 3 days.As a result, massive flooding in 13 states since 1971! 🙁
    many property & lives lost too.
    Our tragedy stem from massive deforestation that brought about big debris flow at the highlands & accumulated silt that made our rivers so shallow.
    Fortunately, we still have our precious mangroves forests along our rivers & coastlines to shield us against powerful wind of a cat 5 ST like Rai & recently, ST Noru that only hit us around 3am-4am with minor rainfall & wind.Only Klang lowland was flooded but, only about heel high.

    My point is : Less development in coastal areas will preserve mangroves forests to withstand the most destructive storms ya.
    Stop deforestation, more greening of the Earth to stabilize Earth's climate.
    Malaysia is also bad in CO2 emissions but, after Rai , we learnt our lesson well.

    We are fighting for a new goverment in the next General Election for a change.

    Good luck to us all. We will bounce back after this disaster.God's willing.
    lnsha-Allah.

    Reply

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