Sentences with phrase «what about hurricanes»

Not exact matches

Adding a million users every day in the week that Hurricane Harvey was active and still at the top of the charts, Moore says that the company has learned a great deal about what is required to support rapid growth, especially in urgent situations.
Experts say it depends on several factors, including the cost and components of your trip, where you live and where you're headed, and what potential problems you're worried about (like that «extremely active» hurricane season).
American Airlines CEO Doug Parker speaks with CNBC's Phil LeBeau about the company's outlook and what they are doing in Puerto Rico following the devastation from Hurricane Maria.
(For more on what we know about climate change and this year's hurricanes, read Dave Roberts's piece at Vox.)
She's been on phone calls with partners in Puerto Rico twice a day since the hurricane hit checking in with them and has begun to hear worry about what will happen when portable water and food runs out.
What does Dave Barry think about Hurricane Irma?
What I have learned through AHV has me very concerned about the well being of Nassau residents if we were to be hit with a Hurricane similar to Harvey, Irma, Jose, or Maria.
that's why I said oldest some bible stories tens if not hundreds of thousands of years old.I can tell you about hurricanes that struck here years before I was born because of older families telling what happened.thank God or who ever you want for weather satellites I do.
Oh, the Calvinists could make perfect sense of it all with a wave of a hand and a swift, confident explanation about how Zarmina had been born in sin and likely predestined to spend eternity in hell to the glory of an angry God (they called her a «vessel of destruction»); about how I should just be thankful to be spared the same fate since it's what I deserve anyway; about how the Asian tsunami was just another one of God's temper tantrums sent to remind us all of His rage at our sin; about how I need not worry because «there is not one maverick molecule in the universe» so every hurricane, every earthquake, every war, every execution, every transaction in the slave trade, every rape of a child is part of God's sovereign plan, even God's idea; about how my objections to this paradigm represented unrepentant pride and a capitulation to humanism that placed too much inherent value on my fellow human beings; about how my intuitive sense of love and morality and right and wrong is so corrupted by my sin nature I can not trust it.
But what about all the devout Christians that will suffer because of the exact same hurricane and earthquake?
I agree with the point of your article, BUT your reference to a «conditional covenant» is the same reasoning that leads to protesters at soldiers» funerals and claims that Hurricane Katrina is an act of God's wrath (although I don't think there was agreement on what God was mad about).
Aten wrote for CT about what Christians have learned since Hurricane Katrina about the church's role in disaster relief, and theologian W. David O. Taylor — whose family evacuated during Harvey — wrestled with how to cope when Jesus doesn't calm the storm.
Other than calling a hurricane a blessing, [which of course is immediately picked up as the headline] what is objectionable about what Beck is saying?
It is not likely that Satan can control the weather, or cause earthquakes, hurricanes, and famines, but Satan certainly knows more about the conditions and requirements for such natural disasters to occur, and does what he can to tempt mankind and encourage natural forces toward these destructive storms and natural disasters that are often unleashed upon us.
What I find most entertaining about this is that this is only the first major hurricane of the season, and already people are bringing the question of faith into this equation.
I saw quite a few people asking for recommendations about what vegan items to stock their hurricane emergency kits with so I want to share my list of what we bought to prepare.
It is what he enjoys most about his job, so it is only natural that one of his favorite moments was when the hotel started bringing the employees back after the devastation of Hurricane Katrina.
To be at Wrigley in the summer of 2005 listening to Buffett and the Coral Reefers cover Steve Goodman's City of New Orleans just days after Hurricane Katrina came ashore at Tammany Parish is to understand exactly what he is talking about.
Children might still be confused about what exactly a hurricane is.
Kids might be confused about what a hurricane is, so use simple age - appropriate descriptions of what to expect if one is coming your way.
«He's still repeating the same reprehensible lies about what happened in Sandy [and] called on Congress Wednesday morning to work fast on a bill to aid Texas after Hurricane Harvey.»
What he is now doing is the equivalent of ripping out the foundations of the house just as the hurricane is about to hit.»
... in an election year that has been dominated by environmental issues like fracking, the ongoing recovery from Hurricane Sandy, and what to do about climate change, the Green Party candidate for Governor, Howie Hawkins, is resolutely carrying his message across the state....
And in an election year that has been dominated by environmental issues like fracking, the ongoing recovery from Hurricane Sandy, and what to do about climate change, the Green Party candidate for Governor, Howie Hawkins, is resolutely carrying his message across the state.
«It's amazing what you can learn about how to be upfront in a disaster after a cold, snowy one in December,» said top Democratic consultant Hank Sheinkopf of the city's response to Hurricane Irene.
A federal grand jury has slapped Queens Rep. Gregory Meeks with a subpoena demanding records about his tax - exempt charities and what happened to their money — including one that stiffed Hurricane Katrina victims, law - enforcement sources revealed yesterday.
Meeks has attracted scrutiny since a federal probe was launched over questions — first raised by The Post — about what became of money collected by a charity that he set up to help Hurricane Katrina victims.
Here's Bernadette Woods Placky on what we know about climate change and hurricanes.
Scientists like Emanuel prefer to speak about climate - related factors that can worsen hurricanes, like Harvey, in specific ways — and about the ways in which certain attributes of Harvey seem consistent with what to expect, more generally, in a warming climate, even if they can't be causally attributed to it.
This hurricane has really gotten to me because I see people who has lost everything and just thinking about what they're going through makes my eyes fill up with tears.
Enough about this hurricane and my random ramblings, lets to what I'm loving this week!
What a wild year with it being the return of Star Wars with Phantom Menance, Kubrick's final film Eyes Wide Shut, Fight Club, Magnolia, All About My Mother, Being John Malkovich, The Hurricane, Girl, Interrupted, Man on The Moon, Boys Don't Cr, Election, and THE MATRIX!
Since this is a follow - up to the 2016 camp classic, Hurricane Bianca, the clown queen now knows a thing or two about what it takes to make a good sequel.
What made me stop and think about recycling at the conference was that last year one of my students proposed we do a can and bottle drive to help get food and water for Hurricane Katrina survivors.
Some schools seemed normal, until he asked about what had happened and heard about how troops of volunteers came together and worked weeks to repair what Hurricane Maria had damaged.
What do Mary and John teach their children about the role of religion, from the time they are young (saying an «Angel of God» during the 1960 hurricane) to the novel's closing scene?
Anyway, if anybody has any genius ideas about what I should call this thing about a wolf shifter and a demi - goddess who hook up to rescue their loved ones from a big baddie who plans to sacrifice them to gain crazy cosmic power and shift the balance of the universe, all before a hurricane flattens New Orleans — again — feel free to offer them up in comments.
Gov. Greg Abbott is opening up about what it was like leading the state after Hurricane Harvey devastated much of the Gulf Coast.
If a hurricane blows through Lake County, Debbie Elliott wants to make sure people don't forget about Fido or Tabby.Elliott, Leesburg's animal control officer since 1985, has been at the forefront of efforts in Florida to draft guidelines for what to do with pets in an emergency.Concern about the plight of pets during evacuations heightened after many animals were killed, injured, or lost in South Florida during Hurricane Andrewhurricane blows through Lake County, Debbie Elliott wants to make sure people don't forget about Fido or Tabby.Elliott, Leesburg's animal control officer since 1985, has been at the forefront of efforts in Florida to draft guidelines for what to do with pets in an emergency.Concern about the plight of pets during evacuations heightened after many animals were killed, injured, or lost in South Florida during Hurricane AndrewHurricane Andrew in 1992.
With Hurricane Harvey and Irma still a large part of the conversation, it should also be talked about what should be done with community cats.
What about the devastating effects of the three hurricanes that hit the Florida coast within six weeks?
(PS: I am sorry about what you went through with your cat due to the hurricane, I hope you are doing OK).
It's one of my favorite spas and the fact that it had been closed since Hurricane Irma blew through back in September meant that when my daughter - in - law and I were talking about what spa to go to, we couldn't go... continue reading...
As Hurricane Irma approaches the U.S., here's what you need to know about one of the strongest storms to hit the Atlantic ocean.
What begins as a traditional slideshow lecture about Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath, turns into a storytelling event, illustrated by photographs and video testimonies by New Orleans residents.
When I asked here at RC about it, someone who seemed to know what he was talking about said that indeed hail was not expected during hurricanes.
Striking how this blog talks about polar bears, hurricanes, melting glaciers, melting sea ice, disappearing frogs, intelligence estimates, the snows of Kilimanjaro, drought, famine, insect infestations, too much rain, lack of rain, and who knows what else, and links it all to AGW.
For hurricanes, then, you'd want to ask what the sea surface temperature, subsurface ocean heat content, and atmospheric water vapor content would have been if, say, fossil fuel use had been eliminated 100 years ago, and atmospheric CO2 remained at about 300 ppm.
It's great to see the Union of Concerned Scientists offering nonpartisan criticism of elected officials for distorting — in both directions — what's known about the role of human - driven global warming on several fronts, from tornado ferocity to hurricane losses.
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