One strange hurricane
I am holding off on calling it a hoax until I get more info, but this is what happened where I am: NOTHING.
Ok, there was a quarter inch of rain last night. But the biggest thing I noticed this morning was blasting music that was way too loud coming from somewhere. There was a super mild rain. There was never any wind AT ALL. Nothing happened, and I am only 150 miles from where this thing made landfall, and it was supposed to be headed (sort of) in my direction. If this thing was even a normal category 1, there should have been at least 30 - 40 mph winds and there was NOTHING. So I am going to say what people should see in the news, or this thing is FAKE.
Let's use as a reference the hurricane that hit the Yucatan a while back. It had 155 mph winds (not 220, like last night's hurricane was supposed to have) and it stripped every tree completely out of the ground and razed every building for miles and miles. There were lots of photos of perfect devastation. So if, from this hurricane there are not photos of mountains completely stripped bare of all vegetation, no photos of the coastal road completely missing, no photos of erased cities, BLEAK MONOCHROME PHOTOS WHERE EVERYTHING IS ONE COLOR - MUD COLOR - for miles and miles of nothing but mud color razed flat waste, this hurricane was a hoax and that is all there is to it.
I think we are going to get bright tropical colored photos of half ripped palm trees, IF THAT. This last hurricane should have excavated ground like a mining crew if it was real, once it gets past a certain point (and 220 mph winds with gusts up to 300 are well past that point) the earth itself cannot hold up and even the ground is scoured away and there is nothing but mud colored waste because of the dirt ripped out of the ground. If we do not see this, they hoaxed it. And why would they hoax it? To get their "world record storm" for the global warming scam, that is why. Come on now, THE FREAKING LIGHTS ARE ON AND THERE IS A HUGE PARTY SOMEWHERE, not a whisper of wind, NOTHING AT ALL going on here, and even though I was not in the direct path, I was at least in the strong weather path and nothing at all is simply not possible.
DID YOU KNOW: Two days before this hurricane, a gag order was placed on NOAA and other government weather reporting agencies, stating that anyone in those agencies who spoke up against the "official" line would be criminally prosecuted. And why would that be?
So far I am only going off of what happened where I am, but it was so starkly against what was stated to be happening that I am very suspicious.
http://82.221.129.208/ifyouareinamericayouprobablycantseethis2.html
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MEXICO CITY — Early reports in the aftermath of Hurricane Patricia — one of the biggest storms to ever make landfall — were cautiously optimistic: No deaths were reported and no signs of major damage were seen along Mexico's Pacific seaboard.
TV stations in Mexico broadcast news on Hurricane Patricia throughout the night, showing bright red satellite images of the monster storm's landfall on the Pacific Coast, its slow trudge northeast and interviews with residents and officials near the impacted area.
Landslides and flash floods were reported, but the mass evacuations that occurred prior to the hurricane's arrival appeared to have worked in saving lives. There were no deaths initially reported or major infrastructure damage, according to early TV reports. Residents from Colima to Puerto Vallarta heeded the warnings and evacuated out of dangerous areas or stayed indoors.
USA TODAY
Texas hit with heavy rains, heightened flood threat
By 7 a.m. EDT Saturday, Patricia was downgraded to a tropical storm with sustained winds of 50 mph, a sharp drop from the 200 mph winds it produced at its peak, according to the the U.S. National Hurricane Center. By afternoon, it is expected to be only a tropical depression.
Still, emergency crews were awaiting the first light of day to make a broader assessment. The coastal highway from Puerto Vallarta to Barra de Navidad, 140 miles south, was impassable due to mudslides as was the highway from Manzanillo, on the coast, inland to Colima, the capital of the state of Colima.
Aristóteles Sandoval Díaz, governor of the state of Jalisco, which took the brunt of the storm, confirmed that no fatalities had yet been reported, according to local media.
USA TODAY
Mexico responds well to crises, but planning ahead is another matter
Mario Anguiano, governor of the state of Colima, which includes the coastal city of Manzanillo, toured the impacted area just before midnight Friday – nearly six hours after Patricia's landfall – and saw minor damage to buildings and roads but said there were no reported deaths or major damage to infrastructure, such as downed bridges.
"The saving of lives has been exceptional," he said in an interview with Milenio Television.
Puerto Vallarte resident Carlos Guzman told CNN en Español that his neighborhood never lost power during the storm and he was able to stay in touch with friends in different parts of the city. Rain pelted the city relentlessly, but he noticed no downed trees or power lines in his immediate area, Guzman said. He credited widespread evacuations in the popular resort city for the lack of injuries.
"Thank God, we're in perfect condition," he told the newscast.
Mexico’s Tourism Secretary Enrique de la Madrid said major resorts like Puerto Vallarta had had “extraordinary luck” in avoiding damage from the once immensely powerful storm. He said mountains around the city “served as a barrier," according to the Associated Press.
http://www.usatoday.com/story/weather/2015/10/24/hurricane-patricia/74517864/