Oct 9, 2024
Hurricane Milton BARRELS Toward Florida
Hurricane Milton will make landfall on Florida’s Gulf Coast and is expected to cause widespread destruction and human suffering.
- 4 minutes
You are looking at footage that was sent
to me by family members in Florida.
The hurricane.
Hurricane Milton, which has already been,
downgraded a bit to a hurricane.
Three, category three hurricane,
I should say, with 125 mile per hour winds
[00:00:16]
is nowhere near
where my family lives in Florida.
But as you can see,
there were already major gusts of wind.
There was already rain.
Milton, as we do this video right now
as I speak to you at this moment,
has not made landfall yet.
[00:00:31]
However, I am happy to report that it
does appear that individuals living
in the evacuation zone, for the most part,
have decided to listen to the warnings,
listen to the advice to evacuate,
and they have evacuated to shelters
or just left town entirely.
[00:00:49]
You had local police departments
going door to door, urging
Florida residents in areas in Tampa,
Orlando and Fort Myers to evacuate just
to ensure that people were fully aware
of just how dangerous this category is.
[00:01:05]
And look, I say that it was
a downgraded to a category three.
But, you know, these hurricanes tend to be
pretty unpredictable, and a category three
hurricane is still pretty devastating.
And so, you know, as of this morning,
there were already 1700 gas stations
[00:01:22]
that had run out of gas.
You know, people seem pretty terrified.
But again, it is good news
that they are listening to the warnings.
So a few more details about this.
So as I mentioned, you know,
there are evacuation zones in areas
[00:01:38]
of Tampa, Orlando, Fort Myers, and it's
because of the fact that they are likely
to experience a 15 foot, storm surge.
If you're living in a single story home
or if you're living in, you know,
[00:01:55]
a trailer, for instance,
you're not going to survive.
I mean, it's going to be devastating,
and it's unlikely that someone living
in those conditions are going to survive
a 15 foot storm surge.
So if you are watching this and for
whatever reason, you haven't evacuated
[00:02:11]
at this point, the best thing to do,
according to the authorities in Florida,
is to shelter in place.
It's already too late to evacuate
And unfortunately for those who have
not evacuated once the storm hits.
Emergency workers cannot get to you.
[00:02:27]
Which is why, you know,
these hurricanes are serious.
And when you're told that you should
evacuate, please listen to that advice.
And so that's the majority
of news I have on that issue.
Obviously after it, you know, touches land
and we get a better idea of the kind
[00:02:45]
of damage that Hurricane Milton does.
I will report back in
and give you guys more details on that.
And I just want to remind you.
Hurricane Helene already, you know,
battered a certain parts of Florida
and they were, you know,
engaging in cleanup efforts.
And now, boom,
they're hit with another hurricane.
[00:03:02]
And in regard to Fort Myers in particular,
remember just two years ago, Hurricane
Ian pretty much destroyed Fort Myers,
which is, you know,
a small little beach town that, like,
really has a warm place in my heart.
It's where, you know, me and family, where
I go to to spend some time with family
[00:03:21]
in Florida, you know, just for a few days.
And it's just a very great community
with wonderful people.
And I hate that they're being, you know,
victimized
with a hurricane like this again.
But as we've talked about on the show,
again and again and again,
this is the new normal, right?
I mean, you have waters that have warmed,
which fuels serves as the fuel
[00:03:42]
for these hurricanes.
The hurricanes have become
far more intense, far more severe.
They happen more frequently.
And so, you know, when we have
conversations about climate change,
I know that for some it
sounds like a lot of doomerism,
[00:03:59]
you know, a lot of doomsday scenarios,
but it's not guys, we're already
living through those doomsday scenarios.
And so my heart goes out to everyone
that's impacted by this,
not just by Hurricane Milton,
but also by Hurricane Helene.
[00:04:15]
As we know, there are communities
in various states that are still suffering
the consequences and engaging in recovery
efforts as a result of that hurricane.
But those are the updates.
I'll fill you all in as I learn more.
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