News Article:
Tampa Bay Times.
Aug. 14, 2020
It is only a simulation. It’s also the worst-case scenario. One day, it could be reality.
“Hurricane Phoenix” is the hypothetical disaster that would change life in the Tampa Bay area forever.
Imagine a Category 5 storm that drowns South Tampa and turns St. Petersburg into an island. The bridges rendered impassable, the airports unusable and the region’s communities left on their own until help arrives. Power loss in some areas could last months. The beaches would be wiped away, as would tourism. Nearly every small business could die. Recovery would take a decade.
The water would rise so dramatically that most of downtown and South Tampa would be under at least 12 to 15 feet of water, according to a Federal Emergency Management Agency software tool used to estimate losses from potential disasters.
Of the six counties’ more than 1.35 million buildings, the simulation shows more than 103,679 buildings would be severely damaged or destroyed.
What is different about Phoenix 2.0 is that it comes with a program to help small businesses prepare for and survive a major storm.
The simulation estimates 40 percent of small businesses wouldn’t reopen following the storm. Within a year, 25 percent more would close.
Two years out, 90 percent of small businesses would fail because of a storm.
A full scale recovery effort would stall if a major storm wipes out the bridges and other critical roadways, said Hillsborough County’s Metropolitan Planning Organization executive director Beth Alden.
[link to www.tampabay.com (secure)]
Quoting:
Name of the simulation:
Phoenix 2.0
Possible meaning of the word Phoenix:
Destruction and rebirth from the ashes.Despicable' hotels in Florida and Georgia raise prices from $95 to $700-a-NIGHT as desperate Hurricane Milton evacuees flee
As Floridians brace for the catastrophic arrival of Hurricane Milton, hotels across the region are capitalizing on the widespread misfortune by gouging their prices.
Hurricane Milton is due to make landfall in Tampa Bay on Wednesday, less than two weeks after Helene devastated the same region.
Locals have been met with warnings to urgently evacuate, but with so many displaced residents still in temporary accommodation from the last storm, it's near impossible for some to seek shelter this time around
Gainesville, Tallahassee, Madison and Thomasville are among the dozens of small towns in northern Florida and southern Georgia completely booked out of places to stay.
Worsening the crisis is the sheer volume of businesses which have marked up their prices or canceled old bookings at the last minute, leaving people stranded.
shouldnt be cancelling old bookings to make more money
A Marriott hotel was offering a room for two nights this week for $548 per night - or $707 for guests wanting to park their cars.
Comparatively, the same room is available in November for $94 per night.
'Sad and inhumane,' one person wrote.
[link to www.dailymail.co.uk (secure)]
Claudia from Florida “My zone C was just evacuated, and we're headed towards central Florida. This has never happened before. HAARP IS IN FULL SWING!”
The storm surge for Hurricane Milton is expected to be 15 feet.
To give you an idea of how deadly this is, here's what 9 feet looks like:
https://x.com/i/status/1843591864546648147/video/1
EMP[electromagnetic pulse/field radiation] being detected in Florida: Many residents' vehicles in Florida are not starting up. Emergency Road Services are being inundated with calls about downed vehicles. This means electromagnetic field radiation is being generated, artificially using using precision guided, and directed energy weapons to influence the hurricane. The 2nd video is an example of electromagnetic field radiation. I tested my microwave using an EMF meter. The microwave wasn't even running, and the high voltage was off the charts
https://x.com/i/status/1843643586509758759
Ko-fi.com/thejournaloflingeringsanity
DISCLAIMER: The Journal of Lingering Sanity is a reader-supported publication from Old Gold Mountain (Chinese: 旧金山. We are beholden to truth not party. “The time has come," the Journal said, "To talk of many things: Of shoes—and ships—and sealing-wax— Of cabbages—and kings— And why the sea is boiling hot— And whether pigs have wings."
If a small percentage of the money being wasted on the anthropocentric climate crisis hoax were to be spent on hardening sites like Tampa, risks would be much reduced, in my opinion.
Likely the EMP action is the huge sun flare which began at the same time.