Stormy Weather Season - Dangerous!
September 6 2017 By Abiodun Giwa
It is Wednesday. A day before, news report was about the temporary suspension of the Dream Act in the United States.
Little attention was given to Hurricane Irma playing out in the Caribbean Islands. Discussions were mostly centered on the havoc that Hurricane Harvey had caused in Texas, the cost of rehabilitation and whether or not Texas will be the same again and how folks affected in Texas will begin life again.
By Wednesday, the tone of news reports has changed from the suspension of the the Dream Act to Hurricane Irma's devastation in the Caribbean.
The public that thought that Hurricane Harvey was too bad or worst compared to all the Hurricanes they had witnessed, saw something worse than Harvey in Irma in the way it had mesmerized affected Caribbean Islands. Every newspaper online in the West had Irma's devastation as a major report.
Irma also beat the North Korea's belligerence to be first in the news. It is like saying "Hei, Kim, you can pack and test your missiles whichever way you want and like, we have much more serious issue of safety at hand concerning these hurricanes. Our attention for you and your missiles will be later."
The danger from the stormy hurricane weather is serious, dangerous and needs attention more than one leader spoiling for unnecessary attention. Described as Hurricane Number 5, packing a wind of 300 miles on its path, Irma has invoked fear on all people from the Caribbean to the U.S. and the United Kingdom.
People in Florida are bracing for a tough experience. President Donald Trump's Maralago residence is also said to be on Irma's path. If the news from the effect of Irma on the Caribbean islands, destroying over 90 percent of houses, is anything to consider, if Irma is not weakened before its land fall in the Sunshine State, a cloud of uncertainty pervades the atmosphere.
It is a season that drought will be preferable to utter destruction that the stormy and dangerous hurricane season in all its ramification. The road turning into sea from the effect of flooding. The wind moving whole house from their foundations and others having their roofs completely blown off. With death seeking whom to devour.
Little attention was given to Hurricane Irma playing out in the Caribbean Islands. Discussions were mostly centered on the havoc that Hurricane Harvey had caused in Texas, the cost of rehabilitation and whether or not Texas will be the same again and how folks affected in Texas will begin life again.
By Wednesday, the tone of news reports has changed from the suspension of the the Dream Act to Hurricane Irma's devastation in the Caribbean.
The public that thought that Hurricane Harvey was too bad or worst compared to all the Hurricanes they had witnessed, saw something worse than Harvey in Irma in the way it had mesmerized affected Caribbean Islands. Every newspaper online in the West had Irma's devastation as a major report.
Irma also beat the North Korea's belligerence to be first in the news. It is like saying "Hei, Kim, you can pack and test your missiles whichever way you want and like, we have much more serious issue of safety at hand concerning these hurricanes. Our attention for you and your missiles will be later."
The danger from the stormy hurricane weather is serious, dangerous and needs attention more than one leader spoiling for unnecessary attention. Described as Hurricane Number 5, packing a wind of 300 miles on its path, Irma has invoked fear on all people from the Caribbean to the U.S. and the United Kingdom.
People in Florida are bracing for a tough experience. President Donald Trump's Maralago residence is also said to be on Irma's path. If the news from the effect of Irma on the Caribbean islands, destroying over 90 percent of houses, is anything to consider, if Irma is not weakened before its land fall in the Sunshine State, a cloud of uncertainty pervades the atmosphere.
It is a season that drought will be preferable to utter destruction that the stormy and dangerous hurricane season in all its ramification. The road turning into sea from the effect of flooding. The wind moving whole house from their foundations and others having their roofs completely blown off. With death seeking whom to devour.
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