5 Deadly Natural Phenomena America Has That Britain Doesn't REACTION | OFFICE BLOKES REACT!!

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 19 сер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 119

  • @kevinp8108
    @kevinp8108 Рік тому +97

    Yes, in 1989, San Francisco's double-deck Cypress freeway (motorway) collapsed onto itself crushing the cars on the lower level.

    • @derred723
      @derred723 Рік тому +7

      Cypress freeway was in Oakland, California. I used to live in Oakland. It was part of highway 880. That was what pancaked.

    • @surviver5738
      @surviver5738 Рік тому +1

      It was actually the bridge to Atlantis that collapsed

    • @erickjones2655
      @erickjones2655 Рік тому +4

      There is a interview with a 18-wheeler driver that survived the quake on the upper deck.

    • @kevinp8108
      @kevinp8108 Рік тому +1

      The survivors of the collapsed highway were reported to be about 3 feet shorter than before the earthquake.

    • @dariusbrock2351
      @dariusbrock2351 6 місяців тому

      There was a movie made about it in 1993 Miracle On I-880.

  • @SilvanaDil
    @SilvanaDil Рік тому +49

    A small piece of the upper deck of The Bay Bridge fell (the tilt you referred to) during the 1989 quake. Luckily the piece killed only 1 person -- light traffic due to The World Series. The "pancaking" of the two decks was a few miles away on Interstate 880, and several dozen people were killed.

    • @happyfairyjerry
      @happyfairyjerry Рік тому +5

      When he was mentioning it I could see the the road sections sandwiching in my head😅

  • @Jeff_Lichtman
    @Jeff_Lichtman Рік тому +31

    Dave was remembering the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake in the San Francisco Bay Area. One section of the upper deck of the eastern span of the Bay Bridge fell onto the lower deck. Also, a double-decker freeway in Oakland collapsed, with the upper deck crushing the cars on the lower deck.

    • @Jeff_Lichtman
      @Jeff_Lichtman Рік тому +3

      @CLester Yes. The Series probably saved a lot of lives, because people in the Bay Area were either at Candlestick or at home waiting for the game to start, instead of being on the road.

    • @gregrathbone986
      @gregrathbone986 Рік тому +4

      My flat was trashed in the Lima Prieta 1989 quake. I was home. The flat (Victorian) was built on filled land, mostly sand from Golden Gate Park. Liquid faction during the quake made the ground move like jello. The steps up to my door separated approximately 10” from the structure. Plaster fell off walls 100 years of soot came down the chimneys and in the flat upstairs the hot water heater fell over flooding the walls and ceiling in my kitchen. I’ve lived in California all my life and that was the most terrifying 15 seconds of my life! Needless to say, I moved to an area of the city located on solid bedrock.

  • @PenelopeFrank
    @PenelopeFrank Рік тому +38

    We did a summer trip to Washington to see the aftermath of Mount St. Helens eruption. It was absolutely amazing. Under all those dead trees seemingly lined in order… My dad pointed out to us kids the new vegetation starting to growing from all that grey ash in an area seemingly lifeless. It was so alien yet beautiful.

  • @lavendermagic84
    @lavendermagic84 Рік тому +10

    I was a little girl when the '89 earthquake happened in San Francisco. Our building manager told my dad that another few moments of the earthquake would've had the building completely collapse on top of us. That was enough information to scare my parents into moving us across the country to Florida - a state with hurricanes, tornadoes, and...Florida Man. 🤦‍♀

  • @FirebirdPrince
    @FirebirdPrince Рік тому +19

    I seen a number of tornadoes in the Midwest, usually off in the distance. Kinda frightening and awesome at the same time. They were mostly small though but i imagine folks from overseas would've shat their pants seeing one cause it's truly something else

    • @clipsedrag13
      @clipsedrag13 Рік тому

      It's an eerie feeling.. like seeing a storm out in the middle of the ocean

  • @PsycoDwarf9
    @PsycoDwarf9 Рік тому +3

    I grew up in Tornado alley. Watched an F3 to F4 Re-locate a barn VERY effectively. "Dude Where's my car?... In that tree..."

  • @genepreston2571
    @genepreston2571 Рік тому +5

    I lived hundreds of miles away in Montana when St. Helen's blew. Schools were shut down and you barely see a few feet due to all the ash. The next year we moved to Washington state, I was terrified.

  • @egadgo
    @egadgo Рік тому +2

    A fair amount of the deaths in the 1906 San Francisco Earthquake and Fire was the fire.
    SF being a peninsula with no bridges in 1906, the only ways out were by boat or to go south.
    While the fire rapidly spread and the city burned many citizens trapped by the circumstance of geography parished.

  • @cwalokie9559
    @cwalokie9559 Рік тому +9

    I live in Oklahoma. My first memory is being wrapped up in a blanket, and being taken into a "hidey hole". Okie term for a tornado shelter. I've also seen wildfires (grass fires here). Believe it or not a hurricane hit Oklahoma in 2007. A tropical storm hit Texas. It went north into New Mexico, then made a sharp right turn and strengthened into a hurricane. The satellite picture was crazy with the eye going straight west to east down the middle of Oklahoma

    • @Gutslinger
      @Gutslinger Рік тому

      Weird.. I don't remember that supposed hurricane.
      I remember 2007 very well. Possibly the worst year in my life.

    • @cwalokie9559
      @cwalokie9559 Рік тому

      @@Gutslinger Look it up. August 19, 2007-- Tropical storm Erin.

  • @Alex-kd5xc
    @Alex-kd5xc Рік тому +13

    I was actually in Anaheim, California during the 2019 Ridgecrest earthquakes which I believe included the largest earthquake California had seen in 20 years.
    I was taking a nap and literally did not feel a thing and just slept right through it 😂 but my family said they could feel the beds shaking a bit

    • @imnotyourfriendbuddy1883
      @imnotyourfriendbuddy1883 Рік тому +3

      I lived on the tenth floor of a building in Taiwan for a year. Earthquakes were common, about every 2 weeks there was a noticeable one. During the strongest one I experienced I was taking a shower, the whole building swayed(supposed to) and I could feel it. Lights cut out and flickered for about 30 seconds and I thought "no, i dont want to die butt naked". lol.

    • @kimchi2780
      @kimchi2780 Рік тому +2

      I lived in Los Angeles during the Whittier, Northridge, Big Bear/Landers quakes. I've also been through tornados living in TX and I'd take a few hours of warning over being shook to death at 4AM anyday.

    • @moeortega8529
      @moeortega8529 Рік тому

      I live an hour away from ridgecrest and holy hell I was scared. The aftershocks were crazy too. I remember there being a smaller earthquake a day before the big one in ridgecrest.

  • @oAPXo
    @oAPXo Рік тому +3

    As a Southern Californian, I can say that earthquakes to us are nornal, we hardly freak out, we really go "oh, earthquake" and keep doing whatever we're doing. The Ridgecrest one was pretty strong, but it only really shook my bed like as if someone was trying to wake me up.
    Wildfires are normal for us too sadly, the biggest one that got really close to our town was the Thomas fire in...2017? 2018? It really felt so weird so see a mountain at night become illuminated by red/orange lights and a few minutes later the mountain itself just being engulfed in fire.

    • @krayzy932
      @krayzy932 Рік тому

      I slept through quite a few of them growing up down there. My uncle was at a gym rehabbing a broken ankle when the Northridge earthquake hit. Building collapsed on him and broke his ankle again.

  • @RockyNikolashin
    @RockyNikolashin Рік тому +2

    Yep, the Cypress Bridge collapsed onto the lower deck. I was nearby the epicenter. In fact, we are coming up on the anniversary, Oct 17, 1989 at 5:04pm PST. It's a day I'll never forget. I was 14 years old and saw the roof of our school gym fall down. I still get flashbacks if I feel a heavy truck shake the ground nearby. But thankfully, the World Series was going on and most ppl were at home waiting to watch the game, so the fatalities weren't as bad as they could of been. Nonetheless, I saw humanity at its finest that week.

  • @petethedete
    @petethedete Рік тому +2

    They do prescribed burns as you were talking about here to limit how far wildfires can spread

  • @AcousticGString
    @AcousticGString Рік тому +6

    Hi folks!

  • @carrie-leehurzeler7413
    @carrie-leehurzeler7413 Рік тому +1

    In 2018 here in Alaska we had a 7.4, and in the 60’s they had a 9.2. We frequently have earthquakes, thankfully most are not even noticeable.

    • @wheredidthetimego8087
      @wheredidthetimego8087 Рік тому

      My sister lives up there. I was impressed by how quickly they repaired the highways.

    • @carrie-leehurzeler7413
      @carrie-leehurzeler7413 Рік тому

      Yes, they did a great job. It helped that one of the most damaged roads was one of the most heavily used. We were fortunate no one was killed.

  • @SE-gs6gd
    @SE-gs6gd Рік тому +1

    Lived thru blizzards, hurricanes- one with green lightning will never forget that, fires and earthquakes. For me the most terrifying are tornadoes. Seen one once which was in the sky- didn't touch down but was still very scary

  • @brettg274
    @brettg274 Рік тому +1

    For the SF earthquake, my uncle had just passed the section of the bridge that collapsed, and was stranded on the island it went to for a day. My brother was a skyscraper window-washer and had just gotten off work and to the bottom of the skyscraper when it hit. Both lucky.

  • @SIXX2772
    @SIXX2772 Рік тому +1

    Im born and raised right here in Nashville TN and remember how shocked I was a tornado hit here in Nashville at that time in 1998, that was the first time ever for me and I was 26 at that time. Nashville has had one or two more since but it isn't common as much in actual Nashville.

  • @kevincinnamontoast3669
    @kevincinnamontoast3669 Рік тому +1

    You have fish and chips avalanches,Tikka Masada landslides,Geordie storms and stiff upper lip crashes.

  • @gregrambo606
    @gregrambo606 Рік тому

    As a little kid, definitely remember the 1971 (February 9th) Sylmar earthquake of Los Angeles, a magnitude 6.6 on the Richter scale. The thing that makes earthquakes so weird is: THEY ALMOST ALWAYS SEEM TO HAPPEN IN THE EARLY MORNING HOURS WHEN YOU'RE IN BED! You are completely caught by surprise. Sylmar happened right around 6AM. The 1989 San Francisco quake happened during the telecast of the baseball world series. Sportscaster Al Michaels only got the words "we're having an earth......" out of his mouth before the telecast was knocked off the air by the quake.

  • @TDHSFV
    @TDHSFV Рік тому +1

    I lived through the 1994 Northridge Earthquake. I was a few miles away from the epicenter. I was almost 4.

    • @Itsakindamagic
      @Itsakindamagic 4 місяці тому

      I had to evacuate because of the Van Norman dam. Woohoo! Great fun.

  • @tm2bee
    @tm2bee Рік тому +1

    I live in an area where tornados happen often. I'd rather dodge the occasional tornado though, than deal with extreme cold, feet of snow and/or blizzards. I hate autumn only because it means cold weather is around the corner and our winters aren't harsh at all. I just hate cold weather.

  • @kinjiru731
    @kinjiru731 Рік тому

    When I was 18 I was working at a Blockbuster Video store at 11:30 at night. We were closing in a half hour, so we had some customers inside still. A tornado hit it, ripped part of the roof of and dumped it in the parking lot. Everyone was OK, the only car in the lot that was damaged was my mother's I had driven to work.

  • @RhensShorts
    @RhensShorts Рік тому +1

    Most hurricanes that hits the US hits the Caribbean first. I’ve experienced storms, hurricanes and earthquakes in Jamaica 🇯🇲 and I’m still young. 😂

  • @DylRicho
    @DylRicho Рік тому

    The UK has plenty of tornadoes. It's practically its own tornado alley. In fact, the UK, along with the Netherlands, have the most mesocyclones of any country in the world. Mesocyclones are early-stage tornadoes, which start out as swirling winds. Up until recently (c. early 2000s), the majority of these mesocyclones never developed further. Now it's quite common as the UK's climate becomes more temperate.

  • @forresthouser5807
    @forresthouser5807 Рік тому

    Let's agree to be clear - "If it tore a house apart...It's a tornado! Not a bloody whirlwind..."

  • @darrinlindsey
    @darrinlindsey Рік тому

    Dave, a funnel cloud that never touches the ground, is only a funnel cloud. It doesn't get the moniker of tornado, until it touches ground. Funnel clouds are much more prevalent than tornados, here in the states. They obviously don't cause any damage, other than an occasional power line.

  • @User-zzyyxxvv
    @User-zzyyxxvv Рік тому

    I live in LA. The house shaking a little, I’ve experienced that a few times. The worst one was where I used to work in a high rise building and bldg shook, drawers opened . That was intense

  • @SAVikingSA
    @SAVikingSA Рік тому +1

    I live in NY and literally the only natural phenomenon I haven't experienced is tsunamis and volcanos. Blizzards, heat waves, tornadoes, even felt the Richmond earthquake (the northeast has low topsoil due to glacial erosion so we can feel earthquakes hundreds of miles away).
    The US is absolutely wild in the ways it can kill you.

  • @hanaj
    @hanaj Рік тому +1

    Lawrence lives fairly close to me in Chicago (I can tell from where he posts). We had a rare tornado hit my neighborhood in Chicago at the beginning of the pandemic. It was a special type called caused by a derecho and came off the Lake. Tons of downed trees

  • @roymoore3156
    @roymoore3156 Рік тому +1

    Additionally, in 1989 when the SF Bay Area experienced the bridge collapse, the Major League Baseball playoffs were just about to start in San Fran at Candlestick park. There was network television of the park filled with people go friggen berserk during and after the earthquake. They postponed the series until they could repair the damaged stadium.

  • @nucpsay1524
    @nucpsay1524 Рік тому

    The escalator at my job collapsed during the 1989 earthquake in the San Francisco Bay Area. Thanks Blokes

  • @Mr1osufan1
    @Mr1osufan1 Рік тому

    When my dad was in High School, he watched the entire town of Xenia get completely wiped by a tornado from the roof of his home in Dayton, Ohio.

  • @nathanbeard513
    @nathanbeard513 Рік тому

    A whirlwind, a microburst, and tornadoes are different, but similar, phenomena. I’m my understanding the difference is duration and strength.

  • @bigplanett
    @bigplanett Рік тому

    In all honesty, while there are incidents with the extreme weather, the fatalities are very low. Fatalities from rain and snow are far greater making common rain and snow far more dangerous. It's like being scared of sharks when you're far likely to die in a car accident on the way to the beach.

  • @bigron725
    @bigron725 Рік тому

    1989 Loma Prieta earthquake is when double decker bridge collapsed in Oakland .

  • @LadyofFe
    @LadyofFe 2 місяці тому

    Yup back in the 80's. It collapsed on top of the bridge below and killed a bunch of people.

  • @TRU_TV_
    @TRU_TV_ Рік тому

    Yup I’m from California. Still in California. I was 2 years old when that earthquake happened when my family and I lived right there in Oakland. My pops did construction in SF & my mom would drive him over that bridge with me in the car seat about everyday. Except for that day of the Earthquake. My pops just so happened to call out sick from tonsillitis and we stayed home.. then the Quake hit right at 5:04pm. My parents tell me we would have been in the middle of that bridge bringing my pops home at around 5:10pm🤯‼️Ever Since my parents told me this when I was maybe 15years old…It’s always strange and scary thinking that any other day we would have been on that bridge 😬🤯
    My pops always makes a point to say “And I thought I was having the worst pain and worst day I could have (tonsillitis) but turns out it saved our family.”
    Not all negatives are NEGATIVES 💯

  • @masterlee9822
    @masterlee9822 Рік тому

    I like tornadoes and used to live in Florida during one of the big ones, big holes where large trees where ripped out by the storms or lying on their side half attached to the ground, flattened homes, trees had to be chopped up to open the road back up after the storm.

  • @sassycatz4470
    @sassycatz4470 Рік тому

    Yes, I grew up in southern New Jersey, outside of Philadelphia and I now live in Washington, DC. I also spent a year in southern California. All told, off the top of my head, I've experienced at least two eathquakes that I noticed -- probably more that I can't remember or didn't notice and at least two hurricanes - Agnes and Isabel. We were also sideswiped by Superstorm Sandy.

  • @cynthiaschultheis1660
    @cynthiaschultheis1660 10 місяців тому

    Lived just south of L. A. My whole life (69 years old) and have lost a tea cup!!!thru every earthquake👍

  • @joshuaking34
    @joshuaking34 Рік тому

    Northridge quake, dropped Interstate 10 in LA.

  • @TheRapnep
    @TheRapnep Рік тому

    Lawrence is turning into Joel and Lia with the backhanded compliments. Oh, I forgot to include Dave in that. 🤣

  • @HRConsultant_Jeff
    @HRConsultant_Jeff Рік тому

    The collapsed bridge was in San Franciso in October, 1989 and it was at 5pm during high traffic time.

  • @derred723
    @derred723 Рік тому

    4:30 Yes you are 100% correct, but specifically that freeway collapse was in Oakland, CA on the other side of the San Francisco Bay from the city of San Francisco. It was part of the "880 freeway" called the "Cypress Viaduct" and that section was a double decker section and when the earthquake hit it pancaked crushing cars, trapping and killing a ton of people. That section was removed and is not there anymore but to me it's also just eerie when i drive where that part used to be.
    Note there was also a section of the San Francisco Bay bridge which was also a double decker bridge where a section of the upper deck broke and fell into the lower deck. There are often scenes of one car going over it as it breaks. But these are two different freeways that had sections collapse. They are not far from each other though. And the one above, the 880, had far more loss of life.

  • @joshuabolton3866
    @joshuabolton3866 Рік тому

    Nothing is scarier than when u are driving at night and the hills are on fire in all direction and the wind is going so you never knew where it was gonna go

  • @nancysexton4364
    @nancysexton4364 Рік тому

    4:30 A portion of the top deck of the Bay Bridge collapsed (along w/ a section of freeway in Oakland) The earthquake hit just as Game 3 of the 1989 World Series was getting started, so the cameras broadcast what was unfolding in real time from SF stadium. They should check out the live footage -- it's surreal.

  • @thathighguy6980
    @thathighguy6980 Рік тому

    I've personally experienced all but the volcano... Thankfully.

  • @thomascrown6681
    @thomascrown6681 Рік тому +1

    Maybe you’re talking about the on that hit the Bay Area in the 80’s it was broadcast while the World Series was happening

  • @Blondie42
    @Blondie42 Рік тому

    I wonder you you guys are gonna do an out of the office Office blokes series where you guys come over to the states together and try, see stuff in person. I'm sure any of the states would be happy to have you.

  • @bondzo7184
    @bondzo7184 Рік тому

    In 2011 my sister experienced a hurricane an earthquake and hurricane Irene in the same year

  • @Gutslinger
    @Gutslinger Рік тому

    Wow.. I didn't know C.S. Lewis passed on the same day as J.F.K.

  • @gwumpyolman
    @gwumpyolman Рік тому

    Loma Prieta 1989, during the World Series.

  • @bryangettel4060
    @bryangettel4060 Рік тому

    The great fires in Michigan were a result of massive lumbering. One of the reasons MI got populous enough to become a state was the lumber industry. In those days,they clear-cut everything but left the brush behind. The ground dries out from the wind and sun exposure… click. Tales of an inescapable wall of fire abound. I expect the Wisconsin fires are the same thing. Chicago right in the are also - Almost all densely packed wood buildings.

  • @BodieB
    @BodieB 3 місяці тому

    New England weather really is the most similar to actual English weather

  • @AztecHusBone
    @AztecHusBone Рік тому

    I live in California. Earthquakes are generally entertaining. The wildfires are not (been evacuated from my house twice).

  • @jvargas5642
    @jvargas5642 Рік тому

    Daz said: “chair a tip over”.

  • @ScruffyNerfhurder
    @ScruffyNerfhurder Рік тому

    OB Dave I think the earthquake you are thinking of where the bridge collapsed is the Northridge Earthquake in '94. I experienced that one. A can of white paint fell out of the rafters in the garage and onto my dad's black car. Then our cat ran through the paint and then through the entire house so there was white paw prints all over the carpet. I was 7 at the time and there was an aftershock at school and we had to get under our desks. We had already had earthquake drills in school so we knew what to do. This may not be the exact one you are thinking of since this kind of thing has happened other times as well.

  • @sherrijean03
    @sherrijean03 Рік тому

    Again this goes to show you how vast the USA is! Even though natural disasters happen in the US more often than other places in the world, there are plenty of states that almost never see any of it!

  • @scottoshea9440
    @scottoshea9440 Рік тому

    Wow, the bearded office bloke has a twin brother here in the U.S., UA-cam Nick Vertucci, you'll be amazed.

  • @cynthiaschultheis1660
    @cynthiaschultheis1660 10 місяців тому

    TORNADOES SCARE ME THE MOST!!!😱😱😱😱😱

  • @Alex.Kaleipahula
    @Alex.Kaleipahula Рік тому

    In 1907 San Francisco is made mostly out of wood and so the earthquake caused a lot of fires that burnt down the city

  • @daporkoil1
    @daporkoil1 Рік тому +2

    Comparing Britain to the USA interns of weather or geography is crazy. Britain is a tiny little place compared to the USA and all its diversity.

    • @RRaymer
      @RRaymer Рік тому

      Not really, Britain can be effected by these weather events

  • @FourFish47
    @FourFish47 Рік тому

    There's videos of people in California leaving their homes to fires and all along the roads they're escaping on are fires and smoke all around them. It's pretty terrifying, I imagine, feeling trapped in a fire in your car with a tank of gas.

  • @dudermcdudeface3674
    @dudermcdudeface3674 Рік тому

    An "ordinary" tornado just looks like a pointy bit at the bottom of a storm cloud. Not really impressive apart from the danger it will get stronger. But thicc stovepipe monster tornados are Cosmic Horror. They look like something supernatural come to eat the world, and you couldn't pay me to live somewhere regularly threatened by those. Just the thought of it would ruin too many days.

  • @johnnash2815
    @johnnash2815 Рік тому

    As Al Murray said, God is British. We don't have earthquakes, because you don't shit on your own doorstep haha

  • @willvr4
    @willvr4 Рік тому

    That is the biggest microphone I've ever seen.

  • @cynthiaschultheis1660
    @cynthiaschultheis1660 10 місяців тому

    No volcanoes in CA. Out at sea, perhaps.

  • @nuavecmoi
    @nuavecmoi 4 місяці тому

    😂 Don’t forget the missing spices.

  • @cynthiaschultheis1660
    @cynthiaschultheis1660 10 місяців тому

    1960's earthquake in Alaska was worse.
    Dave thinking of NORTHRIDGE EARTHQUAKE OR OAKLAND, CA.

  • @mcm8737
    @mcm8737 Рік тому

    Yes, that was the NORTHRIDGE EARTHQUAKE, I believe it was the bay bridge?? Not sure, but yes that was San Francisco area, and it was a double decker bridge. X👍🍀

  • @brianlewis5692
    @brianlewis5692 Рік тому +1

    Mt St Helen - I was old enough to remember this event. He says 57 people perished, and that is horrible. It might also seem low, but I remember that they had ample forewarning of the eruption, and they were evacuating people from the area for weeks prior, and there was a story about one elderly man who refused to leave. He [*was born] 'had lived on the mountain for a long time, and said he would meet his end there as well. So to hear that 57 people still died is actually incredible given the warning and mandatory evacuations. I would have expected just the one. Imagine how many thousands would have died if the eruption had not been forecasted in advance.

    • @kirktravis5780
      @kirktravis5780 Рік тому +1

      He wasn't born on the mountain. But he lived there so long and was old enough to not want to live anywhere else. God bless you harry truman. Sitting on your lodge porch drinking a bloody mary,living your life on your terms until the very last second of it.

    • @brianlewis5692
      @brianlewis5692 Рік тому

      @@kirktravis5780 thanks for the correction ☺

  • @juffurey
    @juffurey Рік тому

    The most ironic thing about it? Evangelicals say that natural disasters are caused by people sinning. But the bible belt has the worst natural disasters in the country. So they must do an awful lot of "sinning".

  • @markmiller9963
    @markmiller9963 Рік тому

    So the earthquake in 1989 in San francisco did collapse the doulbe decker freeway I-880

  • @WandererOTGS
    @WandererOTGS Рік тому

    I pissed all over the toilet during that last quake

  • @juffurey
    @juffurey Рік тому

    as they say in tornado alley, if ya cain't get kilt by one, it ain't a tornado.
    actually, no one says that.

  • @kellyking8362
    @kellyking8362 Рік тому

    I'm going g to StarTeam g hurri-kin instead of hurricane it sounds less intense lol

  • @gtaisgreat8385
    @gtaisgreat8385 Рік тому

    I'm surprised blizzards wasn't on here because there can be really bad blizzards.

  • @mauricehumphrey545
    @mauricehumphrey545 Рік тому

    I think he only mentioned 4 natural phenomenas. He left out Flooding.

  • @StateOfChaos
    @StateOfChaos Рік тому

    Weird to mention Katrina and not Harvey.

  • @cherriledbetter1120
    @cherriledbetter1120 Рік тому +1

    Tornados are NOT RARE, I Live in tornado alley, and we have a tornado season and get a lot of tornadoes each year during this time. But things are changing now, climate change

    • @kerrijohnson2303
      @kerrijohnson2303 Рік тому

      Yep. Louisiana here and I can’t remember a year out of my entire 53 years living here that we didn’t have at least one tornado each year within 50 miles of my house.

  • @part1d10t7
    @part1d10t7 Рік тому

    #1 Chuck Norris

  • @cynthiaschultheis1660
    @cynthiaschultheis1660 10 місяців тому

    CALIFORNIA JUST HAD TROPICAL STORM DOWNGRADED FROM HURRICANE COMING NORTH FROM MEXICO.😵😵😵😵😵

  • @kirkschabatka1999
    @kirkschabatka1999 Рік тому

    Now I'm sorta feeling bad about my saying white's aren't your friend on UA-cam. Red, yWear what ever you want. Be all you can be. And be proud!!!

  • @ikegomez3189
    @ikegomez3189 Рік тому

    One day paddy pimlet will be on here

  • @Gutslinger
    @Gutslinger Рік тому

    California doesn't maintain their forests like they should, which is a big reason why they have so many bad wildfires.. Which is hypocritical of them, since they're the ones who preach the loudest about being environmentally friendly.
    And supposedly, there have been sitings of lasers in some of those wildfires. Seemingly lasers that have been coming from outer space, and supposedly making the wildfires worse.. Heard it being talked about after lasers were seen over Hawaii the other night, from a suspected Chinese satellite.

  • @vannexalpas142
    @vannexalpas142 Рік тому

    Revelation Chapter 13 United Kingdom and United States?

  • @stevenbeall9637
    @stevenbeall9637 Рік тому

    Lemme guess...tornados, hurricanes, earthquakes, teenagers with AK's, and MAGA?

    • @cwalokie9559
      @cwalokie9559 Рік тому

      No no no no. Don't mention MAGA. Hell hath no greater fury. I'd rather be sucked out of a bridge by an F5.

  • @Maeshalanadae
    @Maeshalanadae Рік тому

    Nothing deadly about you guys? Don’t you eat a lot of canned beans?

  • @robertk2007
    @robertk2007 Рік тому

    Hurricane Ian that just hit was a Cat 5

  • @kermitthefrogsings280
    @kermitthefrogsings280 Рік тому

    You guys should react to some ufo videos, mainly the good documentaries.
    It's quite entertaining, even if you don't believe in the phenomenon.