Message from @Fitzydog
Discord ID: 433130345966338068
It's more like 100-200 years. And even then that's not how the ocean works. There are places that are sinking now. But its all manageable.
Idk
SINK, Portland!
I knew that in grade school
in such a short time, we learned so much
yeah, we're doing better than we ever have, we just cant see it, because we can see all our problems now
Tbh I wouldn’t mind if the west coast sunk
I'm not saying "climate change is a hoax"
18 years ago I was taught about how global warming works why it happens and the possible solutions
Like #BringOnTheNukes
life could be pretty f††† sweet in 50 years if we play our cards right
@Deleted User Bruh, please. I have land here.... O_O
ouch
@Fitzydog I’m only talking about the counties adjacent to the pacific
Lol, those are the ones in the NW that are all rural farming towns
West coast made a lot of your fav technologies, mind
Can be remade again
also SF culture is trash
^
in all seriousness though, global climate change is caused by more than just gasses in the atmosphere, the thing that is really messing with climate is cities, by drastically increasing the surface area of places in such a small area it creates hot spots that can produce storms miles away
I wanna get on the 101 south and never look back from here
would dispersion help?
you can even make an agrument that the cites in CA are causeing tornadoes in the plains
why do we crowd into these tiny shitholes anyway?
Are you suggesting the use of nuclear warheads?
@flyingfoxel That's stupid
the hotspots lead and feed into the stroms when they are at there weakest from just getting over the mountains
hasnt there usually been tornados in the plains?
Hmmm
It's a desert
Very woke lexicon
it's going to be hot anyways
that area of the states is god's testbench
it;s really not, the butterfly effect is real with storms, giving them a boost just after crossing the high altitudes has been argued to be the thing allowing them to make it to the plains where they pick up there power
I g2g
not the CA study i read but this explains the effect http://www.purdue.edu/newsroom/research/2011/110526NiyogiStorms.html
it seems like theyre saying the storms have trouble reaching into the cities
so they just bounce and fork around and gain some momentum that way
it'l like the cities are causing a problem they should almost be proud of