EVERYONE'S Lying!! North America's Worst Disaster Is About To Happen!

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The last two years brought a surprisingly cold and snowy winter season to North America.
Certain states suffered more than the others especially Texas where people were caught off
guard by two consecutive bitterly cold winters. Matters were aggravated by the February 2021
North American Winter Storm, unofficially called Viola. And this year will probably not be any
different. Meteorologists and weather forecast channels all around the continent have warned
people that this year’s winter is going to be as difficult as the previous one. They have warned
people to be ready for some miserable weather conditions.
The winter season in North America during the previous year was record breaking with two
individual tornado outbreaks. The 2021-2022 North American winter was not as bad as the one
before it but that doesn’t mean some notable and significant events didn’t occur during this
period. The two tornado outbreaks hit the continent in mid-December, after that a significant
winter storm struck the south in mid-January. And that wasn’t all a powerful blizzard also
impacted the Northeast coast at the end of January. February brought with it a wide-ranging,
significant winter storm that affected almost all of the eastern half of the country. Other
important events included a late-season winter storm in March that affected the Appalachian
Mountains and a major blizzard that struck North and South Dakota in mid-April. Four storms
were ranked on the Regional Snowfall index during the 2021-2022 winter season but none of
these actually attained the major category. A developing La Niña was expected to influence the
weather patterns across the continent like the previous winter. For those of you hearing this
term for the first time, La Niña is an oceanic and atmospheric phenomenon that is the colder
counterpart of El Niño, as part of the broader El Niño-Southern Oscillation climate pattern. The
name originated from Spanish for “the girl”, by analogy El Niño means “the boy”. During the La
Nina period, sea surface temperature across the eastern equatorial part of the central Pacific
ocean will be lower than normal by three to five degrees Celsius. La Niña’s appearance usually
persists for more than five months. Both El Niño and La Niña are indicators of weather change
across the globe. La Niña is a complex weather pattern and occurs every few years due to the
strong winds blowing warm water at the ocean’s surface away from South America, across the
pacific towards Indonesia

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42 Comments

  1. Don't agree with any of this we all know winter lasts from mid November to mid-march even as late as the third week in March. It's a common fact quit trying to scare people. Just go get the Farmer's almanac and you will see snow storms and natural disasters have been happening for hundreds of years long before the industrial age. Science creates problems and then pretends like they fix them.

  2. Im initially from northern Illinois and moved to Kentucky last year. The snow im used to see was 2 to 3 feet, and well below -15 degrees. I love the snow and the ice, but since I moved to Kentucky it's been really lackluster. All we get is power outages without snow or ice, and even if we get snow or ice it's the ice storms that are to worry.

  3. I live in Michigan n I don't remember if it was the late 90s or earlier 2000s but I remember getting 2 ft of snow in April n that was unusual, I mean it has snowed here in April before but not 2ft. We've barely got any snow this year, I live in the mitten btw,. I have no clue what's going on in the UP..

  4. You'd better beware of the Seattle Fault. You should already see it in the animals. It was the same in Japan before the tsunami. There were suddenly many birds on land and on the coast – because they knew that when the water receded there would be plenty of food. The snow is only a small problem against the earthquake. And it's coming soon!

  5. Last yr it snowed one time and it was light, yr before that maybe twice not much snow. I was told when I moved here that the weather here isn't normal that we get good snow, I'm from the south so I figured mother nature was giving me a break.

  6. Question: When did Earth's poles last flip?

    about 780,000 years ago
    Magnetic Pole Reversals

    The time intervals between reversals have fluctuated widely, but average about 300,000 years, with the last one taking place about 780,000 years ago. During a pole reversal, the magnetic field weakens, but it doesn't completely disappear. Aug 3, 2021

  7. I'm from Minnesota, the upper Midwest can handle the snow. It's not that big of a deal here. If it happens down south it would be a problem 🤠

  8. In Canada east coast we been having mild winters not much snow for a few years. Unheard of in past. Could mow lawn in N.B. In western Canada they have been having brutal cold severe winters for few years. Used be opposite. I was told its because of change in jet stream dip into the central states. And a lifting on the east of the stream which brings warmer south air up into Eastern Canada.

  9. I actually liked snowpocalypse here in Austin, TX! Power or no power, me and my dogs were warm, fed, played in the snow and ice for a couple of weeks, and brought some necessary things to elderly, disabled, and needy people around us.

  10. why do gum drops have no flavor anymore? they used to. now they are completely pointless in eating, its just sugar drops with no flavor.

  11. Since October 25th here in Las Vegas Nevada it's been 39゚ pretty much every night that's not normal… I think we're about to have a nice age again

  12. Get used to it North America you will soon see much colder temperatures as your average is dropping by a huge 7 degrees Celsius per century. It’s not just La Niña this will be a Multidecadal drop due to a reduction in TSI. You are more than ever going to need fossil fuels literally to survive. Feel for you guys

  13. Last time this happened in 1981 thru 1986 huge amounts of rain snow tornadoes. Global volcanic eruptions were also high. Like it is now.

    For next 5-7 yrs are going to be harsh. Hotter summers and extreme cold winters.

  14. This makes little sense when you factor in Canada.. i live in Newfoundland, which is very much out in the Atlantic Ocean. As a child i used to go trick or treating on Halloween in a snowsuit in 3+ feet of snow…. now we dont see snow til late January…

  15. Climate change is going to make storms worse. Snow, rain, drought, winds, will all be worse as our climate fluctuates and changes.

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