thread les can't be edited.
but sure, ding people for haste.
thread les can't be edited.
but sure, ding people for haste.
How much money do we need to give Al Gore to make the hurricanes go away?
How many people's homes will be destroyed because of failed Republican policies? Thousands.
hyperbole
They have allowed unrestricted building of home on the coast for years, with literally no regard for changing ocean levels, and/or potential storm surges.
That is a direct consequence of the deregulatory at ude wherein an easily foreseeable problem is actively ignored by a party that is actively hostile to science, and coupled this hostility to reality and facts to unfounded faith in the infallibility of free markets.
This is neither hyperbole, nor a post hoc rationalization. Good policies do not come out of piss poor understanding of reality. They just... don't, however much you may wish it to be otherwise, because "team red rah rah rah".
Where could you have possibly gotten that from the article? "Unrestricted building"? I call bull .
Ok, you got me there. THAT was hyperbole. "unrestricted" was hyperbole. They had some minor things in play for "setbacks" from the ocean and so forth.
And I did some background reading in looking for the article's source bill, which I read, and posted, as well as some extra stuff, because it was interesting.
Already posted the bill previously. The big thing was for close to 6 years during the housing recovery, they did very little to hold back development along the coast. They recently started hammering out compromises to reign this in, and man people are ING.
South Carolina beach-building line still in legislative snarls
https://www.postandcourier.com/news/...ee4535c3c.html
I googled and skimmed a few articles in the "news" and "all" segment of google using the terms:
south Carolina building along the coast
to better inform myself on what the impact of the bill was, and how things have changed, or not, since the bill was passed.
Feel free to do the same, and find a hole in my assessment.
Here is a good one:
Rising seas put brakes on developers’ march toward the ocean
https://www.thestate.com/news/local/...e81141222.html
You called bull , which is good. I have now provided you with supporting evidence for my assessment. Either you will be lazy and dismiss it, as most conservatives are, or not, and maybe you will address it meaningfully.
Your call.
... and no I didn't get that from just ONE article in the OP. That is factually incorrect. FWIW.
http://www.climatechange.nc.gov/Clim...ent_Future.pdf
This report from 2012 pretty much is spot on what is happening now. It is a bit eerie.
Here is the report, where they said no such thing as "it will be 39 inches"
https://www.sealevel.info/NC_Sea-Lev...ence_Panel.pdf
39 inches was the average, with a wide range and a lot of noise, based on what they knew at the time.
That didn't stop the morons in the Republican party from latching on to that one thing so that they could get an easily accessible talking point for people like you to parrot endlessly "HOW RIDICULOUS THAT IS FOR A HUNDRED YEAR PROJECTION!!!"
So they told people to ignore the and build away while they ordered a study.
Six years later, the scientists were right, and the Republicans were wrong. AGAIN.
What? RG in a haste to puke out another hack article?
Too bad the scientists weren't hired to run Hillary's campaign and do the polling, eh?
[indifference]
[mild pity, bemusement]
Last edited by RandomGuy; 09-14-2018 at 03:18 PM.
I know, right?
You couldn't go a week posting here without using the word "Hillary".
It's just... sad.
You know what else was "hyperbole"?
The Republicans pushing the bill to quit regarding the science used some pretty misleading language to describe what the science said.
Why do you think they did that?
I'm not going to let you forget, though you'd love to. Nuh uh. Reap it.
Dude, you aren't even making sense at this point. I'm sure it made sense in your head, but this just looks... muddled.
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