The photo at Costco there shows something many people might not realize; big stores like Costco and Walmart have weather departments that try to analyze and predict things like this, and ship in additional water and supplies to the stores in the days before.
Even our local Walmart can end up with piles of pallets in the aisles before an expected blizzard.
Even big stores can struggle in truly large weather events. I was once in a somewhat isolated area when the nearby city had a massive snowstorm that shut everything down for two weeks. Every store except Walmart ran out of food. Walmart was okay not because of any particular logistical magic but because they resupplied from a different direction. The lesson is you actually want supply chain redundancy.
This storm is going to be catastrophic for desert areas but probably just merely bad for the more coastal populated areas. Anyone in inland SoCal should be getting ready for rain unprecedented as far back as records go (150-200 years).
btw, Weather West is always the best place to go for California weather -- there's nobody better on this than climate scientist Daniel Swain: https://weatherwest.com/
I am very concerned for the people living in areas who have suffered from recent wildfires. While 2022 did not see as many, 2021 was a brutal year for fires and I worry that there has not been adequate vegetation growth to stabilize the ground structure. Sadly California has experienced mud slides and debris torrents following fires and they take just as many if not more lives.
PS: I understand there is a system for naming hurricanes but at least for me, the fact this one is named Hillary has added to my trepidation.
Yeah, not much so far. The storm is rotating counter-clockwise, meaning the tropical air is going to hit the mountains to the east of the coast first. Also the storm seems to be stuck around the middle of Baja California right now. Strangely enough this is where the water temp begins to cool as you move northward(https://coastalwatertemperatureguide-noaa.hub.arcgis.com/). I was worried the storm would gain some energy from the Gulf of California since that's quite warm(85F now) but that doesn't seem to be happening.
The mountains are what normally prevent the coast from seeing any of the monsoonal storms typical of CA/AZ deserts in mid-summer. It's common for moisture coming from Mexico to produce large thunderstorms east of the coastal mountain ranges this time of year.
I'm not saying this storm won't amount to anything for the coast. We'll probably get some rain and some wind. I'm not stockpiling anything and my only prep has been to put a bit of gas in the car and charge all of my batteries. We're most likely going to roll our eyes at the people panic-buying TP and water this Monday.
Edit: It's 12:32 AM in San Diego. According to several online radar maps including weather.com, we've been in the middle of a rainstorm for almost an hour. The ground is still dry and it's a calm 73F outside. Very weird. I can understand radar picking up light rain which evaporates before hitting the ground, but the map is indicating rain that is much heavier than that. Weird.
1:44AM: still solidly inside the main band of rain on the radar. The only noticable precipitation happened about 45 minutes ago and it was barely sprinkling for 2-3 minutes. Pavement is still dry. Calm with hardly any wind.
I don’t know if they’ve changed how they forecast, or things are more unpredictable, or not updated as often as they seem, but “chance of rain today” forecasts have been wildly inaccurate for me - often going from 0% all day to “rain starts in 20 minutes”.
Odd, we've had steady rain in south Orange county since around 5am. It was downpouring for about 30 minutes between 6 and 7am. It's slowed a bit now but it's still been raining nonstop.
Update: It rained. Nothing special. Based on the radar map there's some more rain coming but nothing severe. So much for being the storm of the century.
The rainfall prediction from the National Hurricane Center showing vast majority of areas will experience 1-4 inches, but some inland areas in small regions will experience up to 10 inches.
Sitting here waiting, calm before the storm. Wife is asleep, cats are relaxed. Rain is supposed to start in about 4 hours.
It’s heartening to think that the last time this happened a direct consequence was the large amount of flood control infrastructure we have today.
I’m anxious but not concerned even though every map with some rating of impact, has us at the highest level. But we are on the edge of those zones, I know our terrain, we should handle the water all right. I have good confidence in the water control engineering in our area, even if it’s overrun. The wind may be an issue, however, particularly with the water. I’ve not experienced that before. Wind, yes. But not wind driving water that hard. It’s a real unknown to me and can make both the wind and water more impactful.
It’s going to be an interesting day or so, but the sun should be back by Tuesday, and it’s always a pretty day in the sun when it strikes the mountains.
Oh yea, we're all rolling around on the ground with our tactical flashlights! Hut Hut Hut...
Waiting for "the enemy"... You know, those non-people we get to cap with our gunporn h/w without a glimmer of remorse... Just like in "Final Incineration of the Infidel! #14"...
In the city of San Diego now (12:45pm PDT), we're experiencing light rain. Nothing even close to an emergency at this point, much less "THE ENEMY"...
It started raining in Orange county around 5am. I went out for a run at 6am and it started to downpour shortly after. It's slowed a bit now but it's been raining nonstop.
The rain started, it's been quite light, and has stopped for the moment. So far, under .2 of an inch with a predicted 4"+, so "it's rain, but not as we know it". If we're in for 4" in 24 hours, there's going to be some catching up to do.
The winds are not due until early to mid afternoon.
One friend, in OC, thinks this is being "overhyped". On the other hand, the weather warnings are using words such as "devastating" and "catastrophic". The problem, of course, is that the area is large, the terrain is varied, and what's "nothing" for one person and "devastating" for another can be as little as being on a neighboring street. OC is farther from the core of it than I am.
Another friend, who has a cabin up in the mountains, that area is under mandatory evacuation. I doubt he was up there, and it's not surprising. Not so much because I think that area per se is under particular danger (it well could be), but simply getting in and out of there is via some rather nasty roads, and the exit is right next to a river bed. Not a place you'd want to be, or try to leave, as I can see it simply being cut off.
I'm on part of the alluvial fan of the foothills, so any water is likely to pass me by. That said, there's a creek and canyon mouth north of me, quite capable of flash flooding. But there's a good amount of just raw riverbed land than any outflow will have to work its way through, and any real water would likely take to the street (the streets are part and parcel to the flood control system as well) long before it could impact me. But there are folks farther up the hill.
We're also at the bottom of Cajon Pass, notorious for its wind. My concern is that it will act as an amplifier of the already fast winds, and we may get a taste of that. Tomorrow is trash day, and some of my neighbors already have their cans out, and I just shake my head. My other neighbor just planted a large, 20 ft palm tree -- on Friday. We are eyeing that warily, just really bad timing, and can only hope the wind doesn't take it. It probably won't but I moved my car out of the way anyway.
So, more waiting. It's like being in that Twister movie, with the storm chasing us in slow motion. We're sheltering in place, made some nice waffles for breakfast. The cats are ignorant and ambivalent, more interested in cleaning something, have their fur brushed off, or bonking a sibling. There's always solace taking moments to watch them instead of the dark sky outside.
Thanks all for the thoughts, I'm sure we'll be fine. Hopefully the "catastrophe" and "devastation" will be limited to the others nearby. Hopefully the limit of my catastrophe will be my neighbor trashcans in my driveway.
It really is amazing how extreme weather events are starting to feel like mass shootings. Awful, shocking, once-in-a-lifetime events ... that now seem to happen so frequently that, depending where you live and where the weather emergency is, you shrug and "those poor people", and get on with your day.
Oh, and also: "There's literally nothing we can do / could have done to prevent this awful disaster!" and"Thoughts and prayers" sent by the bucket.
The intractability is honestly the worst part. All decisions to help the climate crisis are first and foremost prioritizing private sector profits. We’re sitting around hoping for new inventions to save us.
The royal "we", yes we are. Personally, I've been extremely conscious of this for over 30 years, mainly because my wife took this stuff very seriously and put a huge amount of time into researching it. So we're vegetarian, no kids, don't drive and quit flying a long time ago. We still have an extremely comfortable and enjoyable lifestyle, and I know that's only possible because of world wide trade and progress in science, technology and manufacturing. Everybody has to draw their own lines, where they're physically, politically and morally comfortable.
Edit: in total honestly, my wife drew the lines, and I've been happy to live along them. So I claim no great moral superiority here.
Why would you restrict yourself so when 71% of climate emissions are produced by 100 companies??
Never understood the impetus to restrict yourself when we're beyond negligible.
Carbon footprint propaganda was rhetoric popularized by BP themselves to shift the blame to empathetic people like you and your wife, while they continue to make everything worse.
Vote for and organize for serious progressive candidates who take climate seriously in your local elections. That will do a million $ more than you not taking a vacation because of plane emissions while the rich take private flights down to the grocery store.
Still it’s worth changing your individual behavior. Just because Al Gore takes a jet to the grocery doesn’t mean that parent commentators reduction in CO2 emissions has been useless.
I think we should work both ways: be conscious about what we can do as individuals and at the same time, organize society.
>parent commentators reduction in emissions has been useless
Useless? Of course not. Completely negligible? Absolutely, 100%. I'm no climate scientist but voting literally once for the party that believes in climate science probably has about a million x the effect of you not going on vacation.
>Be conscious about what we can do as individuals
All I'm contesting is that the most effective thing we can do is participate and organize in politics.
Not going on vacation and markedly decreasing your quality of life to reduce climate emissions by 1x10^-9999999 percent is naively negligible at best, a propagandized (by an oil company nonetheless) abdication of their larger responsibility to participate in politics causing the actual damage as science denying lunatics fill offices around the nation at worst.
I wouldn't disagree with you but I agree with gp that you need both sides. If you had a population that was apathetic and didn't believe change was possible (and did not act accordingly), then really nothing would get done. The only way stuff gets done is through outreach and education. Once a critical mass of people truly believe that the only way forward is through intense environmental law reform, then it will happen. Of course companies will fight tooth and nail to not make it happen but that shouldn't be the primary deterrent for not doing anything about the problem.
>The only way stuff gets done is through outreach and education. Once a critical mass of people truly believe that the only way forward is through intense environmental law reform, then it will happen
Exactly. I completely agree with the both sides bit, I just think we've got the direction of priority wrong.
Reduction in consumerism comes downstream from that type of education and outreach. Going at consumerism first just makes you seem like a reactionary who wants to "steal our gas stoves" to the ignorant propagandized, and unfortunately needed, masses
> Not going on vacation and markedly decreasing your quality of life to reduce climate emissions by 1x10^-9999999 percent is naively negligible at best
The sad thing is that, with all the COVID lock downs and travel restrictions, carbon emissions only slightly went down a couple percent in 2020, and promptly went back up to "normal" levels in 2021.
Given all those rhetorical shaming of individuals to consume less, it's illuminating to actually look at the data and see what's the actual the effect even if you could literally force (instead of shaming) everyone to live that lifestyle.
>Given all those rhetorical shaming of individuals to consume less, it's illuminating to actually look at the data and see what's the actual the effect even if you could literally force (instead of shaming) everyone to live that lifestyle.
Yeah, almost like the entire notion of a "carbon footprint" was a piece of propaganda produced by a literal oil company[0] to move the blame of polluting the planet from the corporations that knowingly did it, to earnest and empathetic individuals like the original person I replied to, causing them to abstain from vacation (and more) for negligible benefit while the corporations continue to pollute with impunity.
There are many problems here but to cut to the chase, BP (or whoever) is going to keep selling you oil and gas as long as you keep buying it. Shifting blame on to some faceless corporation and absolving yourself of responsibility is exactly the wrong answer.
Reckless misrepresentation of my comment. I suggested that political action is what you should do, not spend your days worrying about how many plastic straws you used.
I'm suggesting all empirics point to the notion that tackling regulation of corporations would have a trillion x the effects of you not allowing yourself to go on vacation because planes = bad.
I am not suggesting any absolution of responsibility. I'm suggesting we look at the basic math behind carbon consumption and note the pretty clear picture painted by 100 companies producing 71% of emissions.
Voting/organizing for politicians that actually change the subsidies given to fossil fuel companies among a litany of other reductions is and always will be a billion x more productive than needlessly preventing yourself from having a nice vacation.
100 companies producing 71% of emissions to sell us products that we continue to buy.
You can’t have a nice vacation in which you hop on an airliner and then rent an SUV to drive around Banff or whatever without these emissions. It’s contradictory. Consumption reduction has to happen while you also stop subsidies and create emission regulations that can reduce the ongoing damage.
If you aren’t willing to make personal changes then nothing will get done because you’ll complain about gas being $19/gallon and a new iPhone costing $4,000 and demand the same economic incentives (emissions) that make our lifestyle artificially cheap.
It’s a fair amount of cognitive dissonance that is required to not put 2 and 2 together here.
To your point, we can do many things at once. But personal consumption reduction everyone likes to hand wave away because it’s easy to just keep doing what you’re doing today and say well if only the corporations maaan.
>100 companies producing 71% of emissions to sell us products that we continue to buy
And they could in most cases produce those goods with a more ecological process, but since that requires reducing profit at least in the short term, it won't ever get done without regulation. Which requires political action.
I agree in general with "consumerism needs to also be reduced" but that's just way down stream from the most impactful things conscientious actors can do. Like those prices would reduce consumerism, and I'd rather have complaints about not being able to afford the new iphone than boiling oceans. I still think there's plenty of space to trim in the profit section of the pie before we increase cost.
I never didn't agree with personal action is important, paper straws good technically, all that good stuff, sure. Just mostly negligible vs political action in a perfectly democratic world.
All I meant to get at is that like per "dollar" of effort spent, you get by far the best return on political action. Personal changes are just nowhere near as efficient. Not taking airplanes vs getting a climate conscious politician elected locally quantified would surely demonstrate that? Again though I'm no climate scientist and I'm mostly talking from my ass and a few books about climate.
I didn't get into the rest of the debate here but this is how I see it: we are the government, we are the companies, and obviously we are the consumers who drive the economy and vote for the government. We all wear different hats at different times, but these things are the embodiment of the collective will of the people. They are the clearest demonstration that we are doing nothing about it and will continue to do nothing about it. We are collectively stupid and selfish.
You can pretend that you can vote for a government that will put in place solutions for climate change, and then wash your hands of the problem. But you're kidding yourself. How would that work? Let's say the green party weren't completely fucking clueless and had policies that would actually work. They'd be banning frivolous air travel, implementing strict personal carbon budgets, shifting complete away from fossil fuels on an aggressive timeline, updating building codes to ensure that all new buildings were carbon negative, banning shit left, right and center. Are you going to vote for them? The hell you are. You would effectively be voting to enforce the lifestyle that you think I'm ker-razy for voluntarily adopting. Even though the Green Party's policies right now are milquetoast, still nobody votes for them.
I'm doing the only thing I can do. You might say that my individual contribution is negligible. You'd be right. But climate change is just the collective impact of a few hundred million people who, just like me, who are in the top x% in terms CO² emissions.
Here's the thing: I always vote for whatever party that leans towards climate action. Usually that means: absolutely nothing. They're all shit. Even if the fantasy political party did exist, and I was happy to vote for those changes (which I would!) my vote would be worth noting in the grand scheme of things because they'd get less than 1% of the vote. And whereas you tell me that my personal CO² reductions are worthless, and my vote is not, it's precisely the opposite. Every kg of CO² that I curb is literally good, but every wasted vote that has it's effective value wiped out in an election is worth literally nothing.
The fact is, I'm far, far happier giving up a luxury lifestyle that was unimaginable two generations ago. Is it really such a huge thing to give up meat? Or flying? Nope. Anyway, if things get as bad as I think they'll get during my lifetime, then I consider my current (comfortable) lifestyle "practice for the real thing when it happens".
The companies are producing climate emissions on your behalf. Oil companies are making gasoline for you to burn, natural gas companies are pumping it to you to burn, and electric companies are burning coal to make electricity for you.
On the other side, changing your behavior is a drop in the ocean. Everybody needs to change their behavior. But your behavior will need to change at some point so helps to do it now, and model it to your neighbors. The companies are a target for regulation, or opponents. But the behavior of consumers will have to be regulated.
They definitely have distracted people by talking about stuff like plastics and recycling. When it is energy and how it is produced that matters. A lot of stuff will become green when energy and transport is green.
>The companies are producing climate emissions on your behalf
Let's not be naive, most if not all things they produce on my behalf could easily be produced with a more ecological process, it would simply require reduction of profit to retool/rebuild infrastructure. Which we all know is only going to happen by enforcement/regulation. If all of that's true, political action is the answer for "most effective individual action you can take to impact climate change", not "abstaining from vacation and plastic straws".
>A lot of stuff will become green when energy and transport is green.
Exactly, which is why we should utilize regulation to tip the economic scales of profitability in different methods of energy production... And other such legislative tools we can use to incentivize such transitions... All of which relies not on "paper straws" but on concerted political action.
Those 100 companies get paid with our money. The choices we make drive the market. My purchasing choices (or lack thereof) will have far more impact on co² reduction than my vote, because there isn't a single candidate, let alone party, that is going to do a damn thing about it. If being close to carbon neutral does nothing more than let me say "I did my best, so I'm not gonna beat myself up", them so be it. That's actually quite a lot in my book. Oh to be a sociopath! I could do as I please and not worry about my conscience!
As I've commented before, the things we all consume could be produced more ecologically, at the cost of reduced profits. Which will never happen unless through legislation.
>My purchasing choices (or lack thereof) will have far more impact on co² reduction than my vote
Agree to disagree here. Heard of the EPA? What purchase can you make that has anywhere near the impact of an institution like that? (Before it was regulatory captured...)
>there isn't a single candidate, let alone party, that is going to do a damn thing about it
Patently false. Plenty has been done research and legislation wise, but since there isn't enough support to get stuff like the green new deal passed, what are we do to? Oh, elect more politicians that DO support it? Think i mentioned something like that...
>If being close to carbon neutral does nothing more than let me say "I did my best, so I'm not gonna beat myself up", them so be it
Again, not saying you should stop, just saying a conscientious actor might feel even better if you did a notably more effective action, and it might do a lot more for climate change to boot.
> I could do as I please and not worry about my conscience!
Another misrepresentation of my stance. I am not suggesting that, I'm simply suggesting political action is a much more efficacious approach. The fact you believe not a single politician cares about climate change is a depressing and inaccurate stance that does explain your position though, as much as I disagree with it.
Twitter (x?) has become a car crash. Unless you're logged into it those tweets (posts?) go nowhere. I genuinely believe he's flushing those billions down the toilet.
You aren’t missing anything by not being able to see that first link. It’s a misleading post from a right wing grifter that does pretty much nothing but make misleading posts.
Bottom line is that the all-green and color coded versions of this temperature map have both been used for 30 years. It wasn’t some change in the last few years to make the temperatures seem scary, as the grifter is clearly implying (and the HN user is clearly inferring).
That fact check was full of bullshit. It does nothing to convince me it wasn’t intentional. There is no “fact checking” here. They agree it’s different colors and one is portraying rain in 2022 with red colors. Yeah… there is a reason why they chose red and not blue.
Well it’s not AP, and the red one isn’t portraying rain.
Here’s their note about the broadcast the red one is from:
> The report later includes green maps, but they are focused on general forecasts and rainfall -- not temperatures.
But honestly, you don’t even need any of this context to know why the implication of the original viral post is nonsense, just a tiny bit of logic: one of these is topographical, and one of these shows heat indicated by color. They both have temperatures listed because the weather report is more useful to the people watching it that way.
If you watch weather on like any news they’re going to show you a number of different maps, all within probably 90 seconds. Temperature, precipitation, cloud cover, wind speeds & direction, topography, storm tracking maps, maybe more.
This is why countering misinformation is such an uphill battle: someone goes to substantial lengths to track down exactly the context that completely obliterates the initial implication. But the context doesn’t go viral, and people fooled by the viral post in the first place who actually see the context instantly reject or misunderstand it.
Once in a lifetime? This says that the last time California had a hurricane was 84 years ago. Current US life expectancy is under 80 years. Seems like it is on track for a "shocking once in a lifetime" event.
No, clearly if it hasn't happened, it isn't worth preparing or worrying about. We do that after the shit has hit the fan and it's too late to actually do anything.
When I moved there from the bay area for college, it was super sunny and beautiful the week I was touring about....
I moved there - and then it rained for 90 days straight (1997) - PNW lures you in with beautiful, then once you commit - it laughs in your non-umbrella-having-face
Yeah, in terms of actual rain, Seattle is mostly nothingburger. As you said, it is mostly just very light drizzle whenever it happens.
Living in ATL prior to this, rains in ATL were way more vicious and something more to care about than rains in Seattle. However, I was not prepared for the effect that multiple weeks of grey sky in a row on a regular basis would do to me. And I am saying that as someone who didn't even like the sun.
This is accurate, and I love rain - the only thing I dont like about rain is that I am an avid bicyclist (>1,000 a month at times) and riding in rain sucks.
I was living in Hoboken during the flooding of Hurricane Sandy. Here are some things I learned from the experience.
Sections of town that never flooded were submerged in several feet of flood water. Some residents of the city had moved their cars to high ground before the storm arrived, but thousands of people didn't. The flood waters had plumes of petrol in it. Hoboken was lucky that nothing caught fire. The lesson learned was that if you are living in a section of town that doesn't usually flood, but your city is in a low elevation, flood prone area, move your car to high ground just in case and expect others not to.
Expect a week without electricity.
If you live in a common dwelling building:
- the lower level should be an empty parking garage before the storm. If you are in an old building, there may be grey market tenants living in the basement. They are in danger and should be warned.
- Vehicles left in the garage will flood and contaminate the entire garage.
- Trash cans need to have the bags tightly fastened.
- If you have a maintenance closet on the first floor, it should be sand bagged at least three feet high. You do not want this stuff leeching into common areas.
- the entire association can reduce the cost of decontamination clean up by moving all vehicles, securing trash and cleaning chemicals in advance of the floods
- bleach wash kills mold. Don't be fooled by cleaning services that their super super cleaning solution that costs 5x bleach water is better.
- it is better to cut dry wall and throw it away, including insulation, than to bother cleaning it. Mold starts inside the wall.
- maintenance services will price gauge. You do not need alleged experts to do what common contractors can.
Sorry you had to experience that. Not sure if you still live in Hoboken, but I must say their flood mitigation efforts in recent years have actually helped somewhat during major rainfall events. They added several pumps which direct stormwater to huge underground water storage basins. Meanwhile PSE&G completely relocated some electrical infrastructure to prevent power loss during storms.
I lived in the flood zone during Hurricane Ida (2021), which turned my street into a two-foot-deep river. The water was completely cleared by the pumps within about 16 hours (iirc), and we never lost power.
Still sucked though. We had a boil-water advisory for over 72 hours. And since Hoboken still has a combined sewer system (rather than separate sanitary vs stormwater systems), the whole town smelled like sewage for weeks. Many people had their cars totaled, and below-grade apartments were ruined. But, all things considered, Hoboken fared significantly better than a lot of other towns in NJ.
That said, Hoboken still hasn't done anything to address risk of storm surge from the river, which is what caused the problems during Sandy. So if there is ever a repeat of those conditions, they'd still be screwed.
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[ 1.9 ms ] story [ 145 ms ] threadEven our local Walmart can end up with piles of pallets in the aisles before an expected blizzard.
Unfortunately, ma and pa are terrible at logistics.
btw, Weather West is always the best place to go for California weather -- there's nobody better on this than climate scientist Daniel Swain: https://weatherwest.com/
PS: I understand there is a system for naming hurricanes but at least for me, the fact this one is named Hillary has added to my trepidation.
The mountains are what normally prevent the coast from seeing any of the monsoonal storms typical of CA/AZ deserts in mid-summer. It's common for moisture coming from Mexico to produce large thunderstorms east of the coastal mountain ranges this time of year.
I'm not saying this storm won't amount to anything for the coast. We'll probably get some rain and some wind. I'm not stockpiling anything and my only prep has been to put a bit of gas in the car and charge all of my batteries. We're most likely going to roll our eyes at the people panic-buying TP and water this Monday.
Edit: It's 12:32 AM in San Diego. According to several online radar maps including weather.com, we've been in the middle of a rainstorm for almost an hour. The ground is still dry and it's a calm 73F outside. Very weird. I can understand radar picking up light rain which evaporates before hitting the ground, but the map is indicating rain that is much heavier than that. Weird.
But hot.
We need to go back to the nerd meteorologists nerds with elbow patches on tweed jackets as opposed to cocktail dresses on tight fitting big boobs.
The rainfall prediction from the National Hurricane Center showing vast majority of areas will experience 1-4 inches, but some inland areas in small regions will experience up to 10 inches.
It’s heartening to think that the last time this happened a direct consequence was the large amount of flood control infrastructure we have today.
I’m anxious but not concerned even though every map with some rating of impact, has us at the highest level. But we are on the edge of those zones, I know our terrain, we should handle the water all right. I have good confidence in the water control engineering in our area, even if it’s overrun. The wind may be an issue, however, particularly with the water. I’ve not experienced that before. Wind, yes. But not wind driving water that hard. It’s a real unknown to me and can make both the wind and water more impactful.
It’s going to be an interesting day or so, but the sun should be back by Tuesday, and it’s always a pretty day in the sun when it strikes the mountains.
Best wishes.
It’s interesting how similar that reads to waiting for an enemy to attack a fortified position.
Waiting for "the enemy"... You know, those non-people we get to cap with our gunporn h/w without a glimmer of remorse... Just like in "Final Incineration of the Infidel! #14"...
In the city of San Diego now (12:45pm PDT), we're experiencing light rain. Nothing even close to an emergency at this point, much less "THE ENEMY"...
The winds are not due until early to mid afternoon.
One friend, in OC, thinks this is being "overhyped". On the other hand, the weather warnings are using words such as "devastating" and "catastrophic". The problem, of course, is that the area is large, the terrain is varied, and what's "nothing" for one person and "devastating" for another can be as little as being on a neighboring street. OC is farther from the core of it than I am.
Another friend, who has a cabin up in the mountains, that area is under mandatory evacuation. I doubt he was up there, and it's not surprising. Not so much because I think that area per se is under particular danger (it well could be), but simply getting in and out of there is via some rather nasty roads, and the exit is right next to a river bed. Not a place you'd want to be, or try to leave, as I can see it simply being cut off.
I'm on part of the alluvial fan of the foothills, so any water is likely to pass me by. That said, there's a creek and canyon mouth north of me, quite capable of flash flooding. But there's a good amount of just raw riverbed land than any outflow will have to work its way through, and any real water would likely take to the street (the streets are part and parcel to the flood control system as well) long before it could impact me. But there are folks farther up the hill.
We're also at the bottom of Cajon Pass, notorious for its wind. My concern is that it will act as an amplifier of the already fast winds, and we may get a taste of that. Tomorrow is trash day, and some of my neighbors already have their cans out, and I just shake my head. My other neighbor just planted a large, 20 ft palm tree -- on Friday. We are eyeing that warily, just really bad timing, and can only hope the wind doesn't take it. It probably won't but I moved my car out of the way anyway.
So, more waiting. It's like being in that Twister movie, with the storm chasing us in slow motion. We're sheltering in place, made some nice waffles for breakfast. The cats are ignorant and ambivalent, more interested in cleaning something, have their fur brushed off, or bonking a sibling. There's always solace taking moments to watch them instead of the dark sky outside.
Thanks all for the thoughts, I'm sure we'll be fine. Hopefully the "catastrophe" and "devastation" will be limited to the others nearby. Hopefully the limit of my catastrophe will be my neighbor trashcans in my driveway.
[1] https://www.nhc.noaa.gov/text/refresh/MIATCPEP4+shtml/200557...
[2] https://www.nhc.noaa.gov/#Hilary
Oh, and also: "There's literally nothing we can do / could have done to prevent this awful disaster!" and"Thoughts and prayers" sent by the bucket.
Edit: in total honestly, my wife drew the lines, and I've been happy to live along them. So I claim no great moral superiority here.
Never understood the impetus to restrict yourself when we're beyond negligible.
Carbon footprint propaganda was rhetoric popularized by BP themselves to shift the blame to empathetic people like you and your wife, while they continue to make everything worse.
Vote for and organize for serious progressive candidates who take climate seriously in your local elections. That will do a million $ more than you not taking a vacation because of plane emissions while the rich take private flights down to the grocery store.
I think we should work both ways: be conscious about what we can do as individuals and at the same time, organize society.
Useless? Of course not. Completely negligible? Absolutely, 100%. I'm no climate scientist but voting literally once for the party that believes in climate science probably has about a million x the effect of you not going on vacation.
>Be conscious about what we can do as individuals
All I'm contesting is that the most effective thing we can do is participate and organize in politics.
Not going on vacation and markedly decreasing your quality of life to reduce climate emissions by 1x10^-9999999 percent is naively negligible at best, a propagandized (by an oil company nonetheless) abdication of their larger responsibility to participate in politics causing the actual damage as science denying lunatics fill offices around the nation at worst.
Exactly. I completely agree with the both sides bit, I just think we've got the direction of priority wrong.
Reduction in consumerism comes downstream from that type of education and outreach. Going at consumerism first just makes you seem like a reactionary who wants to "steal our gas stoves" to the ignorant propagandized, and unfortunately needed, masses
The sad thing is that, with all the COVID lock downs and travel restrictions, carbon emissions only slightly went down a couple percent in 2020, and promptly went back up to "normal" levels in 2021.
Given all those rhetorical shaming of individuals to consume less, it's illuminating to actually look at the data and see what's the actual the effect even if you could literally force (instead of shaming) everyone to live that lifestyle.
[0] https://youtu.be/1J9LOqiXdpE
Reckless misrepresentation of my comment. I suggested that political action is what you should do, not spend your days worrying about how many plastic straws you used.
I'm suggesting all empirics point to the notion that tackling regulation of corporations would have a trillion x the effects of you not allowing yourself to go on vacation because planes = bad.
I am not suggesting any absolution of responsibility. I'm suggesting we look at the basic math behind carbon consumption and note the pretty clear picture painted by 100 companies producing 71% of emissions.
Voting/organizing for politicians that actually change the subsidies given to fossil fuel companies among a litany of other reductions is and always will be a billion x more productive than needlessly preventing yourself from having a nice vacation.
You can’t have a nice vacation in which you hop on an airliner and then rent an SUV to drive around Banff or whatever without these emissions. It’s contradictory. Consumption reduction has to happen while you also stop subsidies and create emission regulations that can reduce the ongoing damage.
If you aren’t willing to make personal changes then nothing will get done because you’ll complain about gas being $19/gallon and a new iPhone costing $4,000 and demand the same economic incentives (emissions) that make our lifestyle artificially cheap.
It’s a fair amount of cognitive dissonance that is required to not put 2 and 2 together here.
To your point, we can do many things at once. But personal consumption reduction everyone likes to hand wave away because it’s easy to just keep doing what you’re doing today and say well if only the corporations maaan.
And they could in most cases produce those goods with a more ecological process, but since that requires reducing profit at least in the short term, it won't ever get done without regulation. Which requires political action.
I agree in general with "consumerism needs to also be reduced" but that's just way down stream from the most impactful things conscientious actors can do. Like those prices would reduce consumerism, and I'd rather have complaints about not being able to afford the new iphone than boiling oceans. I still think there's plenty of space to trim in the profit section of the pie before we increase cost.
I never didn't agree with personal action is important, paper straws good technically, all that good stuff, sure. Just mostly negligible vs political action in a perfectly democratic world.
All I meant to get at is that like per "dollar" of effort spent, you get by far the best return on political action. Personal changes are just nowhere near as efficient. Not taking airplanes vs getting a climate conscious politician elected locally quantified would surely demonstrate that? Again though I'm no climate scientist and I'm mostly talking from my ass and a few books about climate.
You can pretend that you can vote for a government that will put in place solutions for climate change, and then wash your hands of the problem. But you're kidding yourself. How would that work? Let's say the green party weren't completely fucking clueless and had policies that would actually work. They'd be banning frivolous air travel, implementing strict personal carbon budgets, shifting complete away from fossil fuels on an aggressive timeline, updating building codes to ensure that all new buildings were carbon negative, banning shit left, right and center. Are you going to vote for them? The hell you are. You would effectively be voting to enforce the lifestyle that you think I'm ker-razy for voluntarily adopting. Even though the Green Party's policies right now are milquetoast, still nobody votes for them.
I'm doing the only thing I can do. You might say that my individual contribution is negligible. You'd be right. But climate change is just the collective impact of a few hundred million people who, just like me, who are in the top x% in terms CO² emissions.
Here's the thing: I always vote for whatever party that leans towards climate action. Usually that means: absolutely nothing. They're all shit. Even if the fantasy political party did exist, and I was happy to vote for those changes (which I would!) my vote would be worth noting in the grand scheme of things because they'd get less than 1% of the vote. And whereas you tell me that my personal CO² reductions are worthless, and my vote is not, it's precisely the opposite. Every kg of CO² that I curb is literally good, but every wasted vote that has it's effective value wiped out in an election is worth literally nothing.
The fact is, I'm far, far happier giving up a luxury lifestyle that was unimaginable two generations ago. Is it really such a huge thing to give up meat? Or flying? Nope. Anyway, if things get as bad as I think they'll get during my lifetime, then I consider my current (comfortable) lifestyle "practice for the real thing when it happens".
On the other side, changing your behavior is a drop in the ocean. Everybody needs to change their behavior. But your behavior will need to change at some point so helps to do it now, and model it to your neighbors. The companies are a target for regulation, or opponents. But the behavior of consumers will have to be regulated.
They definitely have distracted people by talking about stuff like plastics and recycling. When it is energy and how it is produced that matters. A lot of stuff will become green when energy and transport is green.
>A lot of stuff will become green when energy and transport is green.
Exactly, which is why we should utilize regulation to tip the economic scales of profitability in different methods of energy production... And other such legislative tools we can use to incentivize such transitions... All of which relies not on "paper straws" but on concerted political action.
As I've commented before, the things we all consume could be produced more ecologically, at the cost of reduced profits. Which will never happen unless through legislation.
>My purchasing choices (or lack thereof) will have far more impact on co² reduction than my vote
Agree to disagree here. Heard of the EPA? What purchase can you make that has anywhere near the impact of an institution like that? (Before it was regulatory captured...)
>there isn't a single candidate, let alone party, that is going to do a damn thing about it
Patently false. Plenty has been done research and legislation wise, but since there isn't enough support to get stuff like the green new deal passed, what are we do to? Oh, elect more politicians that DO support it? Think i mentioned something like that...
>If being close to carbon neutral does nothing more than let me say "I did my best, so I'm not gonna beat myself up", them so be it
Again, not saying you should stop, just saying a conscientious actor might feel even better if you did a notably more effective action, and it might do a lot more for climate change to boot.
> I could do as I please and not worry about my conscience!
Another misrepresentation of my stance. I am not suggesting that, I'm simply suggesting political action is a much more efficacious approach. The fact you believe not a single politician cares about climate change is a depressing and inaccurate stance that does explain your position though, as much as I disagree with it.
Also some interesting deep dive about NOAA data: https://twitter.com/MorlockP/status/1679838210086641668
More info on this specific viral image here: https://factcheck.afp.com/doc.afp.com.32FV7W7
Bottom line is that the all-green and color coded versions of this temperature map have both been used for 30 years. It wasn’t some change in the last few years to make the temperatures seem scary, as the grifter is clearly implying (and the HN user is clearly inferring).
I thought AP was being sarcastic.
Here’s their note about the broadcast the red one is from:
> The report later includes green maps, but they are focused on general forecasts and rainfall -- not temperatures.
But honestly, you don’t even need any of this context to know why the implication of the original viral post is nonsense, just a tiny bit of logic: one of these is topographical, and one of these shows heat indicated by color. They both have temperatures listed because the weather report is more useful to the people watching it that way.
If you watch weather on like any news they’re going to show you a number of different maps, all within probably 90 seconds. Temperature, precipitation, cloud cover, wind speeds & direction, topography, storm tracking maps, maybe more.
This is why countering misinformation is such an uphill battle: someone goes to substantial lengths to track down exactly the context that completely obliterates the initial implication. But the context doesn’t go viral, and people fooled by the viral post in the first place who actually see the context instantly reject or misunderstand it.
California satellite images: https://www.star.nesdis.noaa.gov/GOES/sector.php?sat=G18&sec...
When I moved there from the bay area for college, it was super sunny and beautiful the week I was touring about....
I moved there - and then it rained for 90 days straight (1997) - PNW lures you in with beautiful, then once you commit - it laughs in your non-umbrella-having-face
I kind of like it, but I get that others don’t.
Living in ATL prior to this, rains in ATL were way more vicious and something more to care about than rains in Seattle. However, I was not prepared for the effect that multiple weeks of grey sky in a row on a regular basis would do to me. And I am saying that as someone who didn't even like the sun.
Sections of town that never flooded were submerged in several feet of flood water. Some residents of the city had moved their cars to high ground before the storm arrived, but thousands of people didn't. The flood waters had plumes of petrol in it. Hoboken was lucky that nothing caught fire. The lesson learned was that if you are living in a section of town that doesn't usually flood, but your city is in a low elevation, flood prone area, move your car to high ground just in case and expect others not to.
Expect a week without electricity.
If you live in a common dwelling building:
- the lower level should be an empty parking garage before the storm. If you are in an old building, there may be grey market tenants living in the basement. They are in danger and should be warned.
- Vehicles left in the garage will flood and contaminate the entire garage.
- Trash cans need to have the bags tightly fastened.
- If you have a maintenance closet on the first floor, it should be sand bagged at least three feet high. You do not want this stuff leeching into common areas.
- the entire association can reduce the cost of decontamination clean up by moving all vehicles, securing trash and cleaning chemicals in advance of the floods
- bleach wash kills mold. Don't be fooled by cleaning services that their super super cleaning solution that costs 5x bleach water is better.
- it is better to cut dry wall and throw it away, including insulation, than to bother cleaning it. Mold starts inside the wall.
- maintenance services will price gauge. You do not need alleged experts to do what common contractors can.
I lived in the flood zone during Hurricane Ida (2021), which turned my street into a two-foot-deep river. The water was completely cleared by the pumps within about 16 hours (iirc), and we never lost power.
Still sucked though. We had a boil-water advisory for over 72 hours. And since Hoboken still has a combined sewer system (rather than separate sanitary vs stormwater systems), the whole town smelled like sewage for weeks. Many people had their cars totaled, and below-grade apartments were ruined. But, all things considered, Hoboken fared significantly better than a lot of other towns in NJ.
That said, Hoboken still hasn't done anything to address risk of storm surge from the river, which is what caused the problems during Sandy. So if there is ever a repeat of those conditions, they'd still be screwed.