Monday, 14 October 2024

DeSantis Nukes Reporter for Blaming Hurricanes on 'Global Warming'


Florida’s Republican Governor Ron DeSantis schooled a leftist reporter who claimed during a press conference that tornados and hurricanes are caused by “global warming.”

During a Thursday presser, the reporter tried to push a conspiracy theory that “global warming” was responsible for the recent major storms that ravaged Florida.

The reporter attempted to promote the green agenda while DeSantis addressed the public after the state was hit with two hurricanes over the last couple of weeks and dozens of tornadoes.

DeSantis was asked if the number of tornado warnings and touchdowns for Hurricane Milton could be associated with “climate change.”

“Tornadoes?” DeSantis shot back.

“I think you can go back and find tornadoes for all of human history,” DeSantis added.

DeSantis correctly noted that tornadoes and hurricanes have brought devastation to the area long before humans started burning fossil fuels.

He noted that the most recent hurricane that the state faced, Hurricane Milton, was not that powerful compared to the most powerful storms the state has faced in its history.

The governor explained that Milton hit with a barometric pressure of approximately 950 millibars when it made landfall.

“If you go back to 1851, there’s probably been 27 hurricanes that have had lower barometric, so the lower the barometric pressure, the stronger it is,” he said.

“I think there have been about 27 hurricanes that have had lower barometric pressure on landfall than Milton did, and of those, 17 occurred I think prior to 1960.

“The most powerful hurricane on record since the 1850s in the state of Florida occurred in the 1930s, the Labor Day Hurricane, barometric pressure on that was 892 millibars.

“It totally wiped out the Keys,” he continued.

“We’ve never seen anything like it, and that remains head and shoulders above any powerful hurricane that we’ve ever had in the state of Florida.”

DeSantis added that the deadliest hurricane the state has ever faced was the Okeechobee hurricane in 1928, which killed more than 4,000 people.

“So I just think people should put this in perspective there,” he said.

“They try to take different things that happen with tropical weather and act like it’s something, there’s nothing new under the Sun.

“You know, this is something that the state has dealt with for its entire history, and it’s something that will continue to deal with.”

“I think what’s changed is we’ve got 23 million people, a storm that hits is likely to hit more people and property than it would have 100 years ago, and so the potential for that damage has grown, but what’s also changed is our ability to do the prevention, to pre-stage the assets,” the governor added.

“I mean, we never did the pre-staging of power assets until I became governor.

“Now, people like expect that, but that wasn’t what was done in the past.

“That’s why people would be out with power for three weeks when we have hurricanes, we thought that that’s not good.

“Now we have to pay to get these guys to come in, but my view is, the quicker you get everyone hooked up, the better off the economy is going to be anyway.”

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