User not logged in - login - register
Home Calendar Books School Tool Photo Gallery Message Boards Users Statistics Advertise Site Info
go to bottom | |
 Message Boards » » Kansas Town destroyed by Tornado Page [1] 2, Next  
Wolfman Tim
All American
9654 Posts
user info
edit post



95% of Greensburg, KS was destroyed by a tornado last night

9 dead so far
more likely to come
http://www.kansas.com/197/story/62467.html

5/5/2007 6:35:58 PM

AxlBonBach
All American
45549 Posts
user info
edit post

Holy Shit

5/5/2007 6:36:47 PM

moron
All American
33756 Posts
user info
edit post

God must hate them.

5/5/2007 6:37:44 PM

miska
All American
22242 Posts
user info
edit post

Andover 2.0

5/5/2007 6:40:11 PM

Wolfman Tim
All American
9654 Posts
user info
edit post

They're saying the tornado is either a high F4 or F5

5/5/2007 6:42:07 PM

miska
All American
22242 Posts
user info
edit post

yeah, KFDI was going crazy with warnings and stuff yesterday, it was pretty bad.

I have family there and might get some first hand pictures, because they're asking for all the volunteer fire fighters and police to help with the cleanup and everything

5/5/2007 6:44:11 PM

CharlesHF
All American
5543 Posts
user info
edit post

Quote :
"God must hate them."

I have a feeling that God isn't a big fan of Bible Thumpers.

5/5/2007 8:41:40 PM

cyrion
All American
27139 Posts
user info
edit post

those 9 should have strapped themselves to a water pipe using their belts. that would have saved them.

5/5/2007 8:46:17 PM

markgoal
All American
15996 Posts
user info
edit post

One of my friend's family lives in that county.

5/5/2007 8:53:37 PM

wolfpack0122
All American
3129 Posts
user info
edit post

that looks like the damage I saw in the '99 wichita/haysville tornado. Thats an image that def sticks out in my mind

5/5/2007 8:56:25 PM

0EPII1
All American
42526 Posts
user info
edit post

why do people continue to live in areas that are hit by hurricanes, or tornados, or floods, most years?

if i was born in an area that was prone to one of those phenomenon, i would pack up and move out of there as soon as i was old enough to.

5/5/2007 8:56:40 PM

Wolfman Tim
All American
9654 Posts
user info
edit post

problably becuase their lifestyles feed millions of people

5/5/2007 9:02:10 PM

markgoal
All American
15996 Posts
user info
edit post

^^Because not everyone can live in Arizona and Nevada.

[Edited on May 5, 2007 at 9:03 PM. Reason : .]

5/5/2007 9:03:07 PM

0EPII1
All American
42526 Posts
user info
edit post

^ huh? they can move to any place they like.

^^ what do you mean?

they are farmers?

still, you can sell everything and move.

that farm ain't no good now, is it?

[Edited on May 5, 2007 at 9:04 PM. Reason : ]

5/5/2007 9:03:49 PM

HockeyRoman
All American
11811 Posts
user info
edit post

Remember a few months ago when there were like 165 tornados in one day and only a handful of people were killed? It speaks volumes to our ever increasing advanced warning as well as how small tornados are compared to the land mass they are affecting. So really your chances of being affected by a tornado are fairly remote. Only the big ones like this are attention grabbers.

5/5/2007 9:07:21 PM

markgoal
All American
15996 Posts
user info
edit post

^^Most of the country is affected by meteorological phenomena. Those areas that are not are deserts, and they still flood when it rains. Where are you suggesting people live to not be at risk of one of those three things?

5/5/2007 9:17:33 PM

cyrion
All American
27139 Posts
user info
edit post

seriously, in the south you get hurricaines and nasty droughts. in new england you get noreasters and blizzards. in the middle of the country you get tornadoes. the midwest is also thrashed by blizards and the occasional tornado. california is king bee with wildfires, mudslides, earthquakes, and the like.

5/5/2007 9:24:05 PM

roddy
All American
25822 Posts
user info
edit post

just think if a F4 or F5 hit Chicago or Oklahoma City......

5/5/2007 9:39:30 PM

HockeyRoman
All American
11811 Posts
user info
edit post

Yeah, all of the "Let's control the weather!!1" freaks would come out of the woodwork.

5/5/2007 9:43:15 PM

cyrion
All American
27139 Posts
user info
edit post

terrorists control hurricaines using a neutron particle beam.

5/5/2007 9:57:14 PM

LiusClues
New Recruit
13824 Posts
user info
edit post

shitty wok!

5/5/2007 10:00:21 PM

absolutapril
All American
8144 Posts
user info
edit post

Quote :
"Remember a few months ago when there were like 165 tornados in one day and only a handful of people were killed? It speaks volumes to our ever increasing advanced warning as well as how small tornados are compared to the land mass they are affecting. So really your chances of being affected by a tornado are fairly remote. Only the big ones like this are attention grabbers."


Exactly

I love how people say stupid shit like "I wouldn't live there"
Where the fuck do you live right now? B/c Raleigh has been hit by the outskirts of hurricanes, tornadoes have set down here, and in 2000 22 inches of snow fell, crippling the city for 2 weeks.

Some people are just ignorant

5/6/2007 4:39:52 AM

Sleik
All American
11177 Posts
user info
edit post

OEPII1, are you in the business of biodome construction or something? Where the fuck does one go to "get away" from natural disasters? That can't seriously be the best you could come up with. People fucking lost everything they had, you spineless dog.

5/6/2007 5:09:36 AM

cockman
Suspended
462 Posts
user info
edit post

tornados can happen almost anywhere. Hurricanes are much worse and the major question is to ask why do people live on the coast in surge prone areas? they live there because its pretty and humans naturally just want to live by the sea. If insurance companies don't provide insurance the government has to. There is one million dollar house in texas that has been rebuilt by federal dollars four times.

5/6/2007 5:29:26 AM

JCASHFAN
All American
13916 Posts
user info
edit post

Quote :
"why do people continue to live in areas that are hit by hurricanes, or tornados, or floods, most years?"
Thats just asinine.

Quote :
"There is one million dollar house in texas that has been rebuilt by federal dollars four times."
Thats actually pretty cheap if it is on the coast, at least by NC standards. I'm not saying the Federal government should be in the business of insuring homes in high risk areas, but to abandon whole swathes of the country just because of natural disasters doesn't make financial sense.


[Edited on May 6, 2007 at 8:38 AM. Reason : .]

5/6/2007 8:35:23 AM

pilgrimshoes
Suspended
63151 Posts
user info
edit post

good god

5/6/2007 10:11:36 AM

ambrosia1231
eeeeeeeeeevil
76471 Posts
user info
edit post

Quote :
"why do people continue to live in areas that are hit by hurricanes, or tornados, or floods, most years?"




Why the hell not? Obviously, there are some pretty significant redeeming factors, and for each person who lives there, the answer will vary as to what those redeeming factors are.

5/6/2007 12:00:09 PM

LRlilDaddy
All American
6511 Posts
user info
edit post

what a shitty looking town.

i mean, obviously it looks shitty now, but it looks like it was shitty before too

5/6/2007 12:04:57 PM

rflong
All American
11472 Posts
user info
edit post

That town is about an hour west of where I live. This weekend has sucked with all of the bad weather.

^ Most towns in Kansas are small and are farming communities. What the fuck do you expect - NYC??

5/6/2007 12:54:07 PM

cockman
Suspended
462 Posts
user info
edit post

Where does all this farming talk come from? most people in kansas DON'T farm. Theres a very small amount of people who still actually farm.

and the house in texas was 1 million to be rebuilt. im talking about structural value. the houses you're talking about in nc sell for a mill because the land is expensive as hell. land is cheap in texas.

5/6/2007 1:48:16 PM

Aficionado
Suspended
22518 Posts
user info
edit post

Quote :
"Thats actually pretty cheap if it is on the coast, at least by NC standards. I'm not saying the Federal government should be in the business of insuring homes in high risk areas, but to abandon whole swathes of the country just because of natural disasters doesn't make financial sense."


actually it makes perfect financial sense if the cost of rebuilding exceeds the cost of revenue generated by developing those properties

5/6/2007 3:44:16 PM

joe_schmoe
All American
18758 Posts
user info
edit post

Quote :
"0EPII1: why do people continue to live in areas that are hit by hurricanes, or tornados, or floods, most years? ... i would pack up and move out of there "


thats a stupid thing to say.

why do i live on a major fault line next to an active volcano?

and why do you live in a desert, where any attempt at modernity is subject to suicide bomber attacks from a group of Qur'an-thumping goat-fuckers?

5/6/2007 6:25:49 PM

cockman
Suspended
462 Posts
user info
edit post

^whoa....you need to slow your role

5/6/2007 7:46:34 PM

joe_schmoe
All American
18758 Posts
user info
edit post

woah, you need to suck a dick.

5/6/2007 8:11:19 PM

ssjamind
All American
30098 Posts
user info
edit post

that is one asshole of a tornado

i wonder if those tornadoes in Day After Tomorrow are actually possible

5/6/2007 10:13:16 PM

drunknloaded
Suspended
147487 Posts
user info
edit post

seems like kentucky would be pretty decent

doesnt seem like they get a lot of tornados and blizzards and floods and earthquakes and hurricanes

can anyone confirm this?

5/6/2007 10:16:26 PM

jcscoopsunc
All American
1717 Posts
user info
edit post

is this why twister is on hbo?

5/6/2007 10:51:47 PM

TerdFerguson
All American
6570 Posts
user info
edit post

^^Couldnt tell you from first hand experience

but i imagine they get some blizzards and some tornados in Kentucky but not with much frequency

Ill bet they do have those underground coal mine fires (like that one in Pennsylvania with the abandoned town)
Not sure what you call those though.



oh yeah and Crystal meth

5/6/2007 10:59:01 PM

Aficionado
Suspended
22518 Posts
user info
edit post

it was on during the day before all this happened

5/6/2007 10:59:25 PM

markgoal
All American
15996 Posts
user info
edit post



Kentucky gets a good number of tornadoes, especially northern and western Kentucky. I drove through a hell of a lot of tornadoes in northern Kentucky and southern Indiana when I drove out west.

They also get a fair amount of flooding from hard rains in the mountains. Southeastern doesn't get a whole lot but some floods and snow, but you probably aren't going to get a job not related to the coal industry or the basic service industry.

5/6/2007 11:23:20 PM

joepeshi
All American
8094 Posts
user info
edit post

When I was in Kindergarten an F4 came through North Raleigh. It destroyed my daycare and a girl in my elementary school died (chimney fell in on her bedroom). A girl in my class showed us her scar from the tornado (leg was cut up by glass). Here is more info about it and a map.

http://www4.ncsu.edu/~nwsfo/storage/cases/19881128/

5/7/2007 1:26:35 AM

OuiJamn
All American
5766 Posts
user info
edit post

Quote :
"those 9 should have strapped themselves to a water pipe using their belts. that would have saved them."


I literally just finished watching that movie ten minutes ago...

5/7/2007 2:04:39 AM

RhoIsWar1096
All American
3857 Posts
user info
edit post

man... Oklahoma ftl!!!

5/7/2007 2:17:44 AM

StillFuchsia
All American
18941 Posts
user info
edit post

Kansan tornadoes are the worst

I'm glad I don't live in Wichita anymore.

Quote :
"I love how people say stupid shit like "I wouldn't live there"
Where the fuck do you live right now? B/c Raleigh has been hit by the outskirts of hurricanes, tornadoes have set down here, and in 2000 22 inches of snow fell, crippling the city for 2 weeks."


You don't know shit about living there, so I'd keep quiet if I were you. Hurricanes barely hitting Raleigh is absolutely nothing like having half your goddamn city ripped apart by a tornado. Not to mention that Kansas usually has at least 50 tornadoes that actually do damage every year.

58-tornado outbreak on April 26th, 1991 >>>>>>>>>>>> the "outskirts of hurricanes"

Yeah, we all live in areas susceptible to certain kinds of weather. But living in Tornado Alley is not something I ever want to revisit.

5/7/2007 2:19:23 AM

joe_schmoe
All American
18758 Posts
user info
edit post

Quote :
"I'm glad I don't live in Wichita anymore."


im glad im not sitting in the sedgwick county jail anymore.





[Edited on May 7, 2007 at 2:20 AM. Reason : ]

5/7/2007 2:19:25 AM

RhoIsWar1096
All American
3857 Posts
user info
edit post

^^man, SOMEBODY's got a sandy 'gina!

5/7/2007 2:24:11 AM

joe_schmoe
All American
18758 Posts
user info
edit post

having travelled extensively through that area of the country ...

i'll say Fuchsia is right.

NC people don't know shit about tornadoes.

and its kind of pathetic listening to a bunch of them talk like they do.




[Edited on May 7, 2007 at 3:02 AM. Reason : ]

5/7/2007 3:02:18 AM

cockman
Suspended
462 Posts
user info
edit post

Quote :
"I drove through a hell of a lot of tornadoes in northern Kentucky and southern Indiana when I drove out west.
"

5/7/2007 3:59:42 AM

markgoal
All American
15996 Posts
user info
edit post

OK, let me clarify. As I drove down the interstate, the weather was nasty as hell, and every station kept noting tornadoes touching down on either side of the interstate. The person on the radio noted that the rest of the staff was in the storm shelter. Eventually, no station was broadcasting because they had all been knocked out by lightning. I saw a tornado and had to go inside to hole up when I spotted a tornado and started getting pounded by hail. Tornado country stretches across a swath of the midwest, and the data supports me.

I lived in Kansas as well, and there were a couple tornado scares while I was there as well as constant high winds. The meteorology there was much more focused and specific during storms than it is back east. However, the area covered by one tornado is so comparably small compared to say, a hurricane, that the risk is still relatively low. Now if you get hit with a big tornado you are screwed (both in sheer power and the small amount of advanced warning), but a tornado hit at any particular spot is still a rare occurrance, even if less rare then in NC.

5/7/2007 6:05:45 AM

wolfpack0122
All American
3129 Posts
user info
edit post

wow, didn't realize there were so many people on here that used to live in KS.
I lived in Wichita from '94 until I graduated HS in '01

5/7/2007 6:46:18 AM

 Message Boards » The Lounge » Kansas Town destroyed by Tornado Page [1] 2, Next  
go to top | |
Admin Options : move topic | lock topic

© 2024 by The Wolf Web - All Rights Reserved.
The material located at this site is not endorsed, sponsored or provided by or on behalf of North Carolina State University.
Powered by CrazyWeb v2.38 - our disclaimer.