Please donate to http://PaulBeckwith.net to support my research and videos as I join the dots on abrupt climate system mayhem.

To do these videos, I need to upgrade my 6 generation old phone ($1500) and (6 year old ) laptop ($1000) so please help out.

Sincerely,
Paul

My heart is very heavy today.

This morning Shackleton the Explorer (my 15 year old cat) was in convulsions (seizures) on the floor. I tried to make him comfortable, and took him to the vet.

Shackleton is now in kitty heaven. He was with me and Newton at the vets. I’m grateful that he was in yesterday’s video.

Vet measured his vitals, but could not help.

15 years is a pretty good age for a cat.

He didn’t really recover from the seizures this morning.

The vet measured his heartrate. Not too bad.

His pupils were wide open, but he did not respond to light. His body temperature was very low and dropping more indicating that he was fading.

There was nothing to do.

The vet gave him a relaxant, and then a drug ten minutes later to stop his heart. Newton and I stayed with him. Newton knew.

Very sad.

Let’s talk about Hurricane Helene. The Gulf of Mexico sea surface temperature (SST) varies between 30 and 31 degrees C. Whenever SST is over 26.5C tropical storms are amplified, ocean evaporation is huge, and the water vapour rises, condenses, and releases its stored (latent) heat fuelling more intense, larger storms.

Helene amplified from a Tropical Storm to a Category 4 large area Hurricane is about a day. It kind of snuck up and surprised many people, leaving much less time for people to prepare.

The geographic area in Florida where landfall was is a curved bay, and the counter clockwise rotation of the hurricane and its fast forward speed resulted in pushed storm surge exceeding 15 feet and even 20 feet in places.

Unsurvivable, for many people who did not evacuate. Authorities asked these people to write their names and dates of birth on their arms in permanent marker.

How does this storm affect people around the world?

The cumulative effect is to drive insurance companies bankrupt, which makes houses un-mortgagable. Eventually this will collapse house prices.

The biggest cumulative economic effect from these extreme storms is to drive inflation higher. Up to half of the global central bank 2% inflation rate target is driven climate disruption. For food, the effect is two to three times higher.

Basically, climate change is raising the cost of living. Now. Significantly. See my video from a couple weeks ago on climate inflation.

You pay more every time there are billion dollar climate disasters. You may not understand that now, but you will.

The Climate Casino is already causing Climate Chaos.

Please donate to http://PaulBeckwith.net to support my research and videos as I join the dots on abrupt climate system mayhem.

To do these videos, I need to upgrade my 6 generation old phone ($1500) and (6 year old ) laptop ($1000) so please help out.

Sincerely,
Paul







by paulhenrybeckwith

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