The earth just broke the record for the hottest day in 120,000 years. In fact, we broke in on three separate days.
— Ilhan Omar (@IlhanMN) July 17, 2023
National climate emergency now.
The chick is a piece of work.
The earth just broke the record for the hottest day in 120,000 years. In fact, we broke in on three separate days.
— Ilhan Omar (@IlhanMN) July 17, 2023
National climate emergency now.
Anything remotely reliable is since 1895. These people are full of crap.45-70Ag said:
Written record for recorded temps goes back what, maybe 200 years?
And we just need one extra large magnifying glass about 6 ft. above her head, and POOF, she's gone.zephyr88 said:
In how long???The earth just broke the record for the hottest day in 120,000 years. In fact, we broke in on three separate days.
— Ilhan Omar (@IlhanMN) July 17, 2023
National climate emergency now.
The chick is a piece of work.
BadMoonRisin said:
comment section bending her over like they were her brother.
C@LAg said:
ALL US TEXANS GONNA DIE
i saw this crap going around yesrterday.
Most recent days in the south Texas borderlands, the wet bulb temperature hits 92-93 at this time of dayclose to fatal levels.
Wikipedia: "A reading of 95 F… is considered the theoretical human survivability limit for up to 6 hours of exposure."Most recent days in the south Texas borderlands, the wet bulb temperature hits 92-93º at this time of day—close to fatal levels.
— Adam Isacson (@adam_wola) July 14, 2023
Wikipedia: "A reading of 95 °F… is considered the theoretical human survivability limit for up to 6 hours of exposure."
Map: https://t.co/XtbW53Yo2S pic.twitter.com/GA31gaRRrz
Brutal day that was. 20-3 was getting to the peak, but Ok ST got IVs at halftime and the rest is history.Owlagdad said:C@LAg said:
ALL US TEXANS GONNA DIE
i saw this crap going around yesrterday.
Most recent days in the south Texas borderlands, the wet bulb temperature hits 92-93 at this time of dayclose to fatal levels.
Wikipedia: "A reading of 95 F… is considered the theoretical human survivability limit for up to 6 hours of exposure."Most recent days in the south Texas borderlands, the wet bulb temperature hits 92-93º at this time of day—close to fatal levels.
— Adam Isacson (@adam_wola) July 14, 2023
Wikipedia: "A reading of 95 °F… is considered the theoretical human survivability limit for up to 6 hours of exposure."
Map: https://t.co/XtbW53Yo2S pic.twitter.com/GA31gaRRrz
I think the last Okie state game lasted 6 hours in that kind of heat. About 83000 made it through and watch Ags blow the half time lead.
zephyr88 said:
In how long???The earth just broke the record for the hottest day in 120,000 years. In fact, we broke in on three separate days.
— Ilhan Omar (@IlhanMN) July 17, 2023
National climate emergency now.
The chick is a piece of work.
Huh? These people have never cut timber or worked outside in East Texas in August.C@LAg said:
ALL US TEXANS GONNA DIE
i saw this crap going around yesrterday.
Most recent days in the south Texas borderlands, the wet bulb temperature hits 92-93 at this time of dayclose to fatal levels.
Wikipedia: "A reading of 95 F… is considered the theoretical human survivability limit for up to 6 hours of exposure."Most recent days in the south Texas borderlands, the wet bulb temperature hits 92-93º at this time of day—close to fatal levels.
— Adam Isacson (@adam_wola) July 14, 2023
Wikipedia: "A reading of 95 °F… is considered the theoretical human survivability limit for up to 6 hours of exposure."
Map: https://t.co/XtbW53Yo2S pic.twitter.com/GA31gaRRrz
Fightin_Aggie said:Huh? These people have never cut timber or worked outside in East Texas in August.C@LAg said:
ALL US TEXANS GONNA DIE
i saw this crap going around yesrterday.
Most recent days in the south Texas borderlands, the wet bulb temperature hits 92-93 at this time of dayclose to fatal levels.
Wikipedia: "A reading of 95 F… is considered the theoretical human survivability limit for up to 6 hours of exposure."Most recent days in the south Texas borderlands, the wet bulb temperature hits 92-93º at this time of day—close to fatal levels.
— Adam Isacson (@adam_wola) July 14, 2023
Wikipedia: "A reading of 95 °F… is considered the theoretical human survivability limit for up to 6 hours of exposure."
Map: https://t.co/XtbW53Yo2S pic.twitter.com/GA31gaRRrz
A high of 95 is a decent cool day. Pretty much always 95% humidity and 101+
They would be shocked to see people survived roofing and pouring concrete in those conditions I suppose
Every global warming religious nut should change their name to chicken little
Maybe I'm just a super hero?
jt2hunt said:
Damn she can make stupid look smart!
I must be superhuman as well. Many summers bailing hay in an open cab tractor, many summers pouring concrete on some 40+ hour foundation pours. (all at 98-100+ degree days) I knew there was something special about me!Fightin_Aggie said:Huh? These people have never cut timber or worked outside in East Texas in August.C@LAg said:
ALL US TEXANS GONNA DIE
i saw this crap going around yesrterday.
Most recent days in the south Texas borderlands, the wet bulb temperature hits 92-93 at this time of dayclose to fatal levels.
Wikipedia: "A reading of 95 F… is considered the theoretical human survivability limit for up to 6 hours of exposure."Most recent days in the south Texas borderlands, the wet bulb temperature hits 92-93º at this time of day—close to fatal levels.
— Adam Isacson (@adam_wola) July 14, 2023
Wikipedia: "A reading of 95 °F… is considered the theoretical human survivability limit for up to 6 hours of exposure."
Map: https://t.co/XtbW53Yo2S pic.twitter.com/GA31gaRRrz
A high of 95 is a decent cool day. Pretty much always 95% humidity and 101+
They would be shocked to see people survived roofing and pouring concrete in those conditions I suppose
Every global warming religious nut should change their name to chicken little
Maybe I'm just a super hero?
Texas Yarddog said:jt2hunt said:
Damn she can make stupid look smart!
If you tallied up the IQs in "the squad" the sum would be around room temperature.
Oh look. Another one ignore ice core samples45-70Ag said:
Written record for recorded temps goes back what, maybe 200 years?