Anonymous ID: 72de18 Oct. 7, 2022, 7:35 a.m. No.17650938   🗄️.is đź”—kun

Updated dough: OLD DOUGH BACK IN PLAY, 8KUN SAILING FORWARD

Baker is ready to hand off to new baker, board is really fucky with posting new threads,

BAKERS PLEASE CLAIM BREAD==

GOD SPEED AHEAD - o7

https://controlc.com/206aff93

#HOOMAN is GHOSTED

Anonymous ID: 72de18 Oct. 7, 2022, 7:39 a.m. No.17651667   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>1853 >>3974

Hotter-than-normal temperatures are predicted through the summer: How cities must prepare

Scorching temperatures aren't going away any time soon.

Following back-to-back dangerous heat waves that impacted a large swath of the nation over the past two weeks, much of the country will be bracing for more rounds of intense heat as summer continues.

 

The final days of June and first days of July will likely bring above-average temperatures along the Gulf Coast, with building heat in the West. Rounds of intense summer heat and longer-duration heat waves will be likely over the next couple of weeks and heading through the month of July, according to long-range weather forecast models monitored by meteorologists.

Heat is the No. 1 weather-related killer. On average, more people in the U.S. die from extreme heat than any other severe weather event, including tornados, hurricanes and flooding combined, according to the National Weather Service.

 

Vulnerable populations, including impoverished and marginalized communities and those with pre-existing health conditions such as asthma and heart disease, are most at risk when temperatures begin to skyrocket, Ladd Keith, an assistant professor in the School of Landscape Architecture and Planning at the University of Arizona, told ABC News.

 

here comes the vax, I mean heat strokes

"Just the average temperatures that are rising due to climate change and how we built our cities can expose people to unsafe temperatures throughout the summer season, particularly for historically hotter states," Keith said. "And so that's a concern, because it could certainly lead to things like dehydration, heat, heat exhaustion and up to heatstroke."

Despite cities being hotter, there are actually more heat-related hospitalizations in rural regions, likely due to the types of occupations those residents hold and their travel patterns, Keith said.

The heat and megadrought are becoming such a concern in the West that the city of Los Angeles named its first-ever chief heat officer earlier this month, while the Federal Emergency Management Agency has identified Los Angeles County as the nation's most vulnerable county to heat waves.

 

https://abcnews.go.com/US/hotter-normal-temperatures-predicted-summer-cities-prepare/story?id=85567171

Anonymous ID: 72de18 Oct. 7, 2022, 7:41 a.m. No.17652154   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>3302 >>3848 >>5294

>>17651111

 

Thats rich, especially since schumer and nanshee declined NG and military help, blaming the guy that followed their order, thats why he’s dead, can’t let a lose end with the truth out there. I hope other from the capitol police board and upper mgmt take precautions