Fifty inches

Again, yes this is A severe storm. If you are talking about the city of Houston, yes, it has indeed not seen a storm like this in long long time. I didn't realize you were simply talking about Texas. It seemed as though you were trying to claim that throughout the world we were seeing more severe storms and that you had data to show that the increase was due to rising temps. My fault for not knowing you really really just wanted to talk specifically about Houston TX.

Houston is simply one example of the increasing climatic severity which you refuse to acknowledge . Just as soon as the media recognizes that the Deniers have LOST and that there is more profit in the truth you'll be off on your unicycle with a name-change.
 
Houston is simply one example of the increasing climatic severity which you refuse to acknowledge . Just as soon as the media recognizes that the Deniers have LOST and that there is more profit in the truth you'll be off on your unicycle with a name-change.

No. Houston is an example of an extreme event. You have not provided any data to suggest that the number of extreme events is increasing. Because you cannot. Because it doesn't exist.
 
No. Houston is an example of an extreme event. You have not provided any data to suggest that the number of extreme events is increasing. Because you cannot. Because it doesn't exist.

Extreme rainfall in Houston has already topped previously recorded levels- ergo, the number of extreme events is increasing. So I can- because it does.

That's just one example of the increasing frequency and severity of ' natural ' disasters. Maybe you're a tad news-deprived in Foxville.
 
Extreme rainfall in Houston has already topped previously recorded levels- ergo, the number of extreme events is increasing. So I can- because it does.

Again moron... you are talking about ONE CITY on the entire planet. That does not give you justification to extrapolate that out to the entire planet. You moron.
 
Again moron... you are talking about ONE CITY on the entire planet. That does not give you justification to extrapolate that out to the entire planet. You moron.

As I said, monkey bollox, it's just one example. Think of it as a battle-field bullet that just took off your fool head. None of the other bullets really matter to you, do they.
 
Historical Look on the Hurricanes That Hit the Texas Coast

Hurricanes are the most damaging natural disasters that impact the United States. Hurricanes not only bring on financial damage after the storm has passed but deaths as well. This article will focus on some of the most impactful hurricanes that hit the Texas Coast. According to the Texas Hurricane Center, the biggest hurricane to hit Texas was Carla and the most destructive was the Galveston Hurricane.

The Galveston Hurricane hit the coastal town in 1900. Although no exact size measurement of the hurricane was recorded, the destruction and damage it caused is how it is measured. This hurricane is categorized as the most destructive hurricane in US history because of damage and deaths that resulted from it. The city of Galveston was drowned by the 8-15 foot storm tides that hit around midnight on September 9, 1900. There was a warning given out to the town before the weather began to hit and out of the 30,000 people who lived in the town, 20,000 evacuated. 8,000 people died from this hurricane in which wind speeds reached 125mph. Property damage was estimated at $1.2 billion in today's dollars.

In 1943, an unnamed hurricane hit Houston which was not categorized as deadly, but it caused major damage of war production work during World War II. The eye of the storm was 13 miles wide and the entire storm itself was about 70 miles in width. This storm is considered to be stronger than the Galveston hurricane, with winds reported up to 132 mph. The winds caused damage totaling $227 million. During this storm, two men flew into the eye of the storm for the first time ever.

Hurricane Carla hit the Texas coast along with Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama on the Gulf Coast in 1961. It caused one of the largest evacuations - an estimated 500,000 people from the lower coastal states fled to safer ground. Because of the early warnings, only 46 lives were lost, a remarkably low number for a storm of Carla's magnitude. The storm's gusts were around 150-175 mph. The storm extended from Victoria, Texas to Dallas, Texas. The storm continued damage with major flooding and numerous tornadoes into the Midwest. There was $14 billion in today's dollars in damage done to the state as a result of this storm.

In 1970, Hurricane Celia hit the northern part of Corpus Christi and made its way deeper into Texas. The storm reached wind gusts of 160-175 mph, becoming even more powerful 15 hours before it hit land. Tornadoes and rain fall reached 9.2 inches in some of the areas hit by the storm. Because of the disaster preparedness team, only 11 people died due to the storm. The total cost in damages reached $9.5 billion.

In 2005, Hurricane Rita severely damaged the southeast coast of Texas, much of Louisiana, along with parts of the Florida Keys. In three days, Hurricane Rita intensified in the Gulf of Mexico transforming from a tropical depression to a full hurricane. The gusts reached 175 mph and cyclones made their presence known throughout the landfall. Rita made landfall as a category 3 hurricane, losing its strength as it traveled through land. There were of total of about 59 deaths and the damage was estimated at about $10 billion.

Hurricane Katrina also effected the southeast coastal region in 2005. It was recorded as one of the five deadliest hurricanes in the history of the United States. Although its landfall was made near Louisiana, the storm made its presence known from central Florida to Texas. As a category 5 in the gulf, the winds reached 175 mph. There were a total of 1,836 confirmed fatalities and $90.9 billion dollars in damage.

On September 13, 2008, Hurricane Ike made landfall near Galveston. Hurricane force winds at around 145 mph extended across the 120 mile storm. It was the largest Texan evacuation in the state's history. About four hours prior to the eye hitting land, power began failing and eventually went out, effecting 4 million residents. Much comparison of this storm was made to the Galveston Hurricane of 1900 which had a very similar track. It was recorded as the third costliest hurricane ever, totaling $29.6 billion in damages.

Texas has seen its fair share of hurricanes and will continue to in the future. In order for no fatalities or as little damage as possible to occur Texas residents must be aware and be prepared for hurricanes.
 
Can you show us the increasing trend in climatic disasters

What is a climatic disaster? Climate is a long term beast, not something we refer to as events measured in days and hours, but measured in decades and centuries

If you're using that term, you're conflating weather with climate and you're doing it to deceive readers. Dishonest warmers like you are a dime a dozen. Keep blaming everything on climate change that the scientists can barely keep the charade going for by making adjustments just like us skeptics predicted they would: Cool the past and warm the present.
 
As I said, monkey bollox, it's just one example. Think of it as a battle-field bullet that just took off your fool head. None of the other bullets really matter to you, do they.

Again... one example of a severe storm does not support your argument that the number of severe storms is increasing. You have shown NO data to support your claim.
 
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