If you have noticed the winds in tornadoes and hurricanes are slowly increasing in the speed of the winds over time. You can see it in the warmer waters and the so far 27 names storms this season in the Atlantic Ocean. What people are mostly not prepared for worldwide is the 200 to 300 mph winds that are going to be coming faster and faster in storms around the world.
What is causing this?
As the poles melt and the water goes from white ice (which reflects the heat back into space) to the blue and green of ocean water, the oceans trap the heat from the sun because blue and green is darker than white. So, the oceans become like Solar Heat Batteries. This heat then is transferred upward into heat with more quickly rising air. This more quickly rising air goes up faster and faster into the sky which causes faster and faster winds closer to the earth. This also causes more extreme evaporation from the oceans which causes increased amounts of precipitation and frequency of rain some places and also makes other places deserts (like what is happening to California and far western states).
I climbed many mountains in the U.S. and up to 10,000 feet in the Himalayas with my older children and wife. So, I have been in conditions as a mountain climber where I was in over 100 mph winds especially on top of a few peaks like Mt. San Gorgonio and Mt. Shasta. Luckily for me, it wasn't fatal for me.
But, I remember being on top of Mt. San Gorgonio in the winter time and being hit with flying ice and snow at over 100 miles per hour which was starting to rip my face off. Luckily I had plastic to slide down the snow from the peak with me and so I wrapped the plastic around my head to keep my face attached to my head. Though it was unbearably loud with the ice and snow hitting my head on the plastic and I was falling down every few steps from the gusty 100 plus mile an hour winds, eventually I just realized I was going to die there and slid down the snow about 3000 feet to a lower altitude (I had been at about 11,000 feet before I got away from the ice storm that would have killed me eventually if I had stayed there upright and falling down from the gusts of wind.
So, I know first hand that you cannot stand up in 100 mph gusts without falling down again. I suppose if you were roped to a rock or a tree you might stand up against the rope or against a boulder or tree. But, that is the only way you are going to manage it.
So, a 200 to 300 mph wind makes human bodies fly through the air and impact the first tree or rock or boulder or car or truck or sign that they hit and then they are maimed or dead.
So, you cannot walk around in 200 to 300 mph winds at all. You are just going to die and that's all.
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