Rolling Stone's Piece Defending the Dems' Russian Collusion Hoax Is Beyond Parody
CNN Reporter Had the Perfect Line to Describe Dems Right Now
Top Biden Aide Finally Reveals Her Role in the Biden Autopen Controversy
Former Rolling Stone Editor Couldn't Hold His Tongue on This Aspect of the...
There Are Some Lib Writers Who Have No Idea Who Lawrence Taylor Is...And...
This Bill Aims to Protect Children From Pornography – but There Might...
Trump Says Market Fallout Is Only Reason He Hasn’t Fired Fed Chair Powell
How a USDA Employee and 5 Others Stole Millions from the Poor
Double Standard Exposed: MAGA Gear Banned at Public Events While Pride, Trans Flags...
Hochul Backs Socialist Zohran Mamdani on Affordability
Colorado Cops Punished for Helping ICE, As Sanctuary State Law Takes Priority Over...
Democrat Calls in to Cuomo: 'I Was Wrong About Trump'
JD Vance Reacts to That American Eagle Ad Featuring Sydney Sweeney
Liberal Media Outlet Forced to Apologize for Baseless Melania-Epstein Smear
Dem Senator Praises Trump’s Trade Strategy: 'It’s Going Well'
Tipsheet

DeSantis Schools Reporter Who Suggests Hurricanes, Tornadoes Linked to Climate Change

AP Photo/Christopher O'Meara

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis on Thursday schooled a reporter who suggested the state’s recent weather events, including two hurricanes and dozens of tornadoes, were tied to climate change.

Advertisement

“I think you can go back and find tornadoes for all of human history for sure,” he said, explaining that Hurricane Milton wasn’t as powerful as other hurricanes that have hit the state. 

"How does this storm rate in kind of the history of storms? I think it hit with a barometric pressure of…about 950 millibars when it hit,” he said. “If you go back to 1851, there’s probably been 27 hurricanes that have had lower–so the lower barometric pressure, the strong it is—I think there have been about 27 hurricanes that have had lower barometric pressure on landfall than Milton did, and of those, 17 occurred I think prior to 1960. And the most powerful hurricane on record since the 1850s in the state of Florida occurred in the 1930s, the Labor Day hurricane, barometric pressure on that was 892 millibars, it totally wiped out the Keys, we’ve never seen anything like it and that remains head and shoulders above any powerful hurricane we’ve had in the state of Florida.”

Continuing to prove he is up to speed on Florida’s history with hurricanes, the Republican governor went on to tell the reporter the most deadly hurricane was the 1928 Okeechobee hurricane, which killed more than 4,000 people. 

Advertisement

DeSantis went on to argue the recent storms need to be put in perspective. 

People “try to take different things that happen with tropical weather and act like it’s something, there’s nothing new under the sun. This is something that the state has dealt with for its entire history," the governor told the reporter. 

What has changed, DeSantis noted, is that the population has grown to 23 million residents so any storm that comes will hit more people and property. But, under his leadership, the state has ramped up efforts to pre-stage assets, including power, which he said was not done before.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement