The forces of nature are great weapons as we see them in play upon America.

GREETINGS,

” The forces of nature are great weapons as we see them in play upon America. “–pg.155(The Fall Of America)

” America is in the grip of divine judgment. America is in the position toward her once slave, so-called Negro, as Pharaoh was with Israel as his slave. She is in this position because of the injustice done to the American so-called Negro slave, brought to America over four hundred years ago, and refuses to let them go free.

 They only say that you are free, knowing within that you are not able to leave them without anything. But the injustice continues to increase. Now they plan death.

 So this God was predicted by the prophets to come to the defense of this people (so-called Negroes) in the last days after they served the enemy for four hundred years. The Bible declares Abraham in Genesis that God would judge the people to whom his people (Abraham’s) would be in bondage.

 This does not mean Israel. This means the present Black people, the members of their Black nation, who have and are fulfilling their prophecy.

 God, in the Person of Master Fard Muhammad, will not be defeated. The more evil, deceiving, tricking and making of false promises to the American so-called Negro only increases America’s divine chastisement — doom.

 America knows that her trouble lies in her mistreatment of the Black man, the so-called Negro, but she is too wicked to give up tricking the Negro and deceiving him on false promises. She just cannot stop. The opportunity is too open, and she thinks that there is no one to hinder her. “–pgs.158 & 159(The Fall Of America)

Brutal heat still grips south-central U.S.

SOURCE: www.usatoday.com

Even the temperatures are bigger in Texas this summer, as heat records tumble across the bone-dry Lone Star State.

And you want really hot? Try Oklahoma, where the 88.9-degree average temperature in July not only set the record as the state’s hottest month ever, but also was the warmest for any state during any month on record, according to data released Monday from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

In all, the heat wave that initially spanned most of the country east of the Rockies and is still gripping big portions of the nation’s south central region helped make July the fourth-hottest July on record in the USA, NOAA researchers reported. The hottest were in 2003, 1936 and 1934.

“This is record-setting heat,” Chris Vaccaro of the National Weather Service said. “In many cases, it’s unprecedented heat.”

Consider Dallas, which is poised to break its all-time record of 42 consecutive days of 100-plus-degree weather. The count stood at 38 such days as of Monday.

How hot was it?

Since May 20, when the national heat wave started to kick in, dozens of cities have had a run of days with above-average temperatures. Here are the number of days and percentage of days above average for selected cities:

City Days Pct.
Houston 76 96%
Oklahoma City 76 96%
Dallas 75 95%
Little Rock 73 92%
Memphis 73 92%
Shreveport, La. 73 92%
Raleigh, N.C. 72 91%
New Orleans 70 89%
Atlanta 69 87%
Charleston, S.C. 69 87%
Wichita, Kan. 69 87%
Washington 68 86%
Philadelphia 64 81%
St. Louis 59 75%
Indianapolis 58 73%
Detroit 57 72%
New York 56 71%
Chicago 56 71%
Minneapolis 56 71%
Omaha, Neb. 56 71%

Source: TheWeather Channel

“This record will probably be broken next week as temps are not forecast to be below 100 anytime soon,” said The Weather Channel’s lead meteorologist, Tom Moore.

The city’s streak of 11 consecutive 105-degree days has tied the record from the “monster summer” of 1980, National Weather Service meteorologist Victor Murphy said.

Texas’ woes are just part of this broader heat wave that began around July 15, initially encompassing nearly two-thirds of the country, even the northern Plains, said Susan Buchanan of the National Weather Service. While the heat wave’s location has retreated some in the past few days, it has stayed stagnant for much of Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi and parts of Missouri, Buchanan said.

“I can’t remember any year with the magnitude and length of this heat wave,” said Jack Hayes, director of the National Weather Service.

Texas has suffered its warmest June and July on record, going back to 1895, according to the weather service. July’s average, 87.1 degrees, broke 1998’s record of 86.5. June’s 85.2-degree average was a record for that month and made it the fifth-warmest ever for the state.

“The heat is just astounding,” Murphy said.

For communities across the country, 2,755 broke or tied their heat records for specific dates in July; an additional 1,042 records were broken or tied in the first six days of August, Buchanan said.

This heat wave has been distinguished by its duration and its breadth. “The size of the prolonged warmth was really, really unusual,” said Deke Arndt, chief of the climate-monitoring branch of the National Climatic Data Center.

It is also bringing warmer nights: Average low temperatures have been “dramatically” warmer, Arndt said, so people aren’t able to cool off at night. “That influences public health, energy consumption, and agricultural and horticultural health,” he said. Heat-related deaths in Oklahoma and Texas alone have reached 22, according to state health agency data.

And then there’s the humidity, fed by a “Bermuda high” which brings moisture in from the Gulf of Mexico…..MORE HERE

 

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