South and Midwest blasted by bitter Winter storm…How can you fight a God with power like this?

Greetings,

   As we see and hear over the net, the news, and on T.V., America is now folding up under the divine decree given by God in person, to use the forces of nature to bring her hurt, misery, loss of life & property, and destruction. Her sins are so terrible that Allah threatens total destruction, but first chastisement, poverty, want, and disgrace.

   You cannot fight a successful war against this God. He has power over the fraction of an atom and can bring anything and everything to bare against His enemies and adversaries. We can now say truthfully and confidently that, ” The fall of America is now visible and understandable, not only in the eyes of scholars and scientists but even in the eyes and understanding of the ignorant.”–pg.288(m.t.t.b.m.)

   This is the hour of her doom. She cannot escape. Allah will not allow her to. He wants to prove that He is able to bring every power to its knees in subjection to His will, aims, and purposes.

   They are witnessing the plight of destruction. When the snow comes, it brings heavy winds. It brings unbelievable cold snaps. It doesn’t bring joy, it brings panic, fear, death, and destruction.

   You are getting a token it now as these cold snaps ravage wicked America!!!!

South and Midwest blasted by bitter Winter storm as snow and ice grounds hundreds of flights and leaves nearly 300,000 without power

  • Winter storm dumped two feet of snow in the Rockie Mountains and in Yellowstone National Park on Thursday
  • Texas hit by ice and snow – claiming the lives of two motorists
  • Schools and government officers have close, 250,000 Dallas residents are without power and 1,000 flights have been canceled
  • Storm stretches from the southern Plains to Texas, through the Ohio Valley and is even contributing to snow in Maine

By Associated Press and Daily Mail Reporter

A biting Winter storm has blasted the South and Midwest with ice and snow – leaving more than a quarter of a million people without power, grounding hundreds of flights and causing treacherous conditions for travelers.

Two people have died in traffic accidents on roads in Texas, where temperatures plunged below freezing on what residents dubbed ‘Ice Friday’.

Schools in the state canceled classes as temperatures plunged below freezing and thousands of shoppers jammed stores to buy milk, pet food and other supplies.

A quarter of a million Dallas residents are without power as well as 35,000 people in Arkansas.

American Airlines and American Eagle, based in Fort Worth, canceled nearly 1,000 flights due to bad weather in Texas, while Southwest Airlines canceled almost 90 flights.

Earlier this week, many in Texas were basking in spring-like temperatures hitting the 80s, but by Thursday, Texas was facing the same wintry blast that’s hitting much of the U.S., bringing frigid temperatures, ice and snow.

The National Weather Service issued winter storm and ice warnings through much of Friday for parts of Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Mississippi, Missouri, Illinois and Indiana.

Some parts of the Midwest were expected to see several inches of snow.

The system has already dumped one to two feet of snow in parts of Minnesota and Wisconsin and draped many communities in skin-stinging cold.

It forced cancellations in places far more accustomed to snow: Officials in Rapid City, South Dakota, said the weather was too cold for ice skating, and temperatures in Montana and Idaho fell below minus 25 degrees.

 
Wrap up warm! An Accuweather map shows the snow and rain that will be sweeping across the U.S.Wrap up warm! An Accuweather map shows the snow and rain that will be sweeping across the U.S.

 Focus on Texas: A map shows the worst ice storms expected to hit the Lone Star state today

Focus on Texas: A map shows the worst ice storms expected to hit the Lone Star state today

 

 

Storm: This NOAA satellite image taken early Friday shows clouds streaming from the Mississippi and Ohio Valleys into the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast, associated with a strong Arctic front

Storm: This NOAA satellite image taken early Friday shows clouds streaming from the Mississippi and Ohio Valleys into the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast, associated with a strong Arctic front

 
Blown away: A gust of wind collapses Joseph Mezo's umbrella as he walks to work in Dallas on Friday morningBlown away: A gust of wind collapses Joseph Mezo’s umbrella as he walks to work in Dallas on Friday morning

 Grounded: Snow removal equipment clears the wet sleet on the ramp area at Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport on Friday. More than 1,000 flights have been canceled from the airport

Grounded: Snow removal equipment clears the wet sleet on the ramp area at Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport on Friday. More than 1,000 flights have been canceled from the airport

 Exasperating: A TSA officer checks flight schedule at the Love Field Airport in Dallas during the winter storm in Dallas on Friday. The board shows scores of canceled flights

Exasperating: A TSA officer checks flight schedule at the Love Field Airport in Dallas during the winter storm in Dallas on Friday. The board shows scores of canceled flights

 
Grounded: An air traveler stranded at Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport sleeps during a flight delayGrounded: An air traveler stranded at Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport sleeps during a flight delay

US braced for ‘Ice Friday’

 

 
 The city of St. Louis opened its first cold-weather shelter of the season and warned residents to dress in layers inside and outside if need be.

After the storm passes, temperatures in parts of the central and western U.S. will be 10 to 30 degrees Fahrenheit through the weekend as a cold air mass spreads through those regions, the National Weather Service said.

At a Dallas Home Depot, manager James McGilberry said the store was already running out of firewood and ice melt on Thursday afternoon, as freezing rain and wind began hitting the region.

Residents were preparing for a storm that threatened to slicken highways, freeze power lines – and leave them stranded through the weekend.

‘It’s almost like a Black Friday,’ McGilberry said, ‘but I guess we’ll call it an Ice Friday.’

A 29-year-old driver, Chase Brandenburgh, was killed just after midnight in Arlington when his car hit an 18-wheeler, which police blamed on the ice roads.

…..More here

Source: www.dailymail.co.uk

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