![]() Once the BBC produced excellent public information films, but now they aim straight for subliminal indoctrination 24/7. Especially its Trump Derangement programme: Americast, with Sarah Smith and Justin Webb. “The BBC Would Like You to Think So” on any subject you care to name, because every subject in every programme is infused with narratives. ![]() The only real shortfall in Orwell’s vision was the fact that the Telescreen goes with you in your pocket, it isn’t fixed to a wall. “Hawaiian’s shout ‘f**k you’ to Biden as he visits fire-devastated island and compares deadly blaze with house fire” Unlike the BBC et al, I noticed all was not sweetness and light in Maui, for example. So once again we find that the BBC can get away with playing fast and loose with the facts, just so that it can promote its political agenda. Rainfall from Hilary has not reached anything like the 375mm recorded in 1976. Hilary dumped 11” or so up in the mountains, but at lower levels it was around 2 or 3” at most, as the BBC map indicates:īut the 1939 storm was much more devastating, with 5” in Los Angeles:Īnd the devastation from Kathleen in 1976 was even greater: In Los Angeles, for instance, daily rainfall of 2” is nothing unusual at all:Īs for California’s wettest day, this is an outright fraud. This, of course, is utterly dishonest, as it was nowhere being a record in Los Angeles, or California as a whole, merely a record for August at most. In any event, one cherry picked station does not prove anything at all, The BBC also claim that this was the wettest August day on record: They say that 3.18” fell on Sunday, but that was less than the 3.22” recorded in 1926: The BBC focus heavily on “record rainfall” in Palm Springs, but even that is a fake claim. The claims about record rainfall are bogus as well. Maybe the BBC should get advice from proper hurricane experts in future, who would tell them that these storms are rare, but sometimes happen. ![]() So much for the silly little theory from Ms Treseder, our ecology expert. Indeed that was one of four tropical storms to hit Southern California in 1939, although the others did not make landfall.
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