Hurricane Irma in Florida : SHOCKING PICTURES OF DESTRUCTION ...

in #irma7 years ago (edited)

 Hurricane Irma or the most powrful Hurricane that we ever saw in humanity , the wind speed reach more than 200km/h , many scientist explain this due to climate change and global warming , is " IRMA " the begining of the end ? is it a start for new cruel ice age ? are we ( HUMANS ) ready for this ? so many questions left without clear answers , probably the common answer for these question is : 


ITS TIME TO SAVE THE PLANET AND STOP OUR MADNESS 


PS: sorry for these violant pictures , but we all must ready and aware of what is comming next to eveyone 

 Larry Dimas walks around his destroyed trailer, which he rents out to others, in the aftermath of Hurricane Irma, in Immokalee, Florida, on September 11, 2017. His tenants evacuated and nobody was inside when it was destroyed. 

 The skyline is seen as the outer bands of Hurricane Irma start to reach Florida on September 9, 2017, in Miami, Florida. #
 

 A man rides a motorcycle through the wind and rain as Hurricane Irma arrives in southwest Florida on September 10, 2017, in Bonita Springs, Florida. 

 Palm trees blow in the wind as Hurricane Irma arrives into southwest Florida on September 10, 2017, in Fort Myers, Florida. 

 Flooding begins in the Brickell neighborhood as Hurricane Irma passes Miami on September 10, 2017. 

 Fernando Oropeza walks up the stairs after taking his dog Simon out for a walk at a hotel on September 10, 2017, in Fort Myers, Florida. 


Laura Raymond walks down the stairs with a flashlight while leaving her mother-in-law's fourth floor apartment, where she rode out Hurricane Irma with her family, to return to their low-lying home a mile away in Marco Island, Florida, on September 11, 2017. 

 A boat sits washed ashore at the Dinner Key marina after Hurricane Irma passed through the area on September 11, 2017, in Miami. 

 A collapsed construction crane in downtown Miami, as Hurricane Irma arrived in south Florida, on September 10, 2017. 

 Boats sit on the ground in the north Florida panhandle community of Shell Point Beach as Hurricane Irma pulls the water out on September 11, 2017, in Crawfordville, Florida. 

 Residents inspect the extreme receding water in Tampa Bay ahead of Hurricane Irma, on September 10, 2017, in Tampa, Florida. 

 The Tampa skyline is seen in the background as local residents (from left) Rony Ordonez, Jean Dejesus, and Henry Gallego take photographs after walking into Hillsborough Bay ahead of Hurricane Irma in Tampa, on September 10, 2017. 

 Barren trees line a residential neighborhood in the aftermath of Hurricane Irma, in Key Largo, Florida, on September 11, 2017. 


 Building owner Catharine Taylor Woods, front, and Jessica Newman, of the City of Wauchula, clean up broken glass after an awning blew off in Hurricane Irma and broke several windows on September 11, 2017. 

 A man walks through flooded streets the morning after Hurricane Irma swept through the area on September 11, 2017, in Naples, Florida. 

 Downed power lines are seen in Bonita Springs, Florida, northeast of Naples, on September 11, 2017. 


PLEASE COMMENT AND SHARE or DISCUSS WITH US YOUR IDEAS ABOUT SAVING OUR PLANET , NOTHING CALL "SIMPLE IDEAS"
 

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Even more sobering is the fact that if global warming is man made and caused by carbon dioxide then if we stopped producing it completely it would 20-30 years before it stopped warming the planet.

yes , exactly ! but better start now and wait 20-30 years than starting when its too late !
thank you so much for your comment