Anyone making a prediction of doom is now a climate expert. The real estate agents at Zillow have determined that Sacramento will be underwater soon.
Miami will suffer the worst, with nearly half a million homes underwater, including more than 80 percent of Miami Beach.
In the New York City area, including Long Island, 180,000 homes are at-risk, totaling a $123 billion loss.
And Malibu, where just 247 homes are in peril, their total value is more than $1 billion.
For unexplained reasons, the Zillow report does not mention the Bay Area. But other scientists have predicted that a 6-foot ocean rise will turn parts of Richmond into an island and flood the Sacramento Valley.
Report: Global warming could leave 2 million US homes underwater by end of century | WKRN News 2
The NOAA tide gauge in the San Francisco Bay shows that sea level has hardly changed over the last 75 years. Perhaps that is why the report didn’t include the San Francisco Bay?
Sea Level Trends – State Selection
But it is the same story at Los Angeles, sea level is about the same as it was in 1940.
Sea Level Trends – State Selection
High tide sea level at La Jolla is about the same as it was in 1871
How is Sacramento going to drown if sea level isn’t rising on the coast? And Zillow is so worried about Miami drowning, that you can pick up a home there for the bargain basement price of $25 million.
Most Expensive Homes in Miami – Photos and Prices | Zillow
According to the report, hurricanes and floods are an indication of climate change.
Harvey, Irma, Maria–the triple punch of hurricanes sent floodwaters into neighborhoods from the Caribbean to the East and Gulf coasts.
This is what Providence, Rhode Island looked like in 1815.
This is what Providence looked like in 1938.
This is what Pittsburgh looked like in 1936
This is what the Texas coast looked like in 1900
09 Sep 1900, 7 – Great Falls Tribune at Newspapers.com
This is what Vermont looked like this week 90 years ago.
This is what the Mississippi River looked like 90 years ago.
Ninety years ago brought the worst floods in US history. The Mississippi River was flooded for more than six months, forcing hundreds of thousands of people to abandon their homes permanently. Vermont’s worst flood on record occurred in November, 1927. The Red Cross described 1927 as the worst year in history.
25 Nov 1927, Page 7 – The News-Review at Newspapers.com
St. Louis was destroyed by a tornado, 90 years ago.
The Pittsburgh Press – Google News Archive Search
A mass superstition has risen about CO2, and people on the left now view every weather event as a sign of the coming apocalypse. They ridicule Christians for their belief in a global flood, while clinging to their own ridiculous, baseless flood myths.