Pebble Beach Real Estate Collapses

Sea level has been rising at 0.0 mm per year in California, leading to the complete collapse of the real estate market.

Property Search – – Coldwell Banker Northern California,Carmel Rancho Pebble Beach Homes

Money talks and global warming bullshit walks.

About Tony Heller

Just having fun
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7 Responses to Pebble Beach Real Estate Collapses

  1. Otter says:

    Well now, you see, that is what they call sea level rise….

  2. chris y says:

    My favorite neighborhood is Carbon beach, near LA, the crown jewel of Malibu. It is infested with climate change hand-wringers who worry about sea level rise as they gaze at the sunset from their beachfront cabanas.

  3. Eric Simpson says:

    Ah, those Pebble Beach houses are just barely a stone’s throw north of the old Big Sur place, part of the same rocky coast where you often get to know the rocks by name. I offer anecdotal support of there being no sea level rise in CA, but also keep in mind that there are similar stories from all over the world, not just CA. A replay of my previous comment:
    I’ve been going to this tide-pooled rocky beach for ~40 years.
    As a little tike I would name the big rocks (as Farm Minor & “Major League Rock” etc), and from shore throw rocks at them. With my own eyes: the sea level has not changed. Further, recently I was there at a low tide of -0.5 and went out to Major rock. There was a few inches of water between Minor & Major rocks.
    This is EXACTLY as it was 40 years ago. Only when the tide was lower than -1.0 would there be no water at all between Minor & Major. I reported this to my scientist (biochem) “trust the experts” brother. He said “ok, that is some anecdotal evidence.” Me: “ANECDOTAL?!! It’s me! And you see the same thing.” Him: “Anecdotal in that it’s not scientific, or… systematic.” In a bit, he said “Those [huge] rocks have moved.” I took this as sarcastic, saying “Haha. Yeah. Another thing I hear is that the ‘land has risen.’”
    Maybe the sea has risen everywhere else, while it’s just at Big Sur that it remains the same.

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