The image below is the current view of Boulder Creek outside the Boulder library. Note the happy face in the sand, and the people enjoying watching the water on the foot bridge.
Does this look like a place destroyed by a wall of water?
The image below is the current view of Boulder Creek outside the Boulder library. Note the happy face in the sand, and the people enjoying watching the water on the foot bridge.
Does this look like a place destroyed by a wall of water?
I’m not familiar with the watershed or water reservoirs in the area. Were they low and now filled back up? What/who is downstream?
Boulder has been very wet since spring. A lot of their problem is that the reservoirs upstream were full at the start of the week.
Does it look to you like anything in that picture was hit by a wall of water?
Japan was hit with a wall of water (tsunami). Boulder’s water came from above, not from the side.
What is the next dam downstream of Boulder?
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This is the same game being played over and over. Sensationalize ordinary events and make it seem like crises occur every day. All the while, the real scandals and disasters (like Bengazi and our economy) remain under the radar.
Amen! I would only add “remain under the radar” courtesy of our lapdog media with no spine to engage in real investigative journalism….the very same media that brought us ‘global warming’…er…’climate change’…er…’climate sustainability’.
BTW Steve, Drudge must have taken your hint. Your recent Record Amount of Sea Ice is linked on Drudge via Climate Depot. And not the first time your work has been linked on Drudge.
Must cover-up the Finance Capitalism that is eating America alive. Thus we get adults talking like children when something like this, a normal event, occurs. Babble, babble, babble.
It’s lies! All lies! I know for a fact that Colorado is in a state of severe and permanent drought:
http://droughtmonitor.unl.edu/DM_state.htm?CO,W