Monday, September 19, 2011

True lack of leadership!


This man killing my America... and my children, grand children and those after them's America... 


I have been dead dead dead broke in my lifetime, more than once! 

I know first hand how to come back. It's called revenue stream. It's called "go to work". Every time I was broke, I had a bank loan to get back on my feet. Someone believed in me and LOANED me money to get to work. That MONEY was NEVER from the government. It was from those around me who had money in banks drawing interest and free enterprise. 

Again it did not come from the government. It was not a hand out. It was not a government backed loan. It was not welfare. 

and now the nut in the white house is saying... America you are broke and I am going to propose a program to get you working again. I am going to steal 3.00 from you and give you one dollar back. Smile and bend over~!

This President is the worst man that America has ever elected to the highest office. He is not a leader, he is not a champion of anything. He has torn down our country by trying to give it away. He has hurt our image overseas. He has hurt our military. There is not a thing he has touched that is better off. 

I want a strong America. I don't know who or how to fix this, but by golly someone needs to step up and get it done. Not for the PARTY... but for the sake of this country. 

Thursday, September 01, 2011

Oklahoma July Warmest on Record for U.S.


Oklahoma July Warmest on Record for U.S.

Fri, Aug 12, 2011

Grover Cleveland was serving his second term as President in 1895. Victoria was the Queen of England and Will Rogers was still a teenager. It is also the year that statewide average temperature records begin for the United States. There have been 1399 months pass by since 1895. Multiply that number by 48 and you have 67,152 months of temperature records for the contiguous states. How hot was it in Oklahoma last month? Of those statewide average temperature records for the 48 states, none has been hotter than July 2011 in Oklahoma.
According to data from the Oklahoma Mesonet, the statewide average temperature during July came in at 89.1 degrees, more than 7 degrees above normal. High temperatures alone were nearly 9 degrees above normal at 102.9 degrees. The National Climatic Data Center’s statewide average for July stands at 88.9 degrees with data still being collected. Both values shattered the country’s previous record of 88.1 degrees held by another legendary hot month in Oklahoma, July 1954.
The extreme heat is being fueled by one of the worst short-term droughts in state history. The drought’s beginnings date back to August 2010 but intensified beginning in the fall under the influence of La Niña. That climate phenomenon, marked by cooler than normal water temperatures in the eastern equatorial pacific, often means drier weather for the southern United States. The statewide average precipitation total of 16.73 inches since October 1, 2010, is the driest on record at nearly 14 inches below normal. Parts of southwestern Oklahoma have seen less than 6 inches of rain over that 10-month period.
The loss of soil moisture and green vegetation has combined with the summer sun to bake the state unmercifully. July was the hottest month in Oklahoma City’s history, dating back to 1890. At 75 days through Sunday, Grandfield is quickly approaching the state’s all-time record for days with highs above 100 degrees. The record is 86 days, set at Hollis in the drought-fueled summer of 1956. Unfortunately, the heat has only intensified during the first week of August. The Mesonet has recorded a statewide average temperature of 92.1 degrees over the month’s first seven days with an average high of 107 degrees and an average low of 77 degrees. The state remains on course to record its warmest summer as well. The statewide average temperature for the summer thus far is 87 degrees, easily outpacing the current record of 85.2 degrees from 1934.
Unfortunately, widespread relief has yet to appear on the horizon. The latest seasonal drought outlook from the National Weather Service’s Climate Prediction Center (CPC) calls for drought to persist or intensify in Oklahoma through the end of October. Farther out, the news is just as troubling. While the La Niña event faded in late spring, the CPC issued a La Niña watch last week for possible development once again this winter. The possibility of extending the current drought further would be very bad news for a state already hit hard by the heat and a lack of rainfall.