Donate To Red Cross!

Discussion in 'General Discussion' started by _Waffle_, Sep 1, 2005.

  1. Korcy

    Korcy Senior Member

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    Whitemist, no offense, but im not beleiving you on that one.
     
  2. WhiT3MisT

    WhiT3MisT Well-Known Member

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    ok man but my parents are loaded, my dad makes 49.50 an hour, house and cars paid off. and my mom works too
     
  3. _Waffle_

    _Waffle_ Well-Known Member

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    the Redcross.org has the link to the yahoo one (the original)
     
  4. HaSh

    HaSh Well-Known Member

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    there was a thread about this like 2 days ago. plz use the search button b4 making a thread
     
  5. _Waffle_

    _Waffle_ Well-Known Member

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    thx for correcting me, Im only trying to help 20,000 people from dying!!!!
     
  6. elusive

    elusive Well-Known Member

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    i dont know if you get much support here bc many people are still kids
     
  7. cowgoboom

    cowgoboom Well-Known Member

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    I will donate some money, but I think it is rather sad that they could have built a flood prevention system for 14bill, but they did not, so now the hurricane strikes and it is costing alot more :blink:
     
  8. _Waffle_

    _Waffle_ Well-Known Member

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    If you dont have the money and would rather donate credits, send credits to waspsting212 and he will convert it into money and send it to Red Cross
     
  9. Fluid

    Fluid Well-Known Member

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    ive sent $100 to the people in New Orleans. Can't wait until Saturday when I go back to my house in Florida ^_^
     
  10. Jtown112

    Jtown112 Well-Known Member

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    id send money, but as many, im just a kid.
     
  11. _Waffle_

    _Waffle_ Well-Known Member

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    Good! Thank you for sending money for this tragic cause. So far, there is about 16 million dollars donated. Keep donating!
     
  12. _Waffle_

    _Waffle_ Well-Known Member

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    Updated news on the storm

    All credit for this update goes to CNN.com

    At least one prominent study suggests that hurricanes have become significantly stronger in the past few decades during the same period that global average temperatures have increased. Katrina blew up in the Gulf of Mexico to a Category 5 hurricane with winds of 175 mph before slackening a bit Monday when it hit, swamping New Orleans and the Mississippi coast.

    Other leading scientists agree the Atlantic Basin and Gulf Coast regions are being battered by a severe hurricane phase that could persist for another 20 years or more. But they believe that a natural environmental cycle is responsible rather than any human-induced change, and they point to what they consider to be large gaps in the global warming analysis conducted by a climatologist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

    Roger Pielke Jr., who studies the social impacts of natural disasters and climate change at the University of Colorado, said any link between the intensity of Katrina and other recent hurricanes and global warming is "premature." Most forecasts suggest climate change would increase hurricane wind speeds by 5 percent or less later in this century.

    Pielke's analysis will be published later this year in the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society.

    "There are good reasons to expect that any conclusive connection between global warming and hurricanes or their impacts will not be made in the near term," he said.

    In August, MIT climatologist Kerry Emanuel reported in the journal Nature that major storms spinning in both the Atlantic and the Pacific have increased in duration and intensity by about 50 percent since the 1970s. During that period, global average temperatures have risen by about one degree Fahrenheit along with increases in the level of carbon dioxide and other heat-trapping pollutants from industry smokestacks, traffic exhaust and other sources.

    Hurricanes rely on huge pools of warm water at the surface of the ocean to grow for several days. As trade winds spin the storm, it pulls more heat from the ocean and uses it as fuel. Typically, large storms require sea surface temperatures of at least 81 F.

    Scientists say rising global atmospheric temperatures have been slowly raising ocean temperatures, although they still vary widely from year to year.

    On Web logs, scientists and environmentalists in the United States and Europe sparred over the possible connection.

    The evidence linking global warming and hurricane intensity might be fuzzy, but it highlights a potential issue worth examining right away, some say.

    "Maybe a connection here is yet to be clearly established, but it is also yet to be ruled out," said Terry Richardson, a physicist at the College of Charleston in South Carolina on CCNet, a British climate blog.

    Pielke and other researchers, including meteorologists at federal weather laboratories, say Emanuel's evidence is too slim at this point.

    The past 10 years have been the most active hurricane seasons on record, and many researchers say the trend could persist for another 20 years or more. They believe it's a consequence of natural salinity and temperature change in the Atlantic's deep current circulation -- elements that shift back and forth every 40-60 years.
     
  13. waspsting212

    waspsting212 Well-Known Member

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    This is true, I do accept credits and trade them in for money. Waffle, nice talkin' to ya! Anyway, donate credits to me if you don't have the money to donate to Red Cross Hurricane Katrina fund and I will convert them into USD.

    Thank you!
     
  14. _Waffle_

    _Waffle_ Well-Known Member

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    Nice talking to you too Wasp!
     
  15. Microsoft

    Microsoft Well-Known Member

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    yes i have donated 15$ at my school but yes this is very big and i mean this hit home unlike the tusiname << how ever u spell it lol...

    anyways yea lotting is a big problem i mean the police have opened up some wal marts and other stores so that ppl can get water and food but some people there are well kind of stupid lol i was watching the news and there was a guy that was taking like a 40 inch t.v. set over his head. y the ---- would u want a t.v. in a time like that lol jeez i mean u step foot outside the store a cop will get u lol. i mean take some food man lol

    but i feel really sorry about this and i will donate some more because it is very sad :(
     

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