
Jennifer Boyles
232 posts

Jennifer Boyles
@jen_boyles
Luck is where preparation meets opportunity




The National Hurricane Center is now explicitly forecasting the first-ever Category 4 hurricane strike in Jamaica. The POTENTIAL exists for a scale of devastation, both economic and humanitarian, that hasn't been witnessed before in Jamaica in the modern era. Consider the impact Hurricane Maria had on Puerto Rico in 2017. NHC predicts Melissa will hit Jamaica at similar strength. But despite having a comparable population, Jamaica has less than 20% the GDP. In other words, inveterate poverty will hinder rebuilding and prolong suffering – assuming a high-end scenario is realized. Imagine being hit by a Category 4 hurricane, but then remember that the average Jamaican household has on the order of 10-15 percent the wealth of a U.S.-based counterpart. In 1988, Hurricane Gilbert hit Jamaica as a 125 mph Category 3. 49 people died, 100,000 homes were damaged, and the banana crop was largely destroyed. On Friday, the National Hurricane Center adjusted its concern of concern and now explicitly predicts a Category 4 Hurricane Melissa to slam the island early next week. What does a Category 4 hurricane look like? Let's discuss the anatomy of a hurricane. First, you'll get a beautiful sunset the night before. That's thanks to high, wispy cirrus clouds fanning away from the storm at the upper levels – the "exhaust". They'll catch the sun, and perhaps make little sun haloes/rainbow circles during the day. That's the calm before the storm. Then we'll get squalls working ashore. At first, only isolated to widely-scattered. They'll last a few minutes each, but the wind will be calm. The squalls will have big rain drops. As the storm nears, you'll notice a light breeze. Winds will begin to stir. With each rain band, the winds will become a bit more squally and blustery. Palm trees will begin to sway, but the winds won't be damaging. The storm will be "breathing" air in. A few of the squalls might contain brief funnel clouds or tornadoes. As the inner bands near, the winds won't be bad yet. The raindrops will become littler, but there will be more of them – you'll start seeing gusts of 35 to 45 mph. Flooding will begin. Only one you're nearing the eye (about 25-30 miles away) will the winds reach hurricane force. They'll quickly build from there. The winds will build until they can't be ignored. Rainfall rates of 4+ inches per hour will be common. Debris will begin to fly. But then there will be a lull. That will be the "moat," or some sinking air outside the eyewall. Then the eyewall will hit. Imagine being in a washing machine. You'll have near whiteout conditions due to extreme rain – along with winds of 100 to 130 mph. Even stronger gusts are possible. Trees will fall, roofs will fly, and tornado-like conditions will onset. At the coast, the eyewall will push water inland, potentially raising the ocean to the height of a second-story balcony. You NEED to take this seriously if you live in Jamaica. Everyone will see different hazards – some will get the inland flooding, some will get the coastal surge, some will get the eyewall winds, and some may experience a combination. Plan for the worst and hope for the best. Our team at @MyRadarWX will be with you every step of the way.

🚨 KASH PATEL INCOMPETENCE EXPOSED 🚨 The inexperienced FBI Director has purged 5,000+ dedicated public servants from the FBI. And when Kash Patel is clearly so unfit to lead, it leaves our country unsafe. THIS is who he's sidelined… and they’re all more competent than him.🧵








Turbo Cancer: ‘It's everywhere.’ “Oncologists are screaming at the top of their lungs, and they're seeing a correlation not with COVID, the virus, but when the vaccine rolled out an uptick in cancers over the military complex ... a 40% uptick in cancers starting in 2021.” Watch the whole interview with Polly Tommey and Dr. Brian Hooker on CHDTV: live.childrenshealthdefense.org/chd-tv/events/…

Customer’s Hate It: Cracker Barrel CEO Julie Felss Masino says people love their new rebrand. Comments on X say otherwise! She’s taken a beloved Americana Brand and trashed it with DEI Wokism. Masino promised to “identify, recruit, and advance” hires by race and now the company faces civil rights complaints from @America1stLegal, the EEOC and Tennessee AG.





I'm addicted to natural healing. So I spend 15+ hours/week studying what Big Pharma doesn't want you to know. Here's what blew my mind this week: 1. Walking past pine trees actually fights cancer.








