Subject: | What happens when a hurricane lifts that nasty mess from the Gulf onto our farmlands and cities? |
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Date: | Sun, 30 May 2010 18:50:11 -0700 (PDT) |
From: | Supreme Law Firm <paulandrewmitchell2004@yahoo.com> |
> from the Gulf onto our farmlands and cities?
Thanks Ben,
Honestly, I believe ... merely to ask that question is also to answer it.
It won't require Katrina's power and severity to lift more cubic miles of water
out of the Gulf of Mexico and onto the States east of the Mississippi River.
Several smaller hurricanes can and will have the very same cumulative effects,
surely!
As a way of visualizing these CUBIC MILES,
here's a link with graphics of Rubik's Cube:
http://peter.
Now, fashion another such "cube" in your mind, only each individual cell
is one cubic foot (12"x12"x12"
in all 3 directions (X, Y and Z): 1 mile = 5,280 feet in length.
A cubic MILE is one mile long, one mile wide, and one mile high!
So, for every 12 inches of rainfall, just divide the area of a State
in square miles by 5,280, to calculate the number of cubic MILES of water
that equals.
Of course, the amount of rainfall varied, but other States were
also hit very hard by Katrina, including Florida, Louisiana and Alabama.
So, my estimate of 8 to 9 CUBIC MILES can't be too far off the mark.
Now, look at what the documented history says about Katrina,
particularly the measured wind speeds as it rammed right up the
center of Mississippi State:
http://en.wikipedia
http://en.wikipedia
Hurricane Katrina brought strong winds to Mississippi,
which caused significant tree damage throughout the state.
The highest unofficial reported wind gust recorded from Katrina
was one of 135 mph (217 km/h) in Poplarville, in Pearl River County.[2]
Ask yourself another question: If one were a demon with the
power to decide when this oil catastrophe would start to gush,
what would be THE BEST WAY to deposit the maximum amounts
of crude oil and toxic dispersal chemicals like Corexit 9500
onto the eastern half of the USA, after a normal hurricane
season begins?
Here's my answer to that question: I would trigger the gusher
far in advance of hurricane season, so as to MAXIMIZE the
sheer volume of crude oil and toxic chemicals that will be
LITERALLY LIFTED by one or more hurricanes and
then SLAMMED into the intended destination --
the United States of America -- at speeds in excess
of 100 miles per hour.
Sincerely yours,
/s/ Paul Andrew Mitchell, B.A., M.S.
Private Attorney General, Criminal Investigator and
Federal Witness: 18 U.S.C. 1510, 1512-13, 1964(a)
http://www.supremel
http://www.supremel
http://www.supremel
http://www.supremel
All Rights Reserved without Prejudice
What happens when a hurricane lifts that nasty mess from the Gulf onto our farmlands and cities?----- Original Message -----From: Paul Andrew MitchellTo: SupremeLawSent: Sunday, May 30, 2010 5:36 PMSubject: Private Attorney General confronts Jeff Rense:"Hey, Jeff: CAN YOU ASK YOUR BRAIN-DEAD AUTHORS TO DO THIS, PLEASE?"
p.s. If you want to get ambitious, compute the
Kinetic Energy of all that water moving at a velocity
of approximately 100 miles per hour. Here's the
formula for Kinetic Energy: E = 1/2 m v^2
(Energy "E" equals one-half times mass times velocity squared).
HINT: at 4 degrees C, the density of water is 62.4 lbs. per cubic foot
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Paul Andrew Mitchell <supremelawfirm@gmail.com >
Date: Sun, May 30, 2010 at 3:18 PM
Subject: Re: Private Attorney General confronts Jeff Rense:
"Hey, Jeff: CAN YOU ASK YOUR BRAIN-DEAD AUTHORS TO DO THIS, PLEASE?"
> Try this one: just compute the geographic area of
Mississippi TIMES the number of inches of rain
that Katrina dumped on Mississippi alone.
TO BEGIN ...
Let's calculate the volume of water that results
from covering Mississippi with 12 inches of rain (one vertical foot):
1 linear mile = 5,280 feet
1 square mile = 5,280 x 5,280 = 27,878,400 square feet
Mississippi's geographic area = 46,914 square miles 1,307,887,257,
Therefore, one foot of water covering Mississippi is:
27,878,400 cubic feet x 46,914 square miles =
1,307,887,257,600 cubic feet of water
1 cubic mile = 5,280 x 5,280 x 5,280 cubic feet
Therefore, 1 foot of water covering Mississippi =
600 cubic feet / (5,280**3) = 8.885 CUBIC MILES That's just 12" of rain covering all of Mississippi:
same quotient as (46,914 * 5,280 * 5,280) / (5,280 * 5,280 * 5,280) = 8.885 CUBIC MILES
HOW MUCH RAIN DID ACTUALLY FALL ON MISSISSIPPI
AS A DIRECT RESULT OF HURRICANE KATRINA?
PLUS, HOW MUCH RAIN FELL ON THE NEIGHBORING STATES?
THEREFORE, HOW MUCH WATER DID KATRINA'S VORTEX
LIFT OUT OF THE GULF OF MEXICO AND SLAM IT
ONTO THOSE SOUTHERN STATES AT A VELOCITY
OF APPROXIMATELY 100 MILES PER HOUR?
ANYBODY?
Sincerely yours,
/s/ Paul Andrew Mitchell, B.A., M.S.
Private Attorney General, Criminal Investigator and
Federal Witness: 18 U.S.C. 1510, 1512-13, 1964(a)
http://www.supremelaw.org/decs/ agency/private. attorney. general.htm
http://www.supremelaw.org/index. htm
http://www.supremelaw.org/support. policy.htm
http://www.supremelaw.org/guideline s.htm
All Rights Reserved without Prejudice
On Sun, May 30, 2010 at 2:47 PM, Paul Andrew Mitchell <supremelawfirm@gmail.com > wrote:
Google "corexit 9500" +hemolysis
(we get 206 results)
Bing "corexit 9500" +hemolysis
(we get 292 results)
And, whether or not it does evaporate into the atmosphere
with seasonal changes in the surface temperature of the
Gulf of Mexico, DO YOU HAVE ANY IDEA HOW MUCH
WATER WAS LIFTED BY HURRICANE KATRINA?
Try this one: just compute the geographic area of
Mississippi TIMES the number of inches of rain
that Katrina dumped on Mississippi alone.
WHAT DO YOU GET?
WE GOT CUBIC MILES!!
But, PLEASE, do not ask your brain-dead authors to
try this simple arithmetic: they may not be able to operate
Windows CALCULATOR, much less situate the decimal place
correctly.
GOOD GRIEF!!!
--
Sincerely yours,
/s/ Paul Andrew Mitchell, B.A., M.S.
Private Attorney General, Criminal Investigator and
Federal Witness: 18 U.S.C. 1510, 1512-13, 1964(a)
http://www.supremelaw.org/decs/ agency/private. attorney. general.htm
http://www.supremelaw.org/index. htm
http://www.supremelaw.org/support. policy.htm
http://www.supremelaw.org/guideline s.htm
All Rights Reserved without Prejudice
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