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Religious_Man
World According To Briggs
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Comments by "Religious_Man" (@Religious_man) on "World According To Briggs" channel.
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That's my sentiment. If one is to talk about the weather, one can never skip over the climate, the environment, and the seasons. They all go hand-in-hand together. Otherwise the information is false.
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Thanks for your contribution and insight. "Once you get inland, it's basically Phoenix by the sea." Wow, yeah I hear ya. Perfect description of San Diego. The further south you go, the hotter it gets generally, right? Bodies of water does little to 0 in cooling off cities. Throw in the pollution factor, how hotter can a city possibly get??
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nalaredneb78 Because you love nasty weather?
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@genevieveelaine221 Give me a break. SF is not always cold. Dafuq out of here. A lot of commentators are lying or exaggerating.
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@richardprice3070 Agreed
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The west coast also has mountains. There really is no such thing as a "mild climate." Every area of the world has its own episodes of violent weather. This is why I don't believe in statistics. I believe in factors.
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@marsgal42 Wet in the winter ---- why do you suppose that is? Wetness is not weather. Dry in the summer ---- are you absolutely sure about that? Little temperature change ------ I'm sure the temperatures wildly fluctuate from season to season, wetness to dryness back and forth. When will people ever be happy?
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Bodies of water can not and does not make any difference near cities. Summer months in SF are just like everywhere else....wherever there is higher terrain. Mountains make their own weather; the open oceans? Not that much. The central valley is hot due to its arid climate. That explains the weather anomalies. So what if its windy? It's always windy on and near higher terrain. Is the wind blowing up or down? South to north? Is the wind blowing in circles? This explains the temperature contrasts too. The Pacific Ocean isn't that cold. It can only be cold to the human touch and according to weather computer programming. In July, in reality, SF can be as warm as 75F while the CV basks in desert-like temperatures of 110F+ while the surrounding areas normally bask in over 90F in mid-summer. It starts noticeably cooling down in late summer of course. "The winds reverse and bring hot weather to SF for a short time." A description of a heat wave ----- in every area of the globe, there are and always will be heat waves and cold spells all year and every year because of the blocking weather patterns. Since we're talking about California here, even the forest fires can make its own weather. If SF were to get a lasting heat wave, I surmise that would be caused by an eastern wind blowing in from where areas are suffering from forest fires.
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Ah yes, we also have the wind chill to factor in and one's state of good health.
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@maryrosekent8223 "I loved living in San Francisco because the weather barely changes." This is an irrelevant reason unless you love getting your windshield fogged up almost everyday on the San Fran Mountains.
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Liar, yes it does. All I have to do is look at a picture. Bodies of water don't create fog, but I know higher terrain does and farm fields.
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Forest fires can occur anywhere. I wasn't referring to the most recent forest fire occurrences. They can occur anywhere, even on the Sierra Mountains, which is east of SF. Cold to the human touch, not necessarily temperature cold unless you measured it yourself. Heat has the ability to travel right above water. It's just that land heats up more effectively than water does.
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October in higher latitudes is beautiful.*
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@alexsf4248 So what drives the ocean currents? Are the Alaskans driving the ocean currents southward so that you Californians can enjoy the "mild climate" all-year round? Then how is it possible that people all along the western coast of North America able to go swimming in cold water? That is utter nonsense. The San Fran Mountains creates fog and so does the Central Valley, you POS.
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@alexsf4248 SF has 46 hills and lot’s of micro climates when the fog rolls in. WTF are you talking about, you whack job? SMFH
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We shall see.
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I guess those mountains SF is built on are a lot higher than we think they are.
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I guess TV shows like Riptide and Baywatch lied the whole time.
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Well wherever there are people, it will always be cold, cloudy, and depressing, lol.
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@hallievanoutryve3109 You still reek of bull$hit. People flock to the beaches when it gets HOT. Understand? North, south, east, and west, EVERYWHERE. Ocean currents do not keep people away from the beaches and these places can get as hot as 100F provided by certain weather conditions. I wish you people would stop lying and stop exaggerating.
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What season was it? I guess you forgot to factor in that San Francisco is built on mountains and mountains create their own weather.
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@grod805 It could have been.
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Because summer is the hottest time of the year and winter is quite the opposite. No one can be this stupid.
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I don't like bull$hit statistics. The moron in the video only spouted climate rumors of these areas. Contrary to popular opinion, San Diego gets as hot as Dallas, Atlanta, etc or even hotter since SD is built in an arid environment. San Francisco also gets hot just not as hot as LA because SF was built on higher elevation. That's why the "fog" tends to roll in. It gets blown off the mountains first. The further south you go, the hotter it gets; the further north you go, the cooler it gets. I'm sure there are exceptions. If you want the "perfect" weather conditions, then move to higher latitudes or move to higher terrain. Good luck finding it.
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Tofino....never heard of it. I'm sure VI has its droughts and flooding issues from time to time. It's not a climate thing, it's a weather thing. Don't forget, VI also has higher terrain on it to factor in and vegetation. "Both are well documented." I like how you even bothered to mention that to bypass scrutiny.
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