us know what s happening as al roker would say, in your neck of the woods. this isn t weather-related, but one of those things that happens when the natural and developed worlds try to live together. take a peek. an enormous sinkhole, about 40 feet across, not just any place. this opened up today beneath the showroom of the national corvette museum in bowling green, kentucky. mario andretti probably crying right now. it s his favorite car. here s what the showroom looked like before the sinkhole opened up. there it is. after. just makes me weep! no one was hurt, thank god. except for the eight classic corvettes that fell into that sinkhole while the workers at the museum hurried to roll others away from the edge. i guess they were able to save several. strangely, 25 to 30-feet deep hole in the museum. museum still open in certain parts today, though, strangely. museum is part of kentucky where
and some days, in some years, no hurricanes at all. you can t really put it all into one pot and say this is changing the climate. because the word is climate. the word isn t weather. it isn t weather change. it s climate change. this is years and years and years of testing to make sure that this is right or wrong. and i believe, if you put more hot air into a hot air balloon, piers, it s going to go higher. if you put more hot air into the atmosphere, it s going to go higher. the storms are going to get higher. the air is going to get more humid. there will be more severe weather. does the nature of these storms at the moment i ve been in america the last few years. it certainly seems to me there s an escalation in the power. if you look at what happened in oklahoma last week, you look at hurricane sandy, here in new york. it just seems to me that the power of these things is increasing. but is that just a short-term situation? have we had these before in the last 30 years? we h
hurricanes at all. you can t really put it all into one pot and say this is changing the climate. because the word is climate. the word isn t weather. it isn t weather change. it s climate change. this is years and years and years of testing to make sure that this is right or wrong. and i believe, if you put more hot air into a hot air balloon, piers, it s going to go higher. if you put more hot air into the atmosphere, it s going to go higher. the storms are going to get higher. the air is going to get more humid. there will be more severe weather. does the nature of these storms at the moment i ve been in america the last few years. it certainly seems to me there s an escalation in the power. if you look at what happened in oklahoma last week, you look at hurricane sandy, here in new york. it just seems to me that the power of these things is increasing. but is that just a short-term situation? have we had these before in the last 30 years? we have had these before. what change
the severe weather getting worse, maybe hurricanes getting worse, as well. and some days, in some years, no hurricanes at all. you can t really put it all into one pot and say this is changing the climate. because the word is climate. the word isn t weather. it isn t weather change. it s climate change. this is years and years and years of testing to make sure that this is right or wrong. and i believe, if you put more hot air into a hot air balloon, piers, it s going to go higher. if you put more hot air into the atmosphere, it s going to go higher. the storms are going to get higher. the air is going to get more humid. there will be more severe weather. does the nature of these storms at the moment i ve been in america the last few years. it certainly seems to me there s an an escalation in the power. if you look at what happened in oklahoma last week, you look at hurricane sandy, here in new york. it just seems to me that the power of these things is increasing. but is that just