Hurricane Don Warning: The Nightmare Storm if Trump Wins Again!

The year is 2029. JD Vance has just finished his first six months as President, following Donald Trump’s second term. You find yourself in a storm shelter in Georgia, having spent the entire night hiding as Hurricane Don tore through the state.

When you finally open the shelter door, the scene is catastrophic—entire buildings leveled, communities obliterated, and a death toll in the hundreds, with many more unaccounted for.

Despite being a Category 5 hurricane, Don struck the Atlantic coast unexpectedly. This lack of warning traces back to several years earlier when, under the Project 2025 initiative, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) was privatized. The cost-ineffective hurricane hunter aircraft were abandoned, and satellite data was auctioned off to the highest bidder.

Today, just days before the Election Day, it’s crucial we understand the implications of a second Trump administration.

The absence of NOAA forecasts left countless individuals unprepared. Many chose to stay behind, attempting to safeguard their homes rather than evacuate.

In the aftermath, it becomes clear that federal aid is not on its way.

Consistent with Project 2025, emergency response duties have shifted to state and local authorities. Federal disaster preparedness funding has been cut, and the National Flood Insurance Program phased out, leaving reconstruction capabilities to the wealthy or those fortunate enough to have private coverage.

This dire situation is a direct result of re-electing Donald Trump and the implementation of his Project 2025, which favored polluters over the populace.

Additionally, Trump fulfilled his campaign vow by escalating oil and gas exploitation through more fracking, more pipelines, and a battle plan centered on relentless drilling.

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Trump also swiftly acted on his promise to oil tycoons, pledging to dismantle any environmental regulations they opposed in exchange for $1 billion in campaign donations.

Between 2025 and 2028, Trump appointed two additional justices to the Supreme Court, creating an 8-1 conservative majority. The Court decided that the Environmental Protection Agency had no authority to regulate greenhouse gases and even denied the existence of climate change.

As a result, no federal agency could address the impacts of climate change, setting the stage for an era dominated by superstorms, severe wildfires, and intense hurricanes.

With Election Day approaching, we must be fully aware of what a second Trump term could mean.

We recently witnessed Hurricane Milton rapidly intensify in the Gulf of Mexico, becoming one of the fastest-strengthening storms ever recorded before devastating Florida as a major Category 3 hurricane. It resulted in at least 24 deaths, left over 3 million people without electricity, spawned numerous tornadoes, and caused a once-in-a-thousand-year rainfall event.

Just two weeks prior, Hurricane Helene caused a 1,000-year rainfall event in North Carolina and Georgia, marking it as the deadliest storm to strike the U.S. mainland since Hurricane Katrina, with at least 230 fatalities reported across six states and an impact stretching up to 500 miles inland from any coast.

The unexpected severity of Milton and the extraordinary rainfall from Helene highlight the effects of global warming, primarily caused by the continued extraction and combustion of fossil fuels.

For years, scientists have warned of increasing storm intensity as governments fail to curb fossil fuel usage, leading to hotter oceans and air. Warmer oceans amplify storms, while warmer air holds more moisture, resulting in heavier rainfall.

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Undoing any progress on climate issues and supporting wealthy polluters will only exacerbate conditions for states along the Gulf and Atlantic coasts, turning what were once century storms into frequent disasters, along with more frequent heatwaves, droughts, wildfires, and floods—with scant hope for recovery or relief.

Trump’s hazardous agenda to withdraw from the Paris agreement again and disrupt global climate talks threatens the crucial agreement achieved last year to begin moving away from fossil fuels.

In a year marked by extreme climate events, it has become clear that no place is safe on a warming planet.

While hurricanes will continue to occur as they always have, the question remains: after surviving Hurricane Don in 2029, do you prefer a government that relies on scientific evidence to protect people and the planet, making polluters pay for their destruction, or one that sacrifices our well-being to the highest bidder?

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