21 Replies to “We Need A Famine”

  1. If they’re deliberately trying to smoke her out, there’s a reason.

    I suspect one of the following:

    1. Feral cats using their garden as a litter box no matter how much they tell her to stop feeding them.

    2. Men dropping in for “massages” at all hours of the day and night.

  2. Translation: “It’s really really hard to remain a vegan when your mouth is watering from the smell of the barbeque next door”.

    1. “the smell of the barbeque next door”

      Been there done that. Turned out that my brother just had a dump and left the downstairs washroom door open.

  3. It’s okay, everyone. It seems that about 3000 people are going to show up in the neighborhood some time later this month to barbecue next door to her, at her neighbor’s place.
    From what I have heard about those Aussies, it should be a hell of a good time.
    Wish I could be there.

    Three thousand. If 10% show up, well hey…

  4. Meanwhile


    Weather Topics |
    Access city
    Tropical Cyclone Information Statements

    8:55 PM ADT Thursday 05 September 2019
    Tropical cyclone information statement for:

    New Brunswick:

    Acadian Peninsula
    Fredericton and Southern York County
    Fundy National Park
    Grand Lake and Queens County
    Grand Manan and Coastal Charlotte County
    Kent County
    Kouchibouguac National Park
    Miramichi and area
    Moncton and Southeast New Brunswick
    Oromocto and Sunbury County
    Saint John and County
    St. Stephen and Northern Charlotte County
    Stanley - Doaktown - Blackville Area
    Sussex - Kennebecasis Valley and Kings County

    Newfoundland and Labrador:

    Cartwright to Black Tickle
    Eagle River
    Newfoundland
    Norman Bay to Lodge Bay
    Red Bay to L'Anse-au-Clair

    Nova Scotia

    Prince Edward Island

    Québec - south:

    Anticosti
    Blanc-Sablon
    Chevery
    Îles-de-la-Madeleine

    For Hurricane Dorian.

    The next information statement will be issued by 03:00 a.m. ADT.

    Hurricane Dorian is expected to severely impact parts of the Atlantic provinces this weekend.

    1. Summary of basic information at 09:00 p.m. ADT.

    Location: 33.6 North 77.9 West.

    About: 79 kilometres east of Wilmington.

    Maximum sustained winds: 167 kilometres per hour.

    Present movement: northeast at 20 kilometres per hour.

    Minimum central pressure: 960 millibars.

    2. Public weather impacts and warnings summary.

    Tropical storm or hurricane watches will be issued early Friday. Based on the latest forecast guidance, the most likely track projection brings Hurricane Dorian south of the Maritimes on Saturday, pushing through eastern Nova Scotia Saturday night, and then over the eastern Gulf of St. Lawrence waters or western Newfoundland by Sunday morning.

    Severe winds and rainfall will have major impacts for southeastern New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, Nova Scotia, Western Newfoundland, and the Quebec Lower North Shore. There will also be large waves, especially for the Atlantic coasts of Nova Scotia and Newfoundland and eastern portions of the Gulf of St. Lawrence. Finally, storm surge, combined with large waves and pounding surf, may have impacts for parts of Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, Newfoundland, and the Magdalen Islands.

    a. Wind.

    Most regions will experience some tropical storm force winds, beginning over southwestern Nova Scotia by early Saturday afternoon and towards the evening over eastern Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, the Magdalen Islands, and southwestern Newfoundland. Near and to the south of the forecast track, winds should reach hurricane force. Gusts up to 120 km/h are likely along parts of Nova Scotia, the southwestern coast of Newfoundland, and the Quebec Lower North Shore. As the storm moves across Nova Scotia, there is a possibility of hurricane force northwesterlies behind it. Wind impacts will likely be enhanced by foliage on the trees, causing broken branches and tree falls, resulting in power outages, blocking of roads, and damage to buildings.

    b. Rainfall.

    Rainfall will be a major factor and heavy rainfall will likely lead to flooding. The highest rainfall amounts are likely for Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, and the Gulf of St. Lawrence region where 50 to 100 mm is expected. Forecast guidance is also suggesting a swath in excess of 150 mm north and west of Dorian's track. Some districts have received large quantities of rain from Post-tropical Storm Erin last week, and with the soil moisture still very high from Erin, excessive runoff may exacerbate the flooding potential. This combined with the previously mentioned severe winds may result in damage from falling trees.

    c. Surge/Waves.

    There will also be some rough and pounding surf, especially for parts of Nova Scotia, Newfoundland and the Gulf of St. Lawrence. Large waves will reach the Southwestern Shore of Nova Scotia on Saturday and build to near 10 metres over the Eastern Shore Saturday night. These waves will likely reach southern Newfoundland by Sunday morning. Waves near or higher than 5 metres will impact north facing coasts of the Gulf of St. Lawrence. Note that waves will break higher along some of the coastlines, and dangerous rip currents are likely. Please exercise extreme caution.

    Storm surge is possible, mainly for eastern Nova Scotia and the Southwest Shore, the north coast of Prince Edward Island, southwestern Newfoundland, and the Magdalen Islands. Current guidance suggests near warning levels at this time. However, when combined with rough and pounding surf, there may be flooding and overwash of waves. On Friday warnings may be issued.

    3. Marine weather impacts and warnings summary.

    As Hurricane Dorian moves into our waters, there is a good chance of hurricane force southeasterlies near and south of the track, mainly over southern Atlantic forecast waters. As the storm moves into the Maritimes, storm to hurricane force northwesterlies will likely develop behind it. Waves in of 10 to 15 metres are likely south of the storm track, beginning late Saturday over southwestern waters and approaching southern Newfoundland Sunday morning. As the low continues east late Sunday into Monday, waves of 4 to 7 metres will develop over Funk and Belle Isle Banks and the South Labrador coast, with 3 to 5 metres expected over the Grand Banks.

    Forecasters: McArthur, Mercer, Couturier

    Please continue to monitor alerts issued by the Canadian Hurricane Centre and forecasts issued by Environment Canada.

    For more comprehensive information about track tables and forecast rationale, please see the Technical Discussion

    https://weather.gc.ca/hurricane/statements_e.html

    1. FXCN31 CWHX 060000
      Tropical cyclone technical information statement issued by the
      Canadian Hurricane Centre of Environment Canada at 8.57 PM ADT
      Thursday 05 September 2019.

      The next statement will be issued by 3.00 AM ADT

      1. Current position, strength, central pressure and motion

      At 9.00 PM ADT, hurricane Dorian was located near latitude 33.6 N and
      longitude 77.9 W, about 43 nautical miles or 79 km south of
      Wilmington. Maximum sustained winds are estimated at 90 knots (167
      km/h) and central pressure at 960 MB. Dorian is moving northeast at
      11 knots (20 km/h).

      2. Forecast position, central pressure and strength

      Date time lat lon MSLP Max wind
      ADT MB kts kmh
      Sep 05 9.00 PM 33.6N 77.9W 960 90 167
      Sep 06 9.00 AM 35.3N 75.5W 965 90 167
      Sep 06 9.00 PM 37.5N 72.1W 967 85 157
      Sep 07 9.00 AM 40.4N 68.1W 965 80 148
      Sep 07 9.00 PM 43.9N 63.7W 960 80 148
      Sep 08 9.00 AM 48.3N 59.8W 960 70 130 post-tropical
      Sep 08 9.00 PM 51.9N 55.2W 963 60 111 post-tropical
      Sep 09 9.00 AM 54.5N 48.7W 971 50 93 post-tropical
      Sep 09 9.00 PM 56.1N 43.0W 979 45 83 post-tropical

      3. Technical discussion

      A. Analysis

      The eye of hurricane Dorian remains just offshore of the South
      Carolina coast. The large eye seen earlier in the day on satellite
      has now become a bit smaller and more ragged. Cloud tops have also
      warmed over the last hour. The latest hurricane aircraft
      reconnasainces have also been showing a slow decrease in intensity
      over the last few hours. Therefore, the initial intensity has dropped
      slightly to 90 knots with a slight increase in speed to the northeast
      at 11 knots.

      B. Prognostic

      Hurricane Dorian's forward motion is now predominantly northeast as
      it approaches the mid-latitude westerlies. The current forecast track
      may graze the North Carolina coast tonight before passing near Cape
      Hatteras on Friday morning. Some weakening is expected as Dorian then
      accelerates towards Canadian offshore waters Friday afternoon into
      Saturday. Exactly when Dorian will undergo extra-tropical transition
      remains uncertain, but the current forecast maintains a land-falling
      hurricane somewhere over Eastern Nova Scotia overnight Saturday and
      should complete transition over the Eastern Gulf of St. Lawrence or
      Western Newfoundland Sunday morning. Regarless, Dorian will remain a
      very potent post-tropical system with hurricane or near hurricane
      force winds as it crosses Newfoundland.

      Global models are suggesting large amounts of rain north of the track
      with most models now suggesting widespread 50 to 100 mm for Nova
      Scotia, Prince Edward Island, Southeastern New Brunswick and the Gulf
      of St. Lawrence including parts of North Shore Quebec.There could be
      a swath in excess of 150 mm just north and west of dorain's track as
      it approaches Nova Scotia.

      C. Predicted wind radii (NM)

      Time gales storms hurricane
      NE SE SW NW NE SE SW NW NE SE SW NW
      06/00Z 225 220 135 130 90 90 70 75 60 50 45 50
      06/12Z 240 245 165 135 95 95 75 80 60 50 45 50
      07/00Z 245 260 190 145 100 110 80 80 55 55 50 55
      07/12Z 255 275 200 160 110 145 95 85 60 65 55 55
      08/00Z 270 280 210 180 110 175 100 90 65 70 55 45
      08/12Z 265 275 220 195 95 145 90 90 55 50 30 45
      09/00Z 240 265 225 195 75 100 70 80 0 0 0 0
      09/12Z 210 255 225 190 60 90 50 65 0 0 0 0
      10/00Z 210 255 260 190 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

      END/MCARTHUR/MERCER/COUTURIER

      1. Did you know, there is a way of linking to a weather report that doesn’t take up multiple pages of space here? Is this info you’ve posted for the 12 people on the planet that didn’t know there’s a storm coming?

        What aspect of this Atlantic storm warning has anything to do with the troubled vegan gal in Perth, Oz?

        1. Thanks Mark…was about to say something similar..

          Seems to me there is always 1 Asshole living in every neighbourhood – your local “Mrs Cratchit”. Pain in the ASS – bitchin and complaining over anything…siccin the Police or By law cops.

          I know her very well.

  5. honestly, that vegan is the kinda ilk i’d go drag somewhere to the outback and let the Australian wildlife do what it does.

  6. A wise man once told me, whether it’s your stocks, car, or home, you got to know when to sell or trade. I’d I’d say this girl has missed that boat.

  7. Why is anyone surprised? Power, and control. Over what you eat, what you think, what you say, what you drive, where you live, what you wear, how many children you have, etc., etc., etc..

    Property rights don’t mean you can defend your property, or do what you want on your property. Property rights means you have to get permission to even walk out there without government supervision. No back yard fires, no backyard barbecues clearly follows. No clearly dead wood, no cutting fire breaks.

    You can’t choose who your customers are in your business (gay cakes anyone?), you can’t choose whom to hire or whom to fire in your business. You expected them to stay out of your backyard?

    This vegan lady is going to win. There is nothing anyone can do about it. But vote for Scheer, because he is not Trudeau.

    1. The Aussies authorities threw her case out twice. However if this was in Canada, she would
      be catered to by the slimy squirming PC leftists idiots we have in charge of human rights tribunals.

  8. “vote for Scheer, because he is not Trudeau.”

    That’s just flat out stupid, and dishonest. NDP Jagmeet Singh is also not Trudeau, Gang Green Elizabeth May is also not Trudeau.

    Vote CPC Scheer, or you’ll get another 4 years of LPC Trudeau. Because only Scheer can defeat Trudeau. Kevin knows this to be true.
    But Kevin doesn’t care. Kevin wants Trudeau to get another 4 years of governing Canada. Kevin thinks Alberta will leave Canada.

  9. As stupid as this story is, the fact that it was utterly dismissed by two lower courts is a positive sign. Unfortunately, she’s not bright enough to see it. It’s entirely likely the ASC will do exactly the same thing, and she’ll be out all those thousands of AU$ that she’ll never get back. And she still won’t be smart enough to have learned the lesson. But at least she’ll have less disposable capital with which to waste other people’s time. If I were the neighbours, I’d consider a countersuit for harassment or whatever, just to really drive home the point, provided she wasn’t already made destitute by her failed legal endeavours.

    1. Because the leopard never learned cursive? Maybe it’s a spotted moth top, in honor of the evolutionist hoax.

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