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NASA, NOAA GOES Project via Getty Images
In this NOAA handout image, NOAA’s GOES East satellite capture of Hurricane Harvey shows the storm’s eye as the storm nears landfall at 10:07 a.m. EDT (1407 UTC) on Aug. 25, 2017 in the southeastern coast of Texas.
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Re: Sept. 10 Diane Carman column.

As Diane Carman accurately points out: “In 2012, scientists in the U.S. were unable to forecast Hurricane Sandy’s path with any degree of accuracy, while the European team predict with confidence that it was going to turn toward New Jersey.”

What Carman avoids discussing is why the European team was able to do that. And the reason is simple: It doesn’t fit her anti-President Trump narrative. There are two main reasons the European model was able to correctly predicted the path of Hurricane Sandy: a superior supercomputer and information provided by NASA’s polar-orbiting satellites.

So why, in 2012, didn’t the U.S. supercomputer match the European’s? The answer is simple: funding.

Which brings us to the reason Carman is so reluctant to discuss the reasons behind the . She wants readers to believe funding for NOAA is only a problem when a war-on-climate-science Republican is in the White House. Shame on you, Carman.

ٴDzDZ,Parker

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