Re: Global Warming will Flood East Coast citys and solve its own problem...

WAAAAAAY [#offtopic]!

Here we go a trolling a trolling a trolling…

[:)]

I don’t think it’s quite that simple. All the people and businesses (and RRs, too) will have to move to higher ground. We will have to rebuild everything. There will be an opportunity for us to reconsider all the ways to “do it better” because we will have to rebuild it anyway.

All the rebuilding will create still more pollution.

Unfortunately, no one is taking global warming seriously. But New Orleans, our lowest city, is only the beginning.

It’s not too far off topic because most of the Northeast Corridor will have to move, as well as nearly all of Florida and most of coastal southern California. Long Beach, now one of the largest sources of railroad revenue, will have to move. But where?

We have no plan.

[:)]

[:)]

Since much of the arable land is nearest the coast, and low lying at that, when the sea rises…what was that you said again, about more plants taking up more of the CO2?

Then you will no longer have to worry about worms in the big apple! [(-D]

Little apples are better for you anyway![(-D]

Railroad subject:What would New York Central RR be without New York?

Have a good one.

Bill B

“When the sea rises…”

When pigs fly…

Yes when the sea rises and the sky falls we need to worry.

Someones off their meds…

What if the sky falls down, and all the trees be broken?[:O]

While we’re at it, let’s provoke the final quake and terminate California![;)][:-^]

greetings,

Marc Immeker

Oh no! Good bye New York! Well thank heavens I did all my mail order shopping at America’s Hobby Center 40 years ago while there was still time!

The spur deal is dead. Long live the spur deal.

Dave Nelson

Unfortunately global warming will mean a longer growing season but less rain. Could turn out that Russia will come out if it better than most places, they’re so far north that many areas that are currently not usefull for agriculture (like Siberia) may be the breadbasket of Europe in 100 years.