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Gulf Coast Prepares for Flooding From Tropical Storm Cristobal

Values at the Heart of the Fight for Canada

Has Canada gone to the dogs? Judging by all the barking that goes on in this country—though that has mercifully diminished during the pandemic—the answer is yes. The din comes not from those who embrace the values that built Canada: individual freedom, private property, free enterprise, personal responsibility, faith, and family. Rather, the snarls tend to emanate from the throats of those malcontents who embrace collective values—egalitarianism, affirmative action, feminism, and victimization. Questioning such creeds is discouraged today; you are sure to be labelled a crank. This tells us much about our conventional wisdom and the state of free speech. In 1944 my late father, Clayton Bird, flew 34 raids as part of Bomber Command’s 420 Squadron in England, and also served in Canada’s peacetime air force until 1964. Many…

Gulf Coast Prepares for Flooding From Tropical Storm Cristobal

The latest forecast track has Tropical Storm Cristobal—the third named storm of what is expected to be an active hurricane season—making landfall sometime in the afternoon or early evening of June 7.

Cristobal has sustained winds of 50 mph and is expected to continue to strengthen as it tracks north through the warm waters of the Gulf of Mexico on Saturday.

As for Cristobal’s landfall location, several models say it will fall somewhere between Marsh Island and Slidell, Louisiana. But that does not mean other locations will be free from impact.

“The highest winds, greatest storm surge, and heaviest rain may occur east of where Cristobal makes landfall, so not only is the Louisiana coast at risk, but also Mississippi, Alabama, and well into the Florida Panhandle,” said CNN meteorologist Dave Hennen.

In the New Orleans area, voluntary evacuation orders are in place for the towns of Jean Lafitte, Lower Lafitte, Crown Point, and Barataria, Jefferson Parish officials announced Saturday morning.

Residents are advised to bring vehicles, boats, and campers to higher ground as the storm is expected to bring heavy rainfall, according to Jefferson Parish officials.

A tropical storm watch has been issued from Intracoastal City, Louisiana, to the Alabama-Florida border.

Flooding will be the biggest concern for Gulf Coast states east of Texas.

A storm surge watch has also been issued for the northern Gulf Coast from Indian Pass to Aripeka, Florida, and from Grand Isle, Louisiana, to Ocean Springs, Mississippi. A storm surge watch, according to the National Hurricane Center, means there is a possibility of life-threatening inundation for 48 hours from rising water moving inland.

“Coastal flooding, heavy rain, and dangerous beach conditions will be the main impacts locally,” the National Weather Service said on its website. “The heaviest rain and greatest coastal flooding threat is expected Saturday night through Sunday.”

It’s worth noting that if the storm speeds up, and does not linger along the coast, flooding risks will decrease a bit.

“There appears to be some limiting factors in advance of the storm to keep it from intensifying into a hurricane, with wind shear and expected dry air that the storm will entrain,” Hennen said, explaining why he’s skeptical the storm will strengthen significantly.

Another concern is the potential for severe weather. The Storm Prediction Center has a “Marginal Risk” for the coastal regions of Lousiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and northwestern Florida.

“Tropical storms like Cristobal can still be prolific tornado producers, especially when making landfall on the Gulf Coast,” said CNN meteorologist Brandon Miller. “Landfalling tropical systems from the Gulf of Mexico produce more tornadoes than their counterparts making landfall along the Atlantic coast, largely because the right-front quadrant (where most tornadoes are found) is located completely onshore.”

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Focus News: Gulf Coast Prepares for Flooding From Tropical Storm Cristobal

Minister Miller Outraged at Violence Against Indigenous People

OTTAWA—Indigenous Services Minister Marc Miller says Canada needs a reckoning over a repeated and disgusting pattern of police violence against Indigenous people. Miller says he “watched in disgust” video and reports this week of violence against a 22-year-old Inuk man in Nunavut and a 26-year-old First Nations mother in New Brunswick. In the first, a graphic video shows an RCMP officer in Nunavut ramming the door of his car into the man walking along the road in Kinngait in the evening on June 1. In the second, police went to check on the well-being of 26-year-old Chantel Moore in Edmundston, N.B., Thursday evening, and ended up shooting and killing her. “A car door is not a proper police tactic, it’s a disgraceful, dehumanizing and violent act,” Miller said, at a…