NewFoundWeatherNerd
Member
Good friend of mine, Jaxon; is working on a radar truck, hes trying to follow Josh's footsteps! But I honestly believe that Ethan Moriarty might be the inspiration of this generation to get back into going outside the box, and trying to give tornadoes real justice. He's honest, level headed, and doesn't fall to "hype" and "weenism" with rating tornadoes. We need to be engineers and creative; thats what this takes.I think the reason he gets so much flak is because a lot of people view him as the main figurehead for damage surveys, kind of like Ted Fujita was during his time (but to a lesser extent), and the steward of the EF scale.
This is subjective opinion, but based on what I've seen I believe he actively sought that status/reputation, and it wasn't accidentally bestowed upon him. As the kids say, he wants all the clout but none of the smoke. All that being said, I'm definitely leaning way more towards @NewFoundWeatherNerd's points about a lack of passion being the biggest issue in fixing the situation we're in. We desperately need a new steward of damage surveying. My vote would be for Josh Wurman, but who knows if he'd even want the title. Maybe someone entirely new is needed!
On a semi-unrelated note -- this excerpt from a comment by Randy Zisper on Stormtrack (1970s tornado scientist and co-creator of the original Stormtrack Newsletter) almost makes it seem like there's always been a rivalry between Fujita's camp and the "engineer"/Texas Tech camp, and I think that rivalry has lasted into today.
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When youre just doing a job, you dont innovate: but when youre doing your passion, you cant help but innovate. Right now rating is a job over a fascination