Sorry. Hopping off-topic for just a sec:
I went back and reread this thread a little bit,
and realized I came in WAY too hot when I first got here last year. I was super confrontational right off the bat. I didn't bring an attitude that encouraged civil discussion or lively debate. I even carried some of that energy into 2025. By the time people had started calling me out for it I had already forgotten the behavior they were referring to. It sucks realizing now how right those people were.
To this community: I'm genuinely sorry, and I promise to be better.
This is no excuse, but last year was really bad in my neck of the woods (Iowa). A few of the strongest tornadoes hit way too close to home, and a few too many friends underestimated the danger they posed and almost got themselves hurt. In my mind, this was largely because they were being mislead about the strength of the forces at play, due in part to low EF ratings, with egregiously low wind speeds attached to them. The EF debate became personal to me, way more than I realized.
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The only state with more tornadoes than Iowa was Texas and it's 4.7 times the size. In fact, Texas is still 1.5 times larger than Nebraska, Iowa, and Illinois put together, and between the three states there were 387 tornadoes. The fact the biggest cities avoided a major disaster, and most of the tornadoes stayed in farm fields was a miracle. My passion is the result of a sense of urgency to get this system -- and the "public safety risk" I believe it's causing in it's current state -- fixed before our luck with tornadoes missing major metros ends.