Oh sure, there's nothing at all suspicious about the attack on the oil production facility on the (out)House of Saud (and we're already being told that production will be fully restored in a few months) while in the same time frame, Houston, Texas and all the oil facilities there are being flooded, and while there have been explosions at Mexican refining facilities, Russian biotech laboratories, Chinese chemical plants, and so on. It's all just unfortunate coincidence.

Color me skeptical. I think we're watching some sort of covert warfare going on.

And in this strange list, we can add the possibility of "another first," namely, a possibility that California could be hit by a hurricane for the first time in U.S. history, according to the following article shared by B.:

Is California About To Get Hit By A Hurricane For The Very First Time In History?

Now, here's the danger (and no, it's not plastic straws, for those of you in Sacramento):

In the entire history of our country, a hurricane has never made landfall in the state of California. So if such a thing actually happened, it would be considered to be an extremely unusual event. Well, right now there are three very dangerous tropical storms swirling in the eastern Pacific Ocean. Tropical Storm Kiko is not expected to be a serious threat to make landfall, but Tropical Storm Lorena and Tropical Storm Mario “are expected to become hurricanes by Friday as they approach the Mexican coast”. Tropical Storm Lorena is the more immediate threat, and the latest forecast is projecting that it will reach Mexico’s Baja California Peninsula by Saturday. If it maintains hurricane strength and continues to ride up the west coast, it is entirely possible that we could see something that we have never seen before. Most forecasters don’t want to talk too much about it yet, because it truly would be an unprecedented event, but there really is a chance that California could get hit by a hurricane for the very first time in U.S. history.

Why are hurricanes unheard of in California? The standard answer is: