The Insane Story Of The Deadliest Storm In Human History

On November 12, 1970, a cyclone hit the country of Bangladesh (which was known as East Pakistan at the time) that through a combination of bad timing, location, miscommunication, and political malice became the deadliest storm in human history, killing more than half a million people in one day.

It became known as the Bhola Cyclone, and it set in motion a series of events that led to a genocide, a revolution, and brought the world to the brink of nuclear war.

Earlier this month the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration released their summary of weather disasters for the United States in 2022. What they found was that there were 18 weather or climate related events that caused more than a billion dollars in damage including everything from droughts to floods to wildfires to severe storms such as hurricanes.

This is more than double the average of 7.9 since 1980 and led to the deaths of 474 people. Each death is a tragedy but 474 is practically nothing compared to a cyclone that struck South Asia in 1970.

This one storm killed 600,000 people in one night and millions more died in the aftermath of the storm including a famine, a genocide and a war that believe it or not came incredibly close to nuclear Armageddon.

Source: YouTube

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