By the time the tornado siren sounded one week ago, the roof of Sydney Moore’s mobile home in Clarksville, Tennessee, had been sheared off and her 4-month-old son Lord sucked up by the twister.

“There was no warning,” said Moore, 22, who immediately moved to shield her 1-year-old son, Princeton, with her body.

Moore’s boyfriend, Aramis Youngblood, 39, rushed to protect Lord, who was sleeping in a bassinet swept up in a swirl of wind and debris Saturday evening as a series of powerful tornadoes and storms tore through the state.

    • ivanafterall
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      11 months ago

      Seems it protected the little guy this time, at least.

      “Boss, I ran the tornado as planned and the system is saying we’ve accidentally picked up the Lord.”

      “Oh my me, turn it off immediately!”

  • Flying Squid
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    1811 months ago

    The baby is supposed to fall out of the tree when the wind blows.

  • @[email protected]
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    1211 months ago

    So, like, yeah, holy shit, that’s crazy, but what concerns me is…

    “There was no warning"

    Is this just a case of negligence where they ignored the sirens or something, or is there a bigger issue with the warning system?

    • @lennybird
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      11 months ago

      My friend is an amateur storm watcher and loves this stuff. The way he explained it is tornadoes are notoriously hard to predict and track. You can have widespread areas under tornado warnings (i.e., “all the ingredients are ripe for a tornado to form somewhere”) but beyond that it’s difficult to immediately report the formation of a funnel, its heading and speed, etc.

      These storm watchers actually help quite a bit in providing real-time information when feasible.

      • @Cold_Brew_Enema
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        611 months ago

        Im an avid weather watcher, and there was plenty of warning for people who are even slightly weather aware. The problem is, most people are not weather aware in the slightest. It was well known that there was going to be a severe weather outbreak with the possibility of dangerous tornados a day or two before the event. Hell, even growing up in the Midwest it is common to just ignore the tornado sirens because you’ve heard them a million times. Not sure if that’s what happened here.

    • blanketswithsmallpox
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      1011 months ago

      Just to add to the other comment… Mobile homes. There’s a reason why the poor and infirm live there. No structural integrity. Light up like a match. Little protection against any serious weather. Mobile homes are notorious for uping kill counts for natural disasters.

    • @[email protected]
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      811 months ago

      Read the first sentence in the description, it literally says it all started going down before any sirens or anything.

  • @[email protected]
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    311 months ago

    Hope baby is ok. Hope it doesn’t get ptsd or something or starts to chase the high of intense speed and turbulence.

    • @Bernie_Sandals
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      411 months ago

      “Yo Lord, why do you go skydiving every weekend?”

      “It’s a thing from my childhood you wouldn’t understand”

  • @[email protected]
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    211 months ago

    The photo that shows the trees is nuts. Good example of the power they have. Those trees were shredded from the debris tornados carry with them all whipping around at 125 mph.