Huge blocks of ice are still falling from the sky and they’re still being blamed on passing airplanes, even though we have shown that they are actually caused by global warming. This has happened twice so far this year in the Philadelphia area.

A family was woken up suddenly on February 22 by a giant block of ice that crashed through the roof of their home. Pennlive.com quotes Mi Young Choi as saying, “My mom heard a huge explosion type of sound and we all came out just to see and there was a huge hole in our ceiling.” The website reports that a few weeks earlier, on January 17, a “bowling ball-size ice chunk” tore through the roof of another home nearby.
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There has been yet another mysterious ice fall, this time in Florida, and this time it crushed a car. Given the fact that these incidents are now being recorded with such regularity, it seems only a question of before death or injury results from an a block of ice falling from the sky due to global warming. What the local Fox news channel describes as a “refrigerator-sized chunk of ice,” weighing around 50 pounds, fell out of the sky at about 9 a.m. in a town near Tampa and crushed a parked car. As usual, local FAA officials said theywere “unsure” if the ice had fallen from a plane.
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For years, huge blocks of ice have been slamming to earth worldwide. It’s usually assumed that these come from airplanes, although this has been disproved over and over again, and each incident is treated by the local media in the area where the ice falls as unique and not related to the other cases. The truth is that these are probably an indication of global warming. Now the Myers home in Delaware has been struck and the family who live there barely avoided injury after a huge block of ice came crashing through their roof.
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An object about the size of a golf ball and weighing 13 ounces crashed through the roof of a Monmouth, NJ home at approximately 9PM local time on Tuesday. The object was tested by the Monmouth County Office of Emergency Management and found not to be a radiation hazard. The FAA determined that it was not metallic debris from an airplane. The object struck the house with enough force to break through the roof and ceiling, and shatter tile on a bathroom floor.

In LiveScience.com, Chris Newmarker quotes local policeman Robert Brightman as saying, “It’s rather unusual. I haven’t seen anything like it in my career.”
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