It was the deadliest tornado in United States history. In March 1925, a massive, mile-wide funnel carved a continuous 219-mile path of absolute destruction across Missouri, Illinois, and Indiana, killing 695 people. But the true tragedy was that the victims had no warning, because the government had legally banned the word "tornado." At the time, the U.S. Weather Bureau operated under the absurd bureaucratic belief that predicting tornados was impossible and that warning the public would only cause mass panic. Meteorologists were strictly forbidden from broadcasting tornado alerts. This book exposes the fatal consequences of information censorship. We track the monster storm's unprecedented three-and-a-half-hour lifespan, defying all known meteorological physics. The narrative reveals how this singular, catastrophic event forced the federal government to abandon its policy of silence and lay the groundwork for the modern severe weather warning network. Understand the deadly cost of institutional arrogance. Discover the storm that proved silence is far more dangerous than panic.
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