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Thousands Of People Are Thinking The Same Thing After Seeing A Viral Clip Of The Floodwaters In Texas

Thousands Of People Are Thinking The Same Thing After Seeing A Viral Clip Of The Floodwaters In Texas

Yahoo09-07-2025
News out of Texas this Fourth of July weekend has been nothing short of devastating. The death toll from severe flooding has risen to at least 108 people, including 30 children, and continues to climb.
TikTok user @kelseycrowder_ posted a timestamped compilation of clips showing how the Frio River, about 80 miles west of San Antonio, flooded while people were out celebrating the holiday.
She captioned the video "NATURE. IS. WILD." It's been viewed over 8 million times.
Related:
The clip starts at 5:43 p.m., when it was a relatively normal Fourth of July on the then-calm river:
Just about half an hour later, floodwaters are rushing by:
@kelseycrowder_ / Via tiktok.com
Check out how wide the river has gotten by 6:31 p.m.:
Related:
And finally, at 6:44 p.m., the floodwaters have engulfed tree trunks:
You can watch the full video here.
@kelseycrowder_ / Via tiktok.com
Another viral video from the flooding was a 30-second time-lapse of the rapidly rising water on the Llano River in Kingsland, Texas. CNN posted the time-lapse to its TikTok, and people in the comments wasted no time connecting the little-to-no warning reportedly received by residents ahead of the flooding to President Donald Trump's gutting of government entities like the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the National Weather Service (NWS), and FEMA.
Related:
"if only we had a fully funded and supported national weather service..." someone wrote.
This commenter pointed to DOGE's NOAA cuts, which resulted in thousands of laid-off staff, including scientists.
This person wrote, "We should not have to beg for better warning systems."
Someone mentioned how officials in hardest-hit Kerr County have been sounding the alarm on flood preparedness for nearly a decade.
Related:
Someone else said that it's time for Texas to "come together as a community" in the face of Trump's hope to eliminate FEMA altogether.
"But climate change doesn't exist," this person wrote, adding that rural Texas counties often vote against climate policy.
And finally, this person wrote, "Officials just standing around watching the water rise" — literally and figuratively.
What do you think? Discuss in the comments.
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