Yes. Tornadoes injure hundreds of people and kill dozens every year.
Nobody needs tornadoes. They harm those that they effect.
yah u crappy idiots
Both. Tornadoes often damage or destroy property. People in the damage path of a tornado may be injured or killed.
Tornadoes are morally neutral, they are not good and they are not evil. It is what it is -- a violent windstorm. Tornadoes do not choose to be destructive they don't have consciousness or the ability to make a choice. Simply put, it is a natural occurence that must be dealt with when it comes.
No. Some tornadoes touch down in open fields and cause no damage or injuries. However, all tornadoes have the potential to cause harm, even EF0 tornadoes. There are some whrilwinds that are harmless, such as most dust devils. These are not tornadoes, though they sometimes look like them.
Boston is rare for getting tornadoes but when it does it us very mild and won't do a lot of harm
Tornadoes can uproot trees, in some cases leveling large swaths of forest. Tornadoes have sometimes ruptured storage containers, releasing toxic substances such as crude oil (after striking an oil refinery) and anhydrous ammonia (after striking a farm).
They are not. Tornadoes frequently cause property damage and can kill and injure people. They can clear out old vegetation, allowing for new growth, but this benefit is minor compared to the harm caused.
Hurricanes and tornadoes have caused damage in the Florida panhandle. A typhoon is essentially the same thing as a hurricane, but the term is used exclusively to describe a hurricane that occurs in the western Pacific Ocean.
Not really. At most the very strongest of tornadoes have been known to scour away soil. The deepest scouring that has been reported was to a depth of about two feet.
A tornado is not a solid thing that you can touch, it is a vortex of very fast wind.
Most injuries in tornadoes are the result of flying or falling debris caught up in the winds of a tornado. Some people are killed or injured by falling trees or collapsing buildings. In less common cases people may be picked up and thrown.