The Day After Tomorrow
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:31:01
The current depends upon a baIance
of saIt and freshwater.

:31:04
-We aII know that.
-Yes. . .

:31:06
. . .but no one knows
how much freshwater. . .

:31:09
. . .has been dumped into the ocean
because of meIting poIar ice.

:31:13
I think we've hit a criticaI
desaIinization point.

:31:19
It wouId expIain what's driving
this extreme weather.

:31:21
HedIand had some
pretty convincing data.

:31:24
They've asked me to feed it
into my paIeocIimate modeI. . .

:31:27
. . .to track the next events.
:31:28
Are you suggesting these weather
anomaIies are gonna continue?

:31:32
Not just continue. Get worse.
:31:38
I think we're on the verge
of a major cIimate shift.

:31:47
What are you gonna teII
the Administration?

:31:49
What do you expect me to teII them?
:31:51
The government has
to make preparations.

:31:53
-You have a theory.
-Give me the mainframe. I'II prove it.

:31:56
No.
:32:01
You have 48 hours.
:32:04
-Professor HaII.
-Yes.

:32:05
-I think your theory may be correct.
-WaIk with me.

:32:08
Just a few weeks ago, I monitored
the strongest hurricane on record.

:32:12
The haiI, the tornados, it aII fits.
:32:15
Can your modeI factor in
storm scenarios?

:32:17
-We haven't had the time.
-WeII, maybe I can heIp.

:32:21
-WeIcome aboard.
-Thanks.

:32:22
Hi, I'm Jason.
:32:24
-Hi.
-Hi.

:32:29
Do you have Peter's CT scan resuIts?
:32:31
Yeah. The treatments
shrunk the tumor 20 percent.

:32:33
-Is his eyesight better today?
-No. No change.

:32:46
-Hi, Peter. How are you doing today?
-A IittIe better.

:32:49
Good.
:32:51
Let me Iisten here.
:32:55
Can you read that?
:32:56
No, but I remember the story
from the pictures.


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