This is in the heart of wine country where grapes grow in abundance and wheat waves like golden seas- but not now. Now the wheat burns and the grapes whither to raisins on the vine. This is the end of days. And on Monday morning I'll return to work and pretend this isn't happening. It's complete madness.
This seems like a pretty common pattern in argument and debate, which I'll tentatively call "piggybacked claims" - make a claim with some evidence ("this river's dry, it's really rare, here's a picture"), then add on additional claims that may logically follow, but have no evidence of their own.
Is the wheat really burning? Are the grapes really raisins on the vine? Is this the end of days? Maybe, but the claimant doesn't seem to want to demonstrate that. Surely there'd be pictures of the raisins, right?
On a more general note, this is a great example for why Max Tegmark's Improve the News project is an important project. It's only going to become more important as ML advancement enables easier, cheaper, more convincing fake news generation.
Several of my friends have shared this paste (or shares of it) on Facebook:
Along with this picture:
But it's all bunk. While the Loire going dry would be a big deal, it's not dry, and this picture isn't unusual.
The picture is of parallel path of the Loire where its crossed by the Pont de Varades bridge. The main flow of the river is just East of this picture, off to the left:
Google Maps
Translating some tweets from Thibault Laconde, @EnergieDevlpmt on Twitter:
There is definitely a drought, and the heatwave has broken many records, but these water levels are not anywhere close to a "haven't seen in 2000 years" event.