Actual real climate science has been coopted by stupid woke climate activists with their doomsday predictions that never come true and gesticulating at fires and heat as a sign that doomsday is coming. The cult is real.
100 degree heat with 100% humidity is a regular day in Louisiana, but they have to put some spin on it with Heat Index and measure it in the middle of a field of tarmac baking in the sun.
I heard some of these dumbass activists calling for climate justice the other day.
No it isn't. Not even close. Stop with the nonsense. You literally have no earthly idea what it feels like to be in 100 degree temperatures with 100% humidity. Nobody does because it's never happened.
The average humidity in August in Louisiana is 60%. Pretty far from 100%. And that includes the overnight and morning hours where the humidity is relatively higher than during the peak afternoon hours most times.
Even in the very humid places like New Orleans, the average daily humidity in the summer is 79% with it being very humid in the morning in the low 90% range but falling to low to mid 60%s by the afternoon. You have never and will likely never experience a 97 degree dewpoint in your life there. Dewpoints in the upper 70s are considered very high and mid 80s are exceptional.
As air heats up, it can usually hold less water vapor. That's why typically the highest humidity in the summer is in the coolest parts of the day/night.
For a place to actually have 100 degrees temps with 97% humidity is almost unheard of and seems to be confined to the coastal regions of the Middle Eastern countries and its still very rare for them even...for now.
And for the record, Iowa in the summer has you beat for humidity due to the massive corn fields there that "sweat" water into the air in a process known as transpiration. When it gets hot there in August, nowhere in the country can touch them for humidity.
Not saying it isn't very uncomfortable and sticky and in some cases dangerous to be outside doing strenuous activities down there in the summer. It certainly is. The whole gulf coast area is. It's just not the same level as the coastal areas of the Middle East. You'd need to kick it up 2-3 notches.