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#11 | |
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Infamous Member
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Relating Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: CA & AZ I'm a Snowbird
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Of course we are hearing pissing and moaning post event. And if the worst had happened- without the kinds of responses initiated, there would be that pissing and moaning. Let us not forget how many lives could have been saved if FEMA and municipalities had done the kind of "pre" positioning and warning that was not done during Katrina. People, especially those without the means, could have been bused out early and been a lot better off. If the NYC subways had flooded as was possible, people would be thanking authorities for shutting them down. Well, in about 2 weeks after they had electricity back and the damage was fixed. By the way, it takes a good 8-10 hours to shut down systems like these- you don't just flip a switch. The coverage I watched had quite a few stories about aiding the elderly, homeless and moving fragile patients out of hospitals to safer places. Probably will get some flack here- but I did feel the coberage was skewed toward NYC. I love NYC, but, there were thousands of areas under threat including urban centers. These kinds of responses will never be perfect- these kinds of storms just change as they go. Maybe I am just reacting to the bitching and lack of gratefulness. All of those public employees worked their butts off all weekend to keep people safe- no matter the degree of winds and floods, 24/7. Of course politics gets involved- these are public works that have to utilized. People might want to thank a public works employee today.... |
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