http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/10/22/wildfire....ref=mpstoryview
Fires
#1
Posted 2007-October-22, 12:56
http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/10/22/wildfire....ref=mpstoryview
#2
Posted 2007-October-22, 14:14
Why are there natural fires every year in that region? Back home, there are forest fires in Indonesia but those are man-made fires to clear forest cheaply.
John Nelson.
#3
Posted 2007-October-22, 14:20
Rain, on Oct 22 2007, 12:14 PM, said:
Why are there natural fires every year in that region? Back home, there are forest fires in Indonesia but those are man-made fires to clear forest cheaply.
We haven't had any serious fires since 2003 when we had several major fires at the same time. It looks to be about as devastating.
Last year was our driest year on record. We are also experiencing Santa Ana winds gusting up to 70 MPH + which doesn't cause the fires, but makes them very difficult to contain.
#4
Posted 2007-October-22, 14:30
#5
Posted 2007-October-22, 16:30
Fluffy, on Oct 22 2007, 03:30 PM, said:
"Gonna pave Paradise, and put up a parking lot.." - Joni Mitchell
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
Our ultimate goal on defense is to know by trick two or three everyone's hand at the table. -- Mike777
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#6
Posted 2007-October-22, 16:49
blackshoe, on Oct 22 2007, 02:30 PM, said:
Fluffy, on Oct 22 2007, 03:30 PM, said:
"Gonna pave Paradise, and put up a parking lot.." - Joni Mitchell
I thought this was a Counting Crows song, but I looked it up and I guess not.
Re: fires. The other problem is that there's a lot of dry brush near very built-up territory, and that helps spread the fires.
#7
Posted 2007-October-23, 07:24
#8
Posted 2007-October-23, 13:06
"And remember, only YOU can prevent florist friars."
This guy had, last year, put us up against the Jolly Green Giant and the Little Green Sprout to save King McCain's Frozen daughter, Pisa.
(McCain's I think is a canadian-only company - they make lots of frozen "cook and eat" stuff).
Michael.
#9
Posted 2007-October-23, 13:26
#10
Posted 2007-October-24, 15:46
In the past several years San Diego has had terrible brush fires in which dozens were killed and thousands of homes burned.
Voters have repeatedly voted against spending more money on their fire department despite these loses.
Now they have more than another 1000 houses burn. They are told they are short hundreds of firefighters and related equipment but vote no time and time again.
Now the rest of the country gets to send in our tax money.....rather than spend the tax money on our home states...
btw I lived in North SD for years in the last century and have dozens of relatives and friends there..Very pretty when not on fire....
#12
Posted 2007-October-24, 16:12
mike777, on Oct 24 2007, 09:46 PM, said:
In the past several years San Diego has had terrible brush fires in which dozens were killed and thousands of homes burned.
Voters have repeatedly voted against spending more money on their fire department despite these loses.
Now they have more than another 1000 houses burn. They are told they are short hundreds of firefighters and related equipment but vote no time and time again.
Now the rest of the country gets to send in our tax money.....rather than spend the tax money on our home states...
btw I lived in North SD for years in the last century and have dozens of relatives and friends there..Very pretty when not on fire....
I totally concur with this. The ONE bad rap that Bush has gotten has been over Katrina (ironically, that bad rap probably did more damage to his approval ratings than all the valid criticism/outrage put together.)
Hurricanes in the southeast, tornadoes in tornado alley, blizzards in the north, earthquakes/fires in the west, flooding in cities built below sea level. You choose to live somewhere and you assume the risk of recurring natural disasters that that particular area is prone to. It's not my problem that you were too stupid to hire enough firefighters and too lazy to clear the brush around your house in a wildfire zone. Cry me a river that your multi-million dollar house burned down. Next time buy insurance.
#13
Posted 2007-October-24, 16:46
jonottawa, on Oct 24 2007, 05:12 PM, said:
Hurricanes in the southeast, tornadoes in tornado alley, blizzards in the north, earthquakes/fires in the west, flooding in cities built below sea level. You choose to live somewhere and you assume the risk of recurring natural disasters that that particular area is prone to. It's not my problem that you were too stupid to hire enough firefighters and too lazy to clear the brush around your house in a wildfire zone. Cry me a river that your multi-million dollar house burned down. Next time buy insurance.
You are serious about Katrina? What recurring natural disaster are you refering to, since I do not recall seeing any floods of nearly that magnitude before. And did those look like all people living in multi-million dollar houses to you? You know also that in many/most cases those people were told by their insurances companies they don't need flood insurance.
#14
Posted 2007-October-24, 17:01
I was told this by everyone for decades who lived in or near the city.
Everyone in east SD east of I5 knows their homes are one brush fire away from being destroyed. I lived and worked west of Interstate 5
In fact many of these homes burning or in danger of being burned ....were burned down or in danger just a few years ago..and another few years before that ..etc etc...
As for Bush's incompetence..great point.....We assumed we were voting for grownups who at least knew how to get the job done...anddone well.....He did not....
#15
Posted 2007-October-25, 08:34
jonottawa, on Oct 24 2007, 05:12 PM, said:
What world are you living in?
So many experts, not enough X cards.
#16
Posted 2007-October-25, 09:16
jonottawa, on Oct 24 2007, 02:12 PM, said:
mike777, on Oct 24 2007, 09:46 PM, said:
In the past several years San Diego has had terrible brush fires in which dozens were killed and thousands of homes burned.
Voters have repeatedly voted against spending more money on their fire department despite these loses.
Now they have more than another 1000 houses burn. They are told they are short hundreds of firefighters and related equipment but vote no time and time again.
Now the rest of the country gets to send in our tax money.....rather than spend the tax money on our home states...
btw I lived in North SD for years in the last century and have dozens of relatives and friends there..Very pretty when not on fire....
I totally concur with this. The ONE bad rap that Bush has gotten has been over Katrina (ironically, that bad rap probably did more damage to his approval ratings than all the valid criticism/outrage put together.)
Hurricanes in the southeast, tornadoes in tornado alley, blizzards in the north, earthquakes/fires in the west, flooding in cities built below sea level. You choose to live somewhere and you assume the risk of recurring natural disasters that that particular area is prone to. It's not my problem that you were too stupid to hire enough firefighters and too lazy to clear the brush around your house in a wildfire zone. Cry me a river that your multi-million dollar house burned down. Next time buy insurance.
Yes, I'm all for personal responsibility too - to a point.
Maybe you can explain to me how I'm supposed to prepare for a 7.0 earthquake (that we are long overdue for)? Short of moving my family out of California, there isn't a whole lot I can do.
#17
Posted 2007-October-25, 12:45
pclayton, on Oct 25 2007, 03:16 PM, said:
Maybe you can explain to me how I'm supposed to prepare for a 7.0 earthquake (that we are long overdue for)? Short of moving my family out of California, there isn't a whole lot I can do.
Here's what I'm hearing you say:
"I'm all for requiring others to take personal responsibility for their decisions. I just don't think I should have to." (In other words, the "point" at which you stop being "all for it" is the point at which it's expected of you.)
"Explain to me how I'm supposed to prepare for a natural disaster that's inevitable and long overdue when I can just continue to enjoy the benefits of living here and then run crying to the federal government for a big handout when that inevitable, long-overdue disaster strikes."
#18
Posted 2007-October-25, 13:04
jdonn, on Oct 24 2007, 10:46 PM, said:
I'm referring to hurricanes in the southeast.
Katrina was only a category 3 hurricane. It was inevitable that a storm of that magnitude hit New Orleans eventually and somewhat surprising that it didn't happen sooner. It was equally inevitable that when a category 4 storm hit New Orleans that the levees would be breached.
How you can assign any relevance to what people were told by their insurance companies, or car salesmen, or ministers, or magic 8-balls, is beyond me.
#19
Posted 2007-October-25, 13:14
jonottawa, on Oct 25 2007, 02:04 PM, said:
You said "next time buy insurance" which sure sounds like "Their faults since they were cheap idiots for not having bought insurance." That is a totally ridiculous thing to say when their insurance companies told them they don't need that type of insurance, not to mention how many of these people couldn't afford it.
Saying something is inevitable is sure brilliant after it happens. If nothing that big had happened there before then what makes it inevitable? Now we can't move anywhere where there is a chance anything could happen? Sounds good, I'll split an underground bunker in South Dakota with you.
#20
Posted 2007-October-25, 13:43
jdonn, on Oct 25 2007, 07:14 PM, said:
jonottawa, on Oct 25 2007, 02:04 PM, said:
You said "next time buy insurance" which sure sounds like "Their faults since they were cheap idiots for not having bought insurance." That is a totally ridiculous thing to say when their insurance companies told them they don't need that type of insurance, not to mention how many of these people couldn't afford it.
Saying something is inevitable is sure brilliant after it happens. If nothing that big had happened there before then what makes it inevitable? Now we can't move anywhere where there is a chance anything could happen? Sounds good, I'll split an underground bunker in South Dakota with you.
What's "totally ridiculous" is choosing to live below sea level in a region that is susceptible to hurricanes without having a system of levees in place, financed by the people who choose to live there and capable of withstanding a "somewhat stronger than average" storm.
What's "totally ridiculous" is making decisions based on what your insurance company tells you or arguing that people who make such decisions aren't responsible when those decisions work out badly.
What's "totally ridiculous" is believing that insurance companies are going to charge prohibitively high premiums for events that are so unlikely that you think someone shouldn't even bother to insure against them at all.
What's "totally ridiculous" is believing that not being able to afford insurance makes you blameless for not having insurance.
What's "totally ridiculous" is portraying what I've argued above and in previous posts as implying that we all ought to move to underground bunkers in South Dakota.

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