Katrina
Skyalmian wrote:That the Superdome is concrete isn't what bothers me. Take a good look at that picture of it again. The entire bottom of the structure is nothing but entrances and support columns. It'll fill with water like the rest of the city will.
This post sums it up best:
If the worst happens - and at this point it seems implausible that it won't - the bottom 2 stories will fill with water. Dirty nasty foul water full of chemicals and raw sewerage. Further the bathroom facilities are only expected to function for the first day.
So in rough terms, 40,000+ people will be trapped in a building with no plumbing, little light and no air conditioning. The temps after the storm rolls thru will probably be in the low 90s. Considerably hotter in the building.
It is now reported that the Superdome roof is leaking.
edit: Part of the dome roof has blown off.
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I don't mean to be funny in a topic like this, but when he mentioned that, I had a STRANGE visual, and that coupled with the image he linked to, just had me cracking up!roid wrote:this thing is gonna be all like
RARAARARAAAAAARAARAGRAARHARRGARHARHA (windy noises)
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v358/ ... atrina.jpg
To have my frame of thinking, imagine if mother nature was actually a guy, and extreme weather was sort of a "male release" of built up "energy". Couple that with the above quote and you're now within my twisted sense of humour.
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Perhaps New Orleans has the potential to make it to this list
http://www.abc.se/~m10354/uwa/sunkcity.htm
http://www.abc.se/~m10354/uwa/sunkcity.htm
Yes, but the point is just offering assistance would pay out beaucoup brownie points for the country making the gesture. We would, of course, turn it down. So they'd be out nothing but be raised very high in American regard (which always ends up translating into cold hard cash and favored nation trading status). If Mexico was smart, it could swarm New Orleans with tens of thousands of aid workers that could mysteriously get *lost* when it was time to go back south of the border. Double bonus points for Mexico! This is how diplomacy is played well. Or North Korea or Iran. How could we possibly threaten to attack them when they had so selflessly offered to bail out the Big Easy in its time of need? Opportunities are being missed. Tsk, Tsk.
I thought this pic from CNN summed it up pretty well.
http://www.cnn.com/2005/WEATHER/08/30/k ... index.html
http://www.cnn.com/2005/WEATHER/08/30/k ... index.html
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We made it.
Me, my wife, 4 kids, and my mom and dad made it to a friend's house in Memphis early Monday morning. We sat up for the last two days watching as the city was pretty much destroyed before our eyes. They say now 80% of the city is under at least a foot of water. The river and lake levees have broken in several places, causing the already high waters to rise even more. Even if the rainwater pumps were working, they pump water back into the river, which would flow right back into the city. Thousands of people were stupid enough to sit it out, and had to be rescued from their own attics and rooftops yesterday and today. Hundreds more are suspected dead. Looting is rampant.
There is no gas station within 200 miles of New Orleans that has gas AND power to pump it.
They're saying it could be as long as a month or more before they let us back into the city to even see the damage done to our houses. To even attempt a trip back to retrieve my belongings, I'd have to bring 20 gallons of gas, and another person to drive my car back behind me.
Seeing the damage is one thing. Watching it and saying "see that house under 12 feet of water? I was there last week" is a whole other feeling. Most of the hospitals were devastated, even their backup generators stopped working as the water kept pouring into the city today. The first 3 floors of University Hospital downtown were completely gutted by wind and flowing water... and that's where the Neonatal ICU was located. The damage is only getting worse. Bodies floating by, seeing dogs getting electrocuted by live power lines, hearing people scream and then stop as they begin drowning in their own attics... this is what the coast guard has to deal with.
More later.
Me, my wife, 4 kids, and my mom and dad made it to a friend's house in Memphis early Monday morning. We sat up for the last two days watching as the city was pretty much destroyed before our eyes. They say now 80% of the city is under at least a foot of water. The river and lake levees have broken in several places, causing the already high waters to rise even more. Even if the rainwater pumps were working, they pump water back into the river, which would flow right back into the city. Thousands of people were stupid enough to sit it out, and had to be rescued from their own attics and rooftops yesterday and today. Hundreds more are suspected dead. Looting is rampant.
There is no gas station within 200 miles of New Orleans that has gas AND power to pump it.
They're saying it could be as long as a month or more before they let us back into the city to even see the damage done to our houses. To even attempt a trip back to retrieve my belongings, I'd have to bring 20 gallons of gas, and another person to drive my car back behind me.
Seeing the damage is one thing. Watching it and saying "see that house under 12 feet of water? I was there last week" is a whole other feeling. Most of the hospitals were devastated, even their backup generators stopped working as the water kept pouring into the city today. The first 3 floors of University Hospital downtown were completely gutted by wind and flowing water... and that's where the Neonatal ICU was located. The damage is only getting worse. Bodies floating by, seeing dogs getting electrocuted by live power lines, hearing people scream and then stop as they begin drowning in their own attics... this is what the coast guard has to deal with.
More later.
Too late. It's already politcized. *drumroll* It's the Republicans' fault
Yup, it was Bush's fault these nasty hurricanes develop. Why it he had signed the Kyoto Accord there would be no storms today!
On a like note some dems were trying to plug how since national guard troops are in Iraq, there will be less people to aid in recue work. And Birdy wonders why I think the far left is nuts.
On a like note some dems were trying to plug how since national guard troops are in Iraq, there will be less people to aid in recue work. And Birdy wonders why I think the far left is nuts.
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Man this is crazy. I thought we where the only ones in trouble.
http://image.weather.com/images/sat/asiasat_720x486.jpg
http://image.weather.com/images/sat/asiasat_720x486.jpg