Skeptic Ginger
Nasty Woman
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2005
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Hurricane Maria death toll jumps to 34 in Puerto Rico...
To be fair to Trump, he was sitting next to the governor, asked him if the number was 17, and the governor said 16....
Hurricane Maria death toll jumps to 34 in Puerto Rico...
To be fair to Trump, he was sitting next to the governor, asked him if the number was 17, and the governor said 16....
I haven't read the news articles yet. Those are real quotes? Really?
I'm in the choir here. Trump cherry picked the death rate as if that nullifies the criticism his administration hasn't been able to distribute supplies and get power/water/phones back up in such a small island.I question the utility of using death tolls as a measure of the extent of disasters. By that metric the shooting at Las Vegas was nearly as big a disaster as Harvey or Irma.
Having said that, this new number itself gives us an idea of how total the devastation is in PR. Two weeks later, and they are still counting, because there is so much damage.
And there still remains a significant portion of the island where they haven't even been able to access well enough to get a complete survey of the cost in human lives.
Good thing for them it wasn't a "real disaster", I guess.
However, US Americans seem to think that the failure to restore electricity after a hurricane is an obvious sign of communist repression …Government representatives were unsuccessful in their attempts to silence the protest, giving excuses to over 500 people. Protesters continued to shout slogans like “people have the power”, “lights, water and food”, “strike”.
http://www.havanatimes.org/?p=127278
Trump doesn't seem to appreciate that Puerto Rico now has no electricity, water, or medical supplies. That's a serious matter for them.
In comparison:
This is what happened when electricity wasn't restored to a neighborhood in Havana within four days after the category-5 hurricane Irma:
However, US Americans seem to think that the failure to restore electricity after a hurricane is an obvious sign of communist repression …Government representatives were unsuccessful in their attempts to silence the protest, giving excuses to over 500 people. Protesters continued to shout slogans like “people have the power”, “lights, water and food”, “strike”.
http://www.havanatimes.org/?p=127278
While across the street from a hospital that had power, IIRC.Twelve of the eighty people who died in Florida due to Irma were residents of a nursing home who died as a result of the power failure.
See also in places like Refugio (Nolan Ryan's home town) and Port Aransas, which relies a lot on the tourist trade.
Katrina had a real impact on the demographics of Houston and the surrounding area. I wonder where displaced Puerto Ricans are going to end up. Mostly Florida?
A town name whose pronunciation alone let's people know if you are from the area or not.
Staunton, VA is like that.
Leicester, Worcester and Gloucester, MA are like that.