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Yup I am sure humans can survive a week without eating and drinking.Washington Post. missing doesn’t mean missing in the rubble but simply residents they haven’t been able to contact so far.
Researcher: High-rise that collapsed was sinking, due for recertification
The 12-story beachfront condominium tower in Miami-Dade County that collapsed early Thursday morning was built in 1981 on reclaimed wetlands and a Florida International University researcher told USA Today that the building had been sinking at an alarming rate.www.news4jax.com
If this was China, we would've been skewered, but cheerleaders being cheerleaders would come up with excuses whenever the Holy land is mentioned.The collapse of a entire building happened much less common in China than it is in the US. Especially considering the fact China built more buildings in 3 years than the US in an entire century.
Hey, which pom pom are you using this time? Pink or Yellow? LolololAlready in post #22
152 dead Muricans, that's their competency level, they need SANY machinery to excavate those debris, just like how our machines were used in Fukushima.They are pretending to rescue. It is too sad. They are waiting for a suitable time to announce that the rescue is over. The victims are just missing and not dead.
He thinks Americans are only the white and successful browns. Apparently the homeless are not Muricans. If you have been to the inner cities, you might think you are in India.I think you forget your US history and context. Urbanization in the US was always about poor immigrants squeezing into tenements owned by slumlords. All the rich of the 1880s up to 1950s had estates in the country. The poor had no choice.
After WW2 there was a construction boom to accommodate returning vets and to make use of the industrial buildup. The cheapest land was in the suburbs and so new houses were built. Thanks to redlining, white families knew they would not live near minorities. And hence the move to the suburbs: to avoid minorities and the urban poor as the push and low cost big houses as the pull.
Meanwhile Asians have had a vibrant urban culture since the Han Dynasty in China and the Tokugawa era in Japan. Same with Southern Europeans in Rome and Athens. The city was never associated with poverty but wealth. Urban residents weren't slum dwelling immigrants, they were shop owners and professionals even in 200 BC.
In my personal experience, there's also a psychological element. Americans are very touchy about their space, much moreso than Chinese or Italians.
If this was China, we would've been skewered, but cheerleaders being cheerleaders would come up with excuses whenever the Holy land is mentioned.
Lol, looks whose talking. Why so triggered mate? Just telling the truth, like how you are downplaying the severity of this shit.Chinese insecurity on display here .
The pace of rescue, the accountability of officials has nothing to do with China. No American ever said if this was China the Major and his family and pet chihuahua would be hung, drawn and quartered by now.
Many more people die in China than the US from collapsed buildings each year go shed your tears for them.
They are using machinery, i believe certain heavy machinery cannot be used as the rest of the buildings structural integrity is questionable which is why the rescue effort is so hard as well.152 dead Muricans, that's their competency level, they need SANY machinery to excavate those debris, just like how our machines were used in Fukushima.
Yeah how unfortunate that people are trying to boast when hundreds are dying/dead, then they ask why they are considered a boogeyman. People here need to be reminded to think before they speak.Using the deaths of innocents to try and score brownie points, absolutely disgusting behavior.
You would think that something like that would've been reported by the building management and/or other condo owners and repaired immediately. Not to mention that condo buildings have very strict associations that fees are paid into for maintenance and upkeep etc.
Idk about quality but when it comes to architecture and beauty, builders prefer utility and Cost saving over beautyLook like the quality of construction in the US are generally poor compared to East Asia. In addition, quality of maintenance work leave much to be desired. It is a fancy of the American to build grandiose constructions (just like China now), but the maintenance works thereafter have not been paid much attention.
I've seen various documentaries about rail, metro, roads, bridges etc in the US and they all look poor quality and in poor conditions. It is in stark contrast to Japan or Korea, where everything (even built 100 years ago) look new and well-maintained.
Looks like we have the smoking gun answer. The residents knowingly went down with the ship over money. They didn't want to pay for repairs (at least while they were still owners). Yet another reason why living in a building full of people is not in your best interest. I wonder how many of the units were up for sale.
The president of the board of the Florida condominium that collapsed last week resigned in 2019, partly in frustration over what she saw as the sluggish response to an engineer’s report that identified major structural damage the previous year.
Anette Goldstein was among five members of the seven-member board to resign in two weeks that fall, according to minutes from an Oct. 3 meeting, at a time when the condo association in Surfside was consumed by contentious debate about the multimillion-dollar repairs.
“We work for months to go in one direction and at the very last minute objections are raised that should have been discussed and resolved right in the beginning,” Goldstein wrote in a September 2019 resignation letter. “This pattern has repeated itself over and over, ego battles, undermining the roles of fellow board members, circulation of gossip and mistruths. I am not presenting a very pretty picture of the functioning of our board and many before us, but it describes a board that works very hard but cannot for the reasons above accomplish the goals we set out to accomplish.”
Debate over the cost and scope of the work, along with turnover on the volunteer board, dragged out preparations for the repairs for three years, according to previously unpublished correspondence, condo board minutes and other records kept by the homeowners association.
Concrete restoration work had not yet begun when the building partially collapsed June 24. Identifying the cause of the catastrophe is expected to take many months, and it is not clear whether the problems identified in 2018 played a role. At least 18 people were killed in the catastrophe, and 145 remain missing.
Despite increasingly dire warnings from the board, many condo owners balked at paying for the extensive improvements, which ballooned in price from about $9 million to more than $15 million over the past three years as the building continued to deteriorate, records show.
If maintenance is optional where are all the HOA fees going???
The collapse of a entire building happened much less common in China than it is in the US. Especially considering the fact China built more buildings in 3 years than the US in an entire century.
Apparently "important" things like the valet parking staff.
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Despite increasingly dire warnings from the board, many condo owners balked at paying for the extensive improvements, which ballooned in price from about $9 million to more than $15 million over the past three years as the building continued to deteriorate, records show.