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New Orleans could be without power for up to 3 weeks after Hurricane Ida

Americans have been lauging at China’s natural disasters and now karma has struck the Americans. Just like when they were laughing at China when COVID first struck and then COVID came to the Americans.

Sorry it's the other way around..look at the timeline

Jul 10, 2021 haha US your subway infrastructure sucks




Jul 18, 2021..Karma is a bitch.
 
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Sorry it's the other way around..look at the timeline

Jul 10, 2021 haha US your subway infrastructure sucks




Jul 18, 2021..Karma is a bitch.

600,000 dead from COVID after gleefully laughing at China in January 2020.

Capital Hill riots after gleefully laughing at Hong Kong riots.

Called for a collapse of China’s economy and then 2008 US financial crash happens and endless money printing.

Karma sure is a bitch.
 
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Called for a collapse of China’s economy

Where was that..and don't pull a stupid default Gordon Chang quote excuse. You blame him for the dinosaurs' demise too. Apparently when he speaks he automatically represents everybody on the planet.

Capital Hill riots after gleefully laughing at Hong Kong riots.

No it was HK riots after gleefully laughing at various black lives matters riots..like Fergusen..and the Chinese laughing Civil War...Civil War...Civil War.

Hey look at this funny clown..name look familiar?
Screen Shot 2021-09-02 at 1.31.46 PM.jpg


Karma sure is a Bitch...you hypocrite.
 
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Well I think I have posted this video so many times to what to come in future …


40 deaths reported…may God rest their souls in peace.
 
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Remnants of Ida cause deadly flash flooding in the Northeast 02:10
(CNN)A mother, father and son died by drowning when the remnants of Hurricane Ida poured catastrophic amounts of rain across the East Coast on Wednesday, leaving at least 50 people dead.
Rosa Espinal, 72, and her husband Jose Torres, 71, along with their 38-year-old son Jose Torres died when more than a dozen feet of rain drenched their apartment in a residential complex in Elizabeth, New Jersey, city spokesperson Kelly Martins told CNN Friday. Their neighbor, 33-year-old Shakia Garrett, also drowned, Martins said.
About 20 miles north, rescue workers are searching for two childhood friends whom witnesses say were swept into a storm drain in Passaic Wednesday evening.


Ida recovery could be slowed by rain this holiday weekend

Ida recovery could be slowed by rain this holiday weekend


Nidhi Rana, 18, and Ayush Rana, 21, are among the six people still missing in New Jersey that crews are trying to locate, Passaic Mayor Hector Lora said. Nidhi's father, Prakash Rana, said the two are friends and not related.
"It's such a challenge because there is no moving forward. It's almost like grief in limbo. You don't know what's going on. You don't know whether you're grieving a loss, or you are still concerned whether missing individuals can be found -- even though everything may say they won't, you still hope for the very best," Lora told CNN Friday.
At least 25 people died in New Jersey and 18 died in New York state, according to officials. President Joe Biden has approved an emergency declaration for those two states, the White House said late Thursday.
The storm -- by then remnants of a tropical depression -- unleashed deadly flooding Wednesday from Virginia to New England, but especially from metro Philadelphia to New Jersey and southern New York. That came after Ida devastated parts of the Gulf Coast as a major hurricane Sunday.

New York City's illegally converted apartments proved deadly in Ida's path

New York City's illegally converted apartments proved deadly in Ida's path


Of the dozens killed in the East, many died in flooded homes -- including many in flooded basements -- or while overtaken by water in or outside their vehicles. Four people died in Pennsylvania, and one each in Maryland, Connecticut and Virginia in the storm.
In New York City, 10 of the city's 13 victims were found in illegally converted basement or cellar apartments, officials said Friday.
"We know the basement apartments create a whole set of particular challenges," New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said in his Friday briefing. "We are now going to be speaking -- going forward -- to people who live in basement apartments, specific messages, specific cell phone alerts, telling people about the vulnerabilities they face in these kinds of rain events."
People clean up their flooded homes in a Queens neighborhood that saw massive flooding and numerous deaths following a night of heavy wind and rain from the remnants of Hurricane Ida on September 03, 2021 in New York City.


People clean up their flooded homes in a Queens neighborhood that saw massive flooding and numerous deaths following a night of heavy wind and rain from the remnants of Hurricane Ida on September 03, 2021 in New York City.

Human-induced climate change front and center, mayor says
Parts of the East Coast saw unprecedented rain when Ida steeped areas that were simply not built to withstand volumes of water in such a short period of time.
In particular, New York City was hit by rainfall equivalent to 50,000 Olympic-size pools over five hours, according to CNN meteorologist Pedram Javaheri.
"This is a new world," de Blasio told CNN on Friday, arguing that the intensity and frequency of storms are rising through climate change and that the country is going to need "entirely different responses."

'Heroic' bus driver who got passengers through feet of floodwater says she was terrified -- and is grateful for the praise

'Heroic' bus driver who got passengers through feet of floodwater says she was terrified -- and is grateful for the praise


With the storm causing so much flash flooding inland, de Blasio said he would consider being more aggressive in the future with pre-storm evacuations and orders to clear streets and subways -- steps he said he'd normally reserve for hurricanes or massive blizzards.
A new city task force would determine protocols on when and how to clear the streets and evacuate ahead of storms, he said.
"We're going to have to be much more aggressive with these tools," de Blasio told CNN.
As for what to expect with any new policies, de Blasio said these could include sending cellphone alerts to people living in basement apartments ahead of storms. He did not say how soon policies would be established.

Cars sit abandoned on the flooded Major Deegan Expressway in the Bronx following a night of heavy wind and rain from the remnants of Hurricane Ida  on September 02, 2021 in New York City.


Cars sit abandoned on the flooded Major Deegan Expressway in the Bronx following a night of heavy wind and rain from the remnants of Hurricane Ida on September 02, 2021 in New York City.

More than 800 bridges need inspections in Pennsylvania
Along with astonishing flooding, the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic saw at least eight tornadoes Wednesday, four in Pennsylvania, three in New Jersey and one in southeast Massachusetts, according to the National Weather Service.
Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf visited several of the hardest hit locations in Chester and Montgomery counties on Friday.
What it was like to be stranded on subway stations and trains overnight during New York floods

What it was like to be stranded on subway stations and trains overnight during New York floods


"There's no question that we're doing everything we can (at the) state level, and I know the county and township are doing everything they can to respond as quickly as possible and help with the cleanup and make sure that goes as smoothly as possible," Wolf said at a news conference.
Following the storm, Wolf said there are two specific areas his administration hopes to improve.

"One is what can we do better to respond when something like this happens," Wolf said. "The second is, what could we have done differently to prevent some of this from happening."
The area surrounding Philadelphia was "hit very hard," Pennsylvania Department of Transportation Secretary Yassmin Gramian said. More than 800 bridges across the state will require inspection due to storm damages, she added.
"Where necessary, we remain in disaster relief mode and we're ensuring our teams have what they need," Gramian said in a statement. "As the waters recede, we will conduct post-flood road and bridge assessments and conduct bridge inspections when condition warrants."

CNN's Rob Frehse, Maria Santana, Liam Reilly, Madeline Holcombe, Jason Hanna, Mark Morales, Christina Maxouris and Kiely Westhoff contributed to this report.
Scary : 50 deaths and rising.
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Remnants of Ida cause deadly flash flooding in the Northeast 02:10
(CNN)A mother, father and son died by drowning when the remnants of Hurricane Ida poured catastrophic amounts of rain across the East Coast on Wednesday, leaving at least 50 people dead.
Rosa Espinal, 72, and her husband Jose Torres, 71, along with their 38-year-old son Jose Torres died when more than a dozen feet of rain drenched their apartment in a residential complex in Elizabeth, New Jersey, city spokesperson Kelly Martins told CNN Friday. Their neighbor, 33-year-old Shakia Garrett, also drowned, Martins said.
About 20 miles north, rescue workers are searching for two childhood friends whom witnesses say were swept into a storm drain in Passaic Wednesday evening.


Ida recovery could be slowed by rain this holiday weekend
Ida recovery could be slowed by rain this holiday weekend


Nidhi Rana, 18, and Ayush Rana, 21, are among the six people still missing in New Jersey that crews are trying to locate, Passaic Mayor Hector Lora said. Nidhi's father, Prakash Rana, said the two are friends and not related.
"It's such a challenge because there is no moving forward. It's almost like grief in limbo. You don't know what's going on. You don't know whether you're grieving a loss, or you are still concerned whether missing individuals can be found -- even though everything may say they won't, you still hope for the very best," Lora told CNN Friday.
At least 25 people died in New Jersey and 18 died in New York state, according to officials. President Joe Biden has approved an emergency declaration for those two states, the White House said late Thursday.
The storm -- by then remnants of a tropical depression -- unleashed deadly flooding Wednesday from Virginia to New England, but especially from metro Philadelphia to New Jersey and southern New York. That came after Ida devastated parts of the Gulf Coast as a major hurricane Sunday.

New York City's illegally converted apartments proved deadly in Ida's path
New York City's illegally converted apartments proved deadly in Ida's path


Of the dozens killed in the East, many died in flooded homes -- including many in flooded basements -- or while overtaken by water in or outside their vehicles. Four people died in Pennsylvania, and one each in Maryland, Connecticut and Virginia in the storm.
In New York City, 10 of the city's 13 victims were found in illegally converted basement or cellar apartments, officials said Friday.
"We know the basement apartments create a whole set of particular challenges," New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said in his Friday briefing. "We are now going to be speaking -- going forward -- to people who live in basement apartments, specific messages, specific cell phone alerts, telling people about the vulnerabilities they face in these kinds of rain events."
People clean up their flooded homes in a Queens neighborhood that saw massive flooding and numerous deaths following a night of heavy wind and rain from the remnants of Hurricane Ida on September 03, 2021 in New York City.


People clean up their flooded homes in a Queens neighborhood that saw massive flooding and numerous deaths following a night of heavy wind and rain from the remnants of Hurricane Ida on September 03, 2021 in New York City.

Human-induced climate change front and center, mayor says
Parts of the East Coast saw unprecedented rain when Ida steeped areas that were simply not built to withstand volumes of water in such a short period of time.
In particular, New York City was hit by rainfall equivalent to 50,000 Olympic-size pools over five hours, according to CNN meteorologist Pedram Javaheri.
"This is a new world," de Blasio told CNN on Friday, arguing that the intensity and frequency of storms are rising through climate change and that the country is going to need "entirely different responses."

'Heroic' bus driver who got passengers through feet of floodwater says she was terrified -- and is grateful for the praise
'Heroic' bus driver who got passengers through feet of floodwater says she was terrified -- and is grateful for the praise


With the storm causing so much flash flooding inland, de Blasio said he would consider being more aggressive in the future with pre-storm evacuations and orders to clear streets and subways -- steps he said he'd normally reserve for hurricanes or massive blizzards.
A new city task force would determine protocols on when and how to clear the streets and evacuate ahead of storms, he said.
"We're going to have to be much more aggressive with these tools," de Blasio told CNN.
As for what to expect with any new policies, de Blasio said these could include sending cellphone alerts to people living in basement apartments ahead of storms. He did not say how soon policies would be established.

Cars sit abandoned on the flooded Major Deegan Expressway in the Bronx following a night of heavy wind and rain from the remnants of Hurricane Ida  on September 02, 2021 in New York City.


Cars sit abandoned on the flooded Major Deegan Expressway in the Bronx following a night of heavy wind and rain from the remnants of Hurricane Ida on September 02, 2021 in New York City.

More than 800 bridges need inspections in Pennsylvania
Along with astonishing flooding, the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic saw at least eight tornadoes Wednesday, four in Pennsylvania, three in New Jersey and one in southeast Massachusetts, according to the National Weather Service.
Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf visited several of the hardest hit locations in Chester and Montgomery counties on Friday.
What it was like to be stranded on subway stations and trains overnight during New York floods
What it was like to be stranded on subway stations and trains overnight during New York floods


"There's no question that we're doing everything we can (at the) state level, and I know the county and township are doing everything they can to respond as quickly as possible and help with the cleanup and make sure that goes as smoothly as possible," Wolf said at a news conference.
Following the storm, Wolf said there are two specific areas his administration hopes to improve.

"One is what can we do better to respond when something like this happens," Wolf said. "The second is, what could we have done differently to prevent some of this from happening."
The area surrounding Philadelphia was "hit very hard," Pennsylvania Department of Transportation Secretary Yassmin Gramian said. More than 800 bridges across the state will require inspection due to storm damages, she added.
"Where necessary, we remain in disaster relief mode and we're ensuring our teams have what they need," Gramian said in a statement. "As the waters recede, we will conduct post-flood road and bridge assessments and conduct bridge inspections when condition warrants."

CNN's Rob Frehse, Maria Santana, Liam Reilly, Madeline Holcombe, Jason Hanna, Mark Morales, Christina Maxouris and Kiely Westhoff contributed to this report.
Scary : 50 deaths and rising.
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Thank god it didn't hit the 300+ like in China

Seriously? You immediately see a disaster happening in your country and you just go, "Whatabout China??!!!" as if that makes you feel better? Yikes. Offtopic also.
 
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Seriously? You immediately see a disaster happening in your country and you just go, "Whatabout China??!!!" as if that makes you feel better? Yikes. Offtopic also.

Yes, because the Chinese members did the same but you apparently kept your mouth shut
 
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And they say the Chinese are nationalistic. Here is an American, same as them. Yikes x 1000

No, because only when a Westerner shows "bad manners" do people jump out of their chairs like you do and post. If this was in another forum on pdf you'd be sitting back, eating popcorn, and not blinking an eye.
 
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I don't know whatever this extreme weather is just a rare event that happens once in several decades or centuries?

Or it will be like this each year because of global warming?

If this is because of global warming, then what we are experiencing today is just the beginning of something bigger.

As the earth warmed day by day, the more extreme the weather.

So next year is going to be bigger? Perhaps even two or three times in a year for the same region?

And even today unaffected and unthinkable countries will get it too someday.
 
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Spamming forum with threads on same topic
New York floods: calls for action after 11 die in basement apartments | New York | The Guardian



Tens of thousands of New Yorkers, many immigrants or people of color, live in basements vulnerable to extreme weather
Danny Hong shows where the water reached up to him and the damage in his basement apartment on 153rd St in the Flushing neighborhood of Queens, New York, on Thursday.

Danny Hong shows where the water reached up to him and the damage in his basement apartment on 153rd St in the Flushing neighborhood of Queens, New York, on Thursday. Photograph: Mary Altaffer/AP

Amanda Holpuch

Amanda Holpuch in New York
@holpuch
Sat 4 Sep 2021 07.00 BST



Most people killed in New York City in a record-breaking storm this week lived in basement apartments. Walls of water crashed into their homes, trapping them inside and blocking efforts to help.

A kayaker paddles down a portion of Interstate 676 in Philadelphia. The massive storm system roared across the US and dumped record-breaking rain.
‘People did extraordinary things’: Ida rescuers lauded for heroic efforts
Read more


Of 13 people known to have died in the city, 11 were living in such apartments, including a two-year-old boy who died with his parents.
For decades, affordable housing advocates have campaigned to improve the safety of basement apartments, which are often illegal but can be vital for low-income New Yorkers seeking affordable housing.
Annetta Seecharran, executive director at Chhaya, a nonprofit which founded the Basement Apartments Safe for Everyone (Base) campaign in 2008, said the city should have a plan to induce landlords to bring such homes into line with building codes.
“With climate change, we’re going to see these types of floods and storms more frequently,” Seecharran said. “So are we going to wait for another disaster to act?”
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There is no official count of basement apartments in New York but the mayor, Bill de Blasio, said the city estimated there were 50,000, or possibly “substantially more”. In 2009, according to a study by the Pratt Center for Community Development and Chhaya, there were an estimated 114,000 basement apartment units.
As with the Covid-19 pandemic, Seecharran said, the people most at risk in the storm were the immigrants, people with low incomes and people of color who make up the majority of basement apartment residents.
“Even if your basement wasn’t impacted, you are scared, wondering: ‘Am I going to be next,’” Seecharran said.
The majority of deaths occurred in Queens, an enclave for immigrant communities.
A two-year-old boy whom people called Ang and his mother, Mingma Sherpa, and father, Lobsang Lama, were found dead in a basement apartment. Yue Lian Chen, 86, died in her basement apartment. Darlene Hsu, 48, was found unconscious in a Queens basement apartment and pronounced dead at the hospital.
A mother and son, Phamatee Ramskriet, 43, and Khrishah Ramskriet, 22, were found unconscious by divers in another building in Queens where a wall caved in, filling the basement with water. The son died at the scene. His mother was pronounced dead at the hospital.
The divers were able to save the 39-year-old son of the building owner, Ragenbra Shivprafab, who tried to rescue the family.
“These cops were giving their lives to get them,” Shivprafab told the New York Daily News. “My son was scrambling to get down. He was already in, trying to get them, and the cops pulled him out. He would have died too.”
Three unidentified victims, two women and a man, were found in a Queens basement apartment on Thursday and pronounced dead at the scene.
Mattresses and carpets next to the building where two adults and a two-year-old died during flash flooding in New York.

Mattresses and carpets next to the building where two adults and a two-year-old died during flash flooding in New York. Photograph: Kena Betancur/AFP/Getty Images
In Brooklyn, Roberto Bravo, 66, was found dead by police responding to a call about flooding. Pablo Bravo said his brother survived being hospitalized with Covid-19 for weeks last year and was temporarily living in the building he owned.
“We’re the story of foreigners, immigrants, come here to make it, live a decent life,” Bravo told the Associated Press. “Basically, we came here not only to grow ourselves, but also to contribute and grow the country.”
In a press briefing on Friday, De Blasio sketched a rough outline of plans to address risks in basement dwellings, including ordering door-to-door evacuation warnings and improving the city’s mobile alert system.
In one hour on Wednesday, 3.15in of rain fell in Central Park. The previous record, 1.94in, and was set last month.
De Blasio acknowledged that response efforts to help people in basement apartments could be complicated by language barriers and distrust of the government, especially for undocumented migrants. The city, De Blasio said, planned to work with community groups that might act as “trusted messengers in all appropriate languages”.
“We are building the plane as we go down the runway in this case,” said De Blasio.
Seecharran said the plans outlined on Friday were “absolutely unrealistic” because basement apartments are not on the mainstream market, making it inherently difficult to identify them and alerttenants in any emergency.
To legally rent out a basement apartment, a landlord must get a certificate of occupancy and the space must meet safety requirements, including having a window or door that can open to the outside and be used to exit the space. Ceilings must be at least 7.5ft high.
Many basement apartments do not meet those requirements, which can be costly for small landlords.
In 2019, a pilot program sought to find ways to legalize basement apartments, but $1.09m in funding was redirected in 2020 to the Covid-19 response.
Campaigners had been seeking such a program for decades.
Seecharran said: “We have been facing a housing crisis for a very long time now and we’ve done nothing to bring more units that are safe and affordable online.”
 
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