Maui
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I’m surprised there hasn’t already been a thread about this. 96 dead and still hundreds missing… Many of the dead they’ve still not been able to identify due to the damage caused.
I’ve yet to see a good timeline explanation to the fire. I understand that the biggest culprit seems to be these invasive grasses that have been brought to the island? I would love to see a good explanation besides climate change. Maui’s had droughts before that were even more severe but we’ve never witnessed this over the past 150 years…
@LuFins-Dad said in Maui:
I’m surprised there hasn’t already been a thread about this. 96 dead and still hundreds missing… Many of the dead they’ve still not been able to identify due to the damage caused.
I’ve yet to see a good timeline explanation to the fire. I understand that the biggest culprit seems to be these invasive grasses that have been brought to the island? I would love to see a good explanation besides climate change. Maui’s had droughts before that were even more severe but we’ve never witnessed this over the past 150 years…
I read something by a person raised on the island, who said cane and pineapple fields had not been planted in many years and had reverted to grassland. I don't know about pineapple fields, but cane fields undergo controlled burns as part of raising the crop.
Maybe the situation was similar to some of the stuff in California, where local actions have actually increased the fire hazard?
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I found out last night that my cousin is vacationing in Lahaina. He and his wife and children are ok, and trying to get off the island so they can find their way home.
I have 30+ cousins, so there are plenty where he came from.
My understanding of what made this event so deadly was that the winds were unusually high and that caused the fire to move very quickly. And there were people who were trying to escape the flames by going into the ocean where they were overcome by smoke and heavy currents.
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more to this story.
Whenever a disaster inconveniences a certain number of people, the survivors become wards of the state and the president must make them whole.
What is the magic number? It isn't really a number, it's more like the volume level of the mob.
See Katrina, Sandy, wu-flu and 9/11
What about people that have disasters but don't reach the specified volume level?
Tough. -
more to this story.
Whenever a disaster inconveniences a certain number of people, the survivors become wards of the state and the president must make them whole.
What is the magic number? It isn't really a number, it's more like the volume level of the mob.
See Katrina, Sandy, wu-flu and 9/11
What about people that have disasters but don't reach the specified volume level?
Tough.more to this story.
Whenever a disaster inconveniences a certain number of people, the survivors become wards of the state and the president must make them whole.
What is the magic number? It isn't really a number, it's more like the volume level of the mob.
See Katrina, Sandy, wu-flu and 9/11
What about people that have disasters but don't reach the specified volume level?
Tough.Exactly. If something bad happens to you, you need to hope it happens to lots of other people at the same time.
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https://www.yahoo.com/news/owners-nearly-100-old-wooden-202123828.html
The Maui wildfires that burned down Lahaina shockingly spared a red-roofed wooden house.
A photo shows the buildings on all sides of the house were destroyed.
Yard work and ample space may have saved it, experts say, since those are the best ways to protect your home from wildfire.
The wildfires that struck Maui earlier this month devastated the historic town of Lahaina, reducing nearly every building to ashy rubble — but one wooden house in the center of it all survived unscathed.
Experts say this red-roofed home offers a crucial lesson in wildfire safety.
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Turns out the culprit wasn’t climate change, but CLEAN ENERGY was at last partially responsible!
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How about that. It's pretty ridiculous to think climate change would impact Hawaii more than the ocean conditions.
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Guggenheim Securities warned in a research note that given the size of the company — with a market capitalization of about $1.5 billion — and the possible liabilities if power lines started the fires, “it’s hard for us to imagine if the company will emerge from this tragic incident in its current form.”
I bet some Maui residents will still want to use electricity.