Log in

View Full Version : Morbid Katrina predicitons


Clyde Slick
August 29th 05, 04:25 AM
10,000 dead
French Quarter gone
500,000 homeless
Most of Greater New Orleans uninhabitable for at least 30 days
Unsecured industrial toxic waste gets spread through the muck
in several Gulf Coast cities.

I hope I am not being too optimistic.

any other guesses?




----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==----
http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups
----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =----

Robert Morein
August 29th 05, 04:37 AM
"Clyde Slick" > wrote in message
...
> 10,000 dead
> French Quarter gone
> 500,000 homeless
> Most of Greater New Orleans uninhabitable for at least 30 days
> Unsecured industrial toxic waste gets spread through the muck
> in several Gulf Coast cities.
>
> I hope I am not being too optimistic.
>
> any other guesses?
>
This is a question of "do we trust the experts", or do we trust common
sense?
Experts feel obliged to speak to the worst, because there is little risk in
evacuation, but much in staying.
"Common sense", or lack of it, is what causes people to rely on their
previous experiences, rather than understanding.

But experts are not always right. My hope is that, somehow, it will fizzle.

The worst case prediction is that New Orleans will be destroyed as a city.
Would it be wise to rebuild in the same location, with the same
vulnerability?

If I take the expert opinion literally, New Orleans will cease to be, and
will not be restored. A smaller city with a specific economic focus may be
constructed on the natural levees, with additional landfill. A million
Americans will be refugees. The New Orleans of legend and song will vanish
tomorrow, forever.

Clyde Slick
August 29th 05, 05:26 AM
"Robert Morein" > wrote in message
...
>
> "Clyde Slick" > wrote in message
> ...
>> 10,000 dead
>> French Quarter gone
>> 500,000 homeless
>> Most of Greater New Orleans uninhabitable for at least 30 days
>> Unsecured industrial toxic waste gets spread through the muck
>> in several Gulf Coast cities.
>>
>> I hope I am not being too optimistic.
>>
>> any other guesses?
>>
> This is a question of "do we trust the experts", or do we trust common
> sense?
> Experts feel obliged to speak to the worst, because there is little risk
> in
> evacuation, but much in staying.
> "Common sense", or lack of it, is what causes people to rely on their
> previous experiences, rather than understanding.
>

This could be beyond previous experience.
I know that networks forecast doom and gloom and catastrophe
to enhance ratings, but this looks like really bad news.


> But experts are not always right. My hope is that, somehow, it will
> fizzle.
>
> The worst case prediction is that New Orleans will be destroyed as a city.
> Would it be wise to rebuild in the same location, with the same
> vulnerability?
>

> If I take the expert opinion literally, New Orleans will cease to be, and
> will not be restored.

I didn't get that from the reports.
One interesting perspective they talked about was that 'already' dead
bodies will become floaters.

A smaller city with a specific economic focus may be
> constructed on the natural levees, with additional landfill. A million
> Americans will be refugees. The New Orleans of legend and song will vanish
> tomorrow, forever.
>





----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==----
http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups
----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =----

pyjamarama
August 29th 05, 05:24 PM
Clyde Slick wrote:
> 10,000 dead
> French Quarter gone
> 500,000 homeless
> Most of Greater New Orleans uninhabitable for at least 30 days
> Unsecured industrial toxic waste gets spread through the muck
> in several Gulf Coast cities.
>
> I hope I am not being too optimistic.
>
> any other guesses?

Saints finish season with losing record.

Jim Haslett fired.

>
>
>
>
> ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==----
> http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups
> ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =----

Robert Morein
August 29th 05, 09:45 PM
"Clyde Slick" > wrote in message
...
>
> "Robert Morein" > wrote in message
> ...
> >
> > "Clyde Slick" > wrote in message
> > ...
> >> 10,000 dead
> >> French Quarter gone
> >> 500,000 homeless
> >> Most of Greater New Orleans uninhabitable for at least 30 days
> >> Unsecured industrial toxic waste gets spread through the muck
> >> in several Gulf Coast cities.
> >>
> >> I hope I am not being too optimistic.
> >>
> >> any other guesses?
> >>
> > This is a question of "do we trust the experts", or do we trust common
> > sense?
> > Experts feel obliged to speak to the worst, because there is little risk
> > in
> > evacuation, but much in staying.
> > "Common sense", or lack of it, is what causes people to rely on their
> > previous experiences, rather than understanding.
> >
>
> This could be beyond previous experience.
> I know that networks forecast doom and gloom and catastrophe
> to enhance ratings, but this looks like really bad news.
>
>
> > But experts are not always right. My hope is that, somehow, it will
> > fizzle.
> >
> > The worst case prediction is that New Orleans will be destroyed as a
city.
> > Would it be wise to rebuild in the same location, with the same
> > vulnerability?
> >
>
> > If I take the expert opinion literally, New Orleans will cease to be,
and
> > will not be restored.
>
> I didn't get that from the reports.
> One interesting perspective they talked about was that 'already' dead
> bodies will become floaters.
>
Take a look at
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0BJK/is_15_11/ai_68642805.
Fortunately, it appears the experts were wrong about this particular
hurricane.