Leads me to the question….knowing the history of wildfires in these areas, why does the city allow houses to be built in such a density knowing they don’t have the infrastructure in place to protect those homes from a Santa Ana wind fire event? I’m specifically talking about those elevated areas they were unable to pump water too.
Exactly. They know exactly what their fire management capacity is and they’ve waived it. Repeatedly. It’s almost like politics influenced science*
You both are going to find someone to fault on this issue, and blame the other party. You are following your party's lead and looking for a scapegoat. I was saying all this stuff that Clong is agreeing with me on, and you just ignored it. I bashed your repairs on the water supply with the fact that it wasn't even fire season, and the issue that fire season is now annual/doesn't stop all season. No comment back, just let that slip under the rug. (
One specific instance among several, as an example of arguments dismissed without much thought.) I just quit posting because nothing I said was going to be listened to. I don't particularly care for a forum that is concerned with how you present your arguments, rather than the content of your arguments. I thought we had bright and fairly unbiased minds that could see the content, rather than be biased with how it was presented. Rant section concluded.
Of course they build against advice. It's ocean front. They are always going to push codes, and policies if the property is that desirable. If there was a viable reason for lakes not to be built on in Oklahoma, the codes would get pushed aside also. It's human nature to build around water. Human nature will always push building codes and everything else. It is not a Democrat thing otherwise they wouldn't be flouting similar issues in Florida as HuffyCane pointed out. It's human nature to build where Hurricanes are a real threat as well. The world is attracted to proximity to Ocean fronts.(and lakes) Not just Democratically controlled Cali or Republican controlled Florida.
We've just recently realized the fullness of the risks that are inherent there,(in the last 15-20 years) especially with Climate Change coming into the forefront of our existence. Now we have to realize how to combat that, if it is at all possible. Telling people not to build in Florida and California would bring about a gaza type situation. You can't just say hey, you can't build there anymore. We have to see if there is any way to work around this issue with changes in how we build, and where we build
in those areas. We have to try and design a way to battle fires that is different.
Essentially, we have to see if we can find a way to coexist with the problem not solve the problem. Because just like climate change, (as Lawpoke has argued) we have passed the point of no return on stopping it from happening. People are already entrenched in this place they own property. We won't convince them past civil disobedience, to sacrifice their money for the property they had a home on. We must find ways to coexist with it.
We should really take this as an opportunity to move forward in a better way. We should comprise a federal and state government bipartisan panel of highly talented civil engineers, city planners, and scientists on how to rebuild LA in a better way. This could and should be an example for future building and planning purposes in the states, and even across the world. We also should look at other events and rebuilds to see if there was any examples in rebuilding methods that could be applied to this incident.(like earthquakes and tsunamis concerning the rebuilds in Indonesia, Japan, Turkey, etc.) They should look to see if there was least some little thing was applicable from those rebuilds.
We know that won't happen. Trump couldn't even conceive of acting in this way. To him it just provides a way to get all of his other bully issues approved by California politicians or not provide the federal assistance that the Californian Americans deserve, just like the Floridian Americans deserve after Hurricanes.
Several issues will come to bear. Climate change, city codes, the Santa Ana winds, bad decisions by elected officials, budget cuts at the wrong time for reasonable incoming income purposes, budget cuts for the wrong things are partial causes. Things like them finally getting that water source fixed at the wrong moment, and just generally bad luck amongst a sequence of events. I'm sure that all of these played
at least a small part in this incident and how it was handled. It really bothers me that either party jumps on the other one so quickly to lay blame, instead of waiting till the emergency has been contained, and waiting till the investigation about the incident has at least been
started, or even better, waiting till the investigation is finished.
The lynch mob begins 24 hours after the fire has begun. Lynch mobs have never been a good idea. Everybody jumps to way too many conclusions without having verifiable truth about what the situation is. The media can accept a large part of the blame on this, but social media(the public) can claim a huge part of the blame as well.