K1052
Elite Member
- Aug 21, 2003
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What building codes could be put in place to handle several feet of rain in a day?
Not building thousands of structures inside the 100 year flood plain would be a place to start.
What building codes could be put in place to handle several feet of rain in a day?
so, to you, "fine" = "hey, as long as it can be rebuilt dozens of times!"
to me, "fine" = something that is not demonstrably stupid in the face of geography and environmental reality. I would easily expand into your definition, however, if we make flood insurance so preposterously unaffordable as to make the concept of building in those areas completely irrational to even the most irrational of humans.
Pricesely what I was going for lol. But there is a lot of factors - and I'm not an insurance company to make those calculations, but I would think the probability of a hurricane/flood hitting, size of the town, population of the town, how high the home is built, etc... all play a factor. But yes, $10k for a year of flood insurance - whatever it takes to deter it. At the end of the day, insurance needs to get (at minimum) the amount to be able to cover for all the losses (as well as a profit, god knows we need moar insurance profits). So if it takes $10k flood insurance bill is what it takes, so be it. If someone wants to pay that then let them.
well, the problem I already see with this, even though I agree with it, is that it would just create another ultra-lux-premium experience for the MINO dickscarfs of the world--basically Trump--to create their little islands of extreme, gated, hyper secure wealth on the coastal areas, restricting all public access to resources. ....so, there's that.
But then it would be yet another stone in the road towards the kind of Marxist revolution that no one wants to see here.
so, to you, "fine" = "hey, as long as it can be rebuilt dozens of times!"
to me, "fine" = something that is not demonstrably stupid in the face of geography and environmental reality. I would easily expand into your definition, however, if we make mandatory flood insurance, without the expectation of federal assistance, so preposterously unaffordable as to make the concept of building in those areas completely irrational to even the most irrational of humans.
Not building thousands of structures inside the 100 year flood plain would be a place to start.
What building codes could be put in place to handle several feet of rain in a day?
How do you feel about SF? A major earthquake would decimate the area (it has before). They have building codes for such but it would still be a catastrophe. Gulf / Atlantic cities are at risk of hurricanes (NO especially so), California cities are at risk of earthquakes. Both would have widespread devastation and the risks of such are well known.
Or build adequate pumps, levees, drainage to accommodate. There's nothing inherently wrong with development so long as the infrastructure is there and maintained (no one likes to do that part). Nowhere is equipped to handle what Houston just went through though and it would be unrealistic to expect any place too. Lessons will be learned, hopefully infrastructure spending will occur, and they can lessen the risk for next time, but that was an unimaginable amount of rain and the damned thing stalled over the area.
Good riddance, fuck em. Though they will likely get a bail out because of the ol' "It's not MY Fault!" argument. As if they should be responsible for their own property and insuring it. Instead they want to piggy-back on the public as their insurance and bitch until everyone else cleans up their mess. Typical liberal fashion.
The truth of the matter is that it's even more ugly because you know they are paying bare minimum on their mortgage, so what they will end up with essentially is a 2nd mortgage payment.
I'm all favor of requiring people to have them if they have a mortgage and certain credentials (e.g. less than 200 mles from the coast OR if your home is at a certain level in relation to sea level). Regardless of if your house is near storm surge, flash flooding is always possible if you live at the short end of the stick and all the rain naturally flows to your area.
unless there is a mega earthquake
How do you feel about SF? A major earthquake would decimate the area (it has before). They have building codes for such but it would still be a catastrophe. Gulf / Atlantic cities are at risk of hurricanes (NO especially so), California cities are at risk of earthquakes. Both would have widespread devastation and the risks of such are well known.
Or build adequate pumps, levees, drainage to accommodate. There's nothing inherently wrong with development so long as the infrastructure is there and maintained (no one likes to do that part). Nowhere is equipped to handle what Houston just went through though and it would be unrealistic to expect any place too. Lessons will be learned, hopefully infrastructure spending will occur, and they can lessen the risk for next time, but that was an unimaginable amount of rain and the damned thing stalled over the area.
Or build adequate pumps, levees, drainage to accommodate. There's nothing inherently wrong with development so long as the infrastructure is there and maintained (no one likes to do that part). Nowhere is equipped to handle what Houston just went through though and it would be unrealistic to expect any place too. Lessons will be learned, hopefully infrastructure spending will occur, and they can lessen the risk for next time, but that was an unimaginable amount of rain and the damned thing stalled over the area.
Politicians in general use identity politics to distract from broader failures. Look at NYC. The citizens there are starting to pay a whole lot of attention to the failing subway system.I think you mean Democrats in general, not the DNC, as the DNC is just a party fundraising organ that doesn't make or direct policy. Overall though, Democrats spend extremely little time on things like renaming Columbus Day. It's basically a policy nonfactor. The news media spends lots of time on that stuff because it's sensationalistic, but that's about it. Democratic policy is overwhelmingly geared towards expanding free trade while strengthening the safety net, better immigration policy, and infrastructure investment. That stuff isn't sexy though, so nobody pays attention.
It was a stupid question so we repurposed the thread.so after 16 pages did any conservative answer the initial question?
Politicians in general use identity politics to distract from broader failures. Look at NYC. The citizens there are starting to pay a whole lot of attention to the failing subway system.
I am talking about the decades leading up to this point. NYC, the greatest city in the world, with no overarching vision for its crumbling rail system, complicated further by the clueless bureaucrats in Albany.I'm confused, what identity politics do you think Cuomo is using to distract from MTA failures?
I am talking about the decades leading up to this point. NYC, the greatest city in the world, with no overarching vision for its crumbling rail system, complicated further by the clueless bureaucrats in Albany.
Although to be fair, the Tappan Zee replacement project went surprisingly well. Shame to name it after a Cuomo though.
several timesso after 16 pages did any conservative answer the initial question?
I am talking about the decades leading up to this point. NYC, the greatest city in the world, with no overarching vision for its crumbling rail system, complicated further by the clueless bureaucrats in Albany.
Although to be fair, the Tappan Zee replacement project went surprisingly well. Shame to name it after a Cuomo though.
I mean it's not really 'complicated' by Albany, it's entirely due to Albany. The setup is stupid as the state controls the MTA but large portions of state government come from areas not serviced by it. They, not unreasonably, don't want to spend lots of money on something their constituents don't use. I don't see how any of this relates to identity politics.
The fringe left are those who keep steering the DNC towards solving first world problems like renaming Columbus Day as opposed to real world problems such as pension reform, crumbling infrastructure, inmigration and loss of jobs to globalization.
There is a reason why Charlie Baker, a Republican leading a blue state in the Trump age, is the most popular governor in America.
Trump's incompetence and lack of moral character does not change the underlying issues that enabled his victory.
