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DEI burns LA to the ground (Read 7150 times)
Karnal
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Re: DEI burns LA to the ground
Reply #330 - Jan 14th, 2025 at 5:30pm
 
lee wrote on Jan 14th, 2025 at 12:51pm:
tickleandrose wrote on Jan 14th, 2025 at 11:43am:
Within your link, it seemed all of the major fires listed are between July and December.   We are in mid Jan.



But it is not unprecedented.

"Southern California is experiencing its most devastating winter fires in more than four decades"

https://apnews.com/article/fire-devastation-climate-change-santa-ana-winds-a46e2...

Then there is the changing vegetation.

"An invasive grass species has sparked the interest of researchers studying the ecology of wildfires in the western United States. Cheatgrass, a long-stemmed plant native to Europe and southwestern Asia that was introduced by settlers in the 1800s, is now common in Nevada, Utah, Colorado, California, and Oregon. By comparing satellite images of cheatgrass to fire activity in the same area, scientists have now shown that the grass is involved in a disproportionate number of fires in these regions, and those fires were among the largest. Although cheatgrass makes up only 6% of the area's vegetation, it has been involved in 39 of the 50 largest fires in the last decade, and has burned twice as much as any other plant species, the team reports this week in Global Change Biology. "

https://www.science.org/content/article/scienceshot-invasive-grass-behind-larges...

It is a 2012 article. But the cheat grass is still there. Wink


Sorry, Chimera, one more.

DEI vegetation.
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Karnal
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Re: DEI burns LA to the ground
Reply #331 - Jan 14th, 2025 at 5:46pm
 
Marla wrote on Jan 14th, 2025 at 8:24am:
Bobby. wrote on Jan 14th, 2025 at 7:17am:
https://www.westernjournal.com/la-mayor-used-fire-department-money-fund-queer-oc...


LA Mayor Used Fire Department Money to Fund Queer Occult Interests,
'Ebony Theatre,' Trans Cafe, and More


https://www.westernjournal.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Karen-Bass-5-817x429.j...
Los Angeles Democratic Mayor Karen Bass

has faced a number of criticisms over her leadership amid the wildfires destroying large portions of the city.

First, there was the fact that Bass spent the first part of the crisis several thousand miles away on an entirely separate continent, attending an official trip all the way in Africa as the horrible situation unfolded.

Then, there was the revelation that she had tried to slash almost $49 million
from the Los Angeles Fire Department budget one day before the Pacific Palisades fire started.

The move came after more than $17 million in cuts the previous year.

If Bass did not want to spend money on fighting fires in a state which lives under a constant threat of such disasters, then the question of what the city funded instead must be raised.

The budget resolution for the 2024-2025 fiscal year, which said on the front cover that the document was submitted by Bass herself before being modified and adopted by the Los Angeles City Council, indeed revealed some rather foolish spending priorities.

There was a “Midnight Stroll Transgender Cafe,” for which Bass suggested a $100,000 slush fund, an amount that was fully approved by the City Council.


The funding was meant to “support a safe haven for unsheltered transgender individuals in Hollywood between the hours of 9:00 pm and 7:00 am.”

One has to wonder whether those “unsheltered transgender individuals” will still be able to take their midnight strolls in that area, or if that area will be reduced to rubble by the fires.

There was $8,230 allocated to the Ebony Repertory Theatre, a project which attempts to “provide a permanent home for artists of color that enables those artists to explore, experience and present a wide-ranging variety of programs that reflect the significant canon of African-American literary, artistic and cultural achievements.”

There was meanwhile $8,670 earmarked for the ONE Archives Foundation.

That entity supports the largest repository of “Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer” materials in the world at the University of Southern California.



It's okay, Blooby. You can come out of the closet anytime


Now now, Marla, now is not the time for petty point scoring. We all need to stick together in this hour of need, no?

I'm sure you'll agree, with 25 dead, 90,000 people homeless and fires still raging, we need to get our priorities right, dear.

I blame the leftards.

I trust this puts the matter to rest.
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Bobby.
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Re: DEI burns LA to the ground
Reply #332 - Jan 14th, 2025 at 5:55pm
 
Karnal wrote on Jan 14th, 2025 at 5:46pm:
Now now, Marla, now is not the time for petty point scoring. We all need to stick together in this hour of need, no?

I'm sure you'll agree, with 25 dead, 90,000 people homeless and fires still raging, we need to get our priorities right, dear.

I blame the leftards.

I trust this puts the matter to rest.



Marla doesn't know -

her brain is full of pot she can't tell when she meets a real man like me.   Roll Eyes
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Jovial Monk
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Re: DEI burns LA to the ground
Reply #333 - Jan 14th, 2025 at 6:00pm
 
Bobby. wrote on Jan 14th, 2025 at 5:55pm:
Karnal wrote on Jan 14th, 2025 at 5:46pm:
Now now, Marla, now is not the time for petty point scoring. We all need to stick together in this hour of need, no?

I'm sure you'll agree, with 25 dead, 90,000 people homeless and fires still raging, we need to get our priorities right, dear.

I blame the leftards.

I trust this puts the matter to rest.



Marla doesn't know -

her brain is full of pot she can't tell when she meets a real man like me.   Roll Eyes

Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin
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chimera
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Re: DEI burns LA to the ground
Reply #334 - Jan 14th, 2025 at 6:07pm
 
Although the Great Fireman made Mar a Lago safe from hurricanes, he failed to handle tornadoes.
2017    1,418
2018    1121
2019    1529
2020    1086  US tornadoes.
If his 2021 coup d'etat had been victorious, we would have seen more of his tornadoes.  They will happen from now on. Buckle up and hang on.
2004 had more tornadoes with 1,817 under GWB.
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lee
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Re: DEI burns LA to the ground
Reply #335 - Jan 14th, 2025 at 7:07pm
 
chimera wrote on Jan 14th, 2025 at 6:07pm:
Although the Great Fireman made Mar a Lago safe from hurricanes, he failed to handle tornadoes.
2017    1,418
2018    1121
2019    1529
2020    1086  US tornadoes.
If his 2021 coup d'etat had been victorious, we would have seen more of his tornadoes.  They will happen from now on. Buckle up and hang on.
2004 had more tornadoes with 1,817 under GWB.



So was it more tornadoes or being able to see more because of Doppler Radar? Wink
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Frank
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Re: DEI burns LA to the ground
Reply #336 - Jan 14th, 2025 at 7:21pm
 
California’s Policies Laid the Groundwork for Wildfire Danger
The risks are growing, but instead of protecting citizens, state leaders focused on climate change.


Fires have been ripping through the forests and scrublands of California for millennia. Indeed, with its combination of long dry seasons and intense Santa Ana winds, the state is uniquely prone to fire. “It’s a place that nature built to burn, often explosively,” writes the noted historian of wildfires, Stephen J. Pyne. In sparsely populated or empty areas, fires cost little in terms of treasure or lives (in fact, they can be beneficial to some ecosystems). But when a wildfire encroaches upon neighborhoods abutting wild terrain—a zone known as the wildland-urban interface (WUI)—the destruction can be swift and catastrophic. The Camp Fire, which raced through the Sierra foothill community of Paradise in 2018, killed 85 people and wiped out some 18,000 structures.
...
While the media stresses climate change, conservative critics point to DEI policies in L.A. government, budget cuts to the fire department, the failure to improve water infrastructure, poor forest-management practices, and other lapses in political leadership.

Those issues all demand investigation. But the biggest question facing California is why so many of its residents live in such hazardous terrain. As I reported in a 2023 City Journal special issue on California, more than a quarter of the state’s residents—roughly 11.2 million people—live in fire-prone WUI regions. Some are drawn there by the state’s natural beauty, but many homebuyers are pushed out of urban areas by regulations that restrict housing construction and thus drive up costs. In recent decades, half of California’s new homes have been built in non-urban regions. That includes more remote communities such as Paradise, where—unlike in elite L.A. suburbs—many homes are relatively affordable. Either way, the explosion in WUI construction has dramatically expanded the scale of economic losses—the disaster “bullseye”—when wildfires ravage those areas.

Nonetheless, California continues to nudge its citizens out of dense regions (which are relatively safe from fire) and into more vulnerable terrain. In fact, while urban dwellers face sky-high costs and declining services, residents of the WUI often benefit from hidden subsidies. For example, while living in fire country entails higher risks, California funds a massive firefighting program focused mostly on protecting residents and their homes. These efforts are not always successful, of course, but the state’s firefighters usually succeed in keeping fires from reaching developed areas. Knowledge that homes in the WUI are likely to be protected (at no cost to the homeowner) constitutes a huge, if hidden, subsidy. Two economists who studied this phenomenon concluded that the state’s firefighting investment boosts WUI home values and effectively bankrolls “development in harm’s way.”

L.A.’s damaged and threatened neighborhoods are an outlier in this dynamic. Some were developed as much as a century ago, long before economic factors lured other Californians into WUI regions. Residents of these peaceful, long-settled communities might easily forget they live next to wild land. Nonetheless, the city’s development patterns subtly amplify fire risks for those on the city margins. Decades of lush landscaping have put more fuel in the paths of fires. (The non-native palm trees beloved by Angelenos light up like roman candles when ignited, showering burning embers on everything downwind.) And the existence of so much wooden infrastructure creates another hazard, note fire researchers Faith Kearns and Max Moritz: when wildfires reach settled areas, they write, “wind driven home-to-home fire spread then occurs, causing risky ‘urban conflagrations’ that can be almost impossible to stop.”

Most wildland fires are started, one way or another, by humans. Potential sources of the L.A. blazes include fires started in homeless encampments, arson, and the smoldering remnants of New Year’s Eve fireworks. Since a bigger human population raises the risk of fires, WUI areas can be more vulnerable than pure back country. That means built-up WUI communities face both more frequent fires and more intense fires, due to their concentrations of flammable infrastructure. Both factors multiply the bullseye effect. L.A.’s massive runup in home prices in recent years has inflated the bullseye even more. Early estimates for the total cost of the disaster run as high as $275 billion.

Rest here:
https://www.city-journal.org/article/california-la-wildfires-risk-housing-policy
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chimera
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Re: DEI burns LA to the ground
Reply #337 - Jan 14th, 2025 at 7:23pm
 
People used to assume a house in the sky was in a tornado. Doppler confirmed it. Also, cows and garbage in the air was a hint.
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Frank
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Re: DEI burns LA to the ground
Reply #338 - Jan 14th, 2025 at 7:26pm
 
The L.A. Wildfires Should Be a Wake-up Call
Decades of fire suppression policies have left forests dangerously dense and overgrown


A growing body of evidence substantiates how these activities lower the risks of extreme wildfires and enhance forest resilience. Yet the pace and scale of restoration work remains woefully inadequate, hampered by a thicket of regulatory and bureaucratic barriers.

The problem is particularly acute in California, where state policies have hindered forest-restoration efforts. In 2020, after experiencing its worst wildfire season in modern history, California pledged to perform fuel treatment (reducing vegetation and other flammable materials) on 500,000 acres annually by 2025. The state’s environmental policies and management decisions, however, have prevented it from meeting this goal. The California Environmental Quality Act, for example, imposes stringent review requirements that can delay critical restoration projects. That process often involves years of analysis, public comment, and litigation before projects can even begin.

But the problem is not unique to California. The federal government manages most of the forests in the western United States, including over half of California’s forestlands. Decades of fire-suppression policies on these lands have left them dangerously dense and overgrown, while federal laws such as the National Environmental Policy Act significantly delay forest-restoration efforts. Under NEPA, even projects with clear environmental benefits—like prescribed burns and selective thinning—can take years to approve, leaving forests and communities at risk.

The rest is here
https://www.city-journal.org/article/la-wildfires-forest-management-regulatory-r...
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chimera
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Re: DEI burns LA to the ground
Reply #339 - Jan 14th, 2025 at 7:30pm
 
The LA wind 'Santa Ana' blow from east to west. This is to the left which explains a lot about the council.
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Bobby.
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Re: DEI burns LA to the ground
Reply #340 - Jan 14th, 2025 at 7:55pm
 

Hang em and hang em high.



California Fires: Looters arrested as wildfires rage in LA

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Frank
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Re: DEI burns LA to the ground
Reply #341 - Jan 14th, 2025 at 8:00pm
 
Bobby. wrote on Jan 14th, 2025 at 7:55pm:
Hang em and hang em high.



California Fires: Looters arrested as wildfires rage in LA




...
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Bobby.
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Re: DEI burns LA to the ground
Reply #342 - Jan 14th, 2025 at 8:15pm
 
Yes Frank:

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Brian Ross
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Re: DEI burns LA to the ground
Reply #343 - Jan 14th, 2025 at 8:16pm
 
...
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Someone said we could not judge a person's Aboriginality on their skin colour.  Why isn't that applied in the matter of Pascoe?  Tsk, tsk, tsk...   Roll Eyes Roll Eyes
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Frank
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Re: DEI burns LA to the ground
Reply #344 - Jan 14th, 2025 at 8:24pm
 
Brian Ross wrote on Jan 14th, 2025 at 8:16pm:

What are you trying to say, moron, but cant find the words?

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