Posted on 06/07/2016 8:52:55 AM PDT by JimSEA
Yeah, my middle name should be /facetious /sarc and /hyperbole
BLUF - there is nothing new here folks.
In 1968 there was a fictional best seller out “The Last Days of the Late Great State of California” by Curt Gentry that took a look at the impact of the San Andres fault letting go. Read it in the early 1970s because I was stationed in Rancho Cordova at the time.
The economic impact, in pre-silicon valley terms, was massive. I wouldn’t want to predict the economic impact 45 years later. Curt also addressed the probability of price gouging - the seven sisters decided that they would restrict the rise in gas prices to a maximum of a dollar a gallon until public outcry forced them to back off.
If you want to see what the impact could be buy the book, its available on eBay starting around $ 10.00.
LOL!
Worrisome!
Agree with you there. That area of the country has such nasty, mean people. Very little good news comes out of there. However, I would feel very sad for the loss of the areas wildlife, such as the grizzly bears and cute little bunnies.
The Obama administration insists there is no “fault” in DC.
Really? Are you some friggin' expert on California demographics. I bet you're so dumb you couldn't find you ass with both hands, much less locate California on a world map.
Our fifth generation American family live in and around Walnut Creek, CA, which is just east of the Hayward fault. Do some research and you'll discover you probably can't afford the rent, much less a house.
LOL! 2 in one day! Enjoy!
An CA earthquake thread
A Freeper jumps into the frey, splash!
CAFreeprs rage.
:-)
what danger?
the government serves and protects us, right? (/s)
the govt has allowed 31+12 = 43,000 new people (largely from communist China now) to now live on “high danger” liquification zone fill dirt right nearby (between, actually) the Hayward and San Andreas faults (Foster City and the Redwood Shores district of Redwood City, built on former bay mud and dredged up silt)... last quake only shook 27 or 28 seconds and the geologists said had it gone on for just a minute or two that there would have been grave damage with houses sinking into the liquified SF Bay (a couple of heavier buildings did suffer major structural damage even in that unusually short quake...it took about 4 years to repair one of them)
the govt allowed the residents of the Oakland and Berkeley Hills (Hayward fault immediately underneath) to rebuild after the last quake and the hills fire.....with construction so close to the roads that firetrucks and emergency vehicles cannot access the neighborhoods in the event of quake or fire
the govt allowed a major new branch campus of the University of California Medical School, plus a big new AT&T Ballpark, plus dense condo highrises (mostly bought by communist Chinese investors)... to be built on fill dirt former baylands in San Francisco, also that city’s most prominent high rise/shopping center development
plus a high capacity rapid transit train “tube” laying, floating underwater in the bay mud
plus a new bay bridge with risky (many say) design and improper construction and materials resulting in rusting support structure (much publicity over this, some partial but no really reassuring available fixes....)
and so it goes. examples galore. but nothing to worry about, the Govt is protecting all you nice Californians
smile
smile
smile
Was fortunate not to be on the Cypress in ‘89; but, much further north that day. Anyone caught in rush hour traffic, stopped on the lower deck, may remember the shaking of the roadway from truck traffic passing overhead.
As you say, the Loma Prieta, 1989 earthquake was, for one thing, a lesson on how not to build freeways in an earthquake zone (double deckers in particular).
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.