Posted on 06/02/2018 5:09:33 AM PDT by cll
I'll admit that I got caught up in the emotion of the issue, as I was there during and after the hurricane. We do know that many people died as a result of lack of medical facilities, but to blame it on anyone but the local PR government is a stretch.
Anyone who believes anything coming out of Harvard, or any other Ivy League school, likely believes in Santa Claus and the Easter Bunny as well.
The Washington Post modulates itself, surprisingly. I posted their first sensationalist article on the subject.
A lot of folks are still without power down there.
But hey, isn’t this what the Clinton Foundation — or the Bill, Hillary, and Chelsea Foundation — is all about?
They held a big fundraiser in NYC May 24. I bet the funds will ALL go to help restore power in P.R.!!
Puerto Rico Ping! Please Freepmail me if you want on or off the list.
The Left needs bodies to advance their agenda ... be it bodies in schools or pretend bodies in PR.
Meanwhile killing Country Music fans gets a yawn from them.
Courtesy ping. I got caught up in the hoopla. I should have checked my emotional attachment to the issue.
Original estimates were it set power restoration back 10 weeks. It was far longer than that and it's still incomplete.
Democrats tried to impugn and ridicule the company by saying there were only two employees.
Whitefish are contractors. They hire on a need for job basis.
Liberals took control of the narrative as seen in the Wikipedia entry:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whitefish_Energy#Hurricane_Maria_controversy
This makes more sense:) And I expect I would have reacted much as you did after reading the WaPo piece. It’s not the same to BE in a catastrophe as it is to examine and reflect on it later.. Emotions? They remind me I’m alive.
Guess I missed the Harvard study on deaths in Haiti after the hurricane. Wonder why?
How big an emergency aid package did Trump propose, and Congress authorize, to patch up Puerto Rico? $20 billion?
And, during the immediate post-hurricane period, didn’t Puerto Rican truck drivers strike for higher pay while aid materiel from the US sat at the docks?
No wonder Trump got frustrated and said, “They want us to do everything for them.”
I agree. Whitefish got power to my home in 40 days, and I live on the opposite end of the island from where power is generated.
“And, during the immediate post-hurricane period, didnt Puerto Rican truck drivers strike for higher pay while aid materiel from the US sat at the docks?”
That was fake news. That never actually happened.
PR is a beautiful island, full of shitty people.
In no way are they a net benefit to the US.
“And, during the immediate post-hurricane period, didnt Puerto Rican truck drivers strike for higher pay while aid materiel from the US sat at the docks?”
Why yes they did.
They took heed of Rahm Emanuels “never let a crisis go to waste” theory.
Just more proof that unions are evil entities.
“No wonder Trump got frustrated and said, They want us to do everything for them.
Just like their democrat brethren in NOLA after Katrina.
A local fellow took his two dump trucks to NO after Katrina to help with the clean up.
After a week he got disgusted and moved over to Biloxi.
He said the people he saw in NO were waiting for someone else to do everything while the people in Biloxi rolled up their sleeves, got out the tools and went to work.
When I read the Harvard report, I wondered why there was no coverage of mass funerals weeks after the storm.
Re trucking slow-down/strike:
I’ve read stories on both sides. All of the liberal fact-check.org or Boston Globe type outlets say its fake news.
The Teamsters Union put out a major PR (no pun intended here) effort to say there was no strike, and they were volunteering drivers and help. I could see why they would say that, whether or not it were the case.
But, I’ve found counter-stories saying that while there was no formally declared strike, there was considerable foot-dragging and attempts to profiteer through temporary higher wages.
I can’t say for sure either way. On the other hand, this is the same Puerto Rico which raised billions over the years for infrastructure and grafted it all away, leaving the electricity distribution more vulnerable to the storm than had it been repaired. It’s reputed to be governed in a very corrupt fashion.
Gee, thanks. I live there.
I run a company in Puerto Rico and our drivers are Teamsters. They all showed up to work, except one whose house was flooded and another who lives in the boonies and was trapped by blocked roads. That’s what happened to most everybody here. Everybody on the island was affected and many if not most had issues to deal with at home. Once the initial chaos was sorted out (in a couple of days), everybody showed up to work and they worked hard.
By all means, explain how PR is a net benefit to the US.
I live close to Allentown and Reading PA, probably as many PR’s here as where you are...(not really)
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