Insurance companies had pulled out from this area. Which means the rest of flyover country will not have to pay higher rates due to California’s lack of fire prevention.
On that note...
Libertas Extremus
@LeBoogidy
This is ridiculous.
Huh?
In a state where fire is THE NUMBER ONE DISASTER?
CA had 8200 fires in 20 years.
Over 100,000 homes burned in 10 years
Over 25% of the entire state has burned.
How, in the name of all that is holy, is fire suppression not the NUMBER ONE thing on everyones list?
Is as absurd as it is tragic. And it’s as predictable as it is inevitable.
https://headwaterseconomics.org/natural-hazards/structures-destroyed-by-wildfire/
12:29 AM · Jan 8, 2025 31.4K Views
https://x.com/LeBoogidy/status/1876863735924510752
“Insurance companies had pulled out from this area.”
I listened to Tim Pool on Rumble covering this. The insurance companies who keep track of precisely this knew the threat of the brush not being trimmed back and the water reserves not kept up made a situation just waiting for high winds to kick off an inferno like this. That made them cancel coverage and no officials cared to address the danger.
It’s criminal negligence by the government in charge of this stuff. Not only did they see it coming they just sat and waited like they had a betting pool on it.
I hope we consider tar and feathering for this crew, but I’m old fashion.
Insurance companies had pulled out from this area. Which means the rest of flyover country will not have to pay higher rates due to California’s lack of fire prevention.
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I was stationed at Camp Pendleton for a couple of years and I know the Santa Anna winds are an annual occurrence, so there is no surprise except perhaps they may be blowing a little harder this time. The point is the Left thinks that leaving the environment to do its thing in its ‘natural’ state is so wonderful until all hell breaks out as it is now. Common sense, which the Libs don’t have, says that if they want to live in the aired desert, they need to manage/clean up the underbrush and maintain major fire breaks. These management measures are much cheaper in the long run and less chaotic than undergoing what is a living hell every five or ten years. No one can blame the insurance companies for bailing out on these crazies.