To: Red Badger
Man this Hurricane did some real damage.
There are reports out there of people dead in trees.
This is nightmare stuff.
4 posted on
09/30/2024 11:34:59 PM PDT by
Beowulf9
To: Beowulf9
Bad deal for sure, there are quartz mines in Arkansas so I wouldn’t freak quite yet
5 posted on
09/30/2024 11:38:42 PM PDT by
One Name
(Ultimately, the TRUTH is a razor's edge and no man can sit astride it.)
To: Beowulf9
Rescue Train Swept off the Tracks by the 1935 Labor Day Hurricane.

On September 2, 1935, a powerful hurricane slammed into the middle Florida Keys. Known as the Labor Day Hurricane, it was the first Category 5 storm to strike the United States in recorded history. The hurricane claimed at least 485 lives, including about 260 World War I veterans working on a section of the Overseas Highway in a federal relief project. The veterans came from the ranks of the Bonus Army, a group of soldiers who camped at the steps of the U.S. Capitol in the early 1930s to demand compensation promised by the federal government, and who on July 28, 1932 were dispersed by U.S. Army troops under the command of General Douglas MacArthur. Some of the veterans later were given relief jobs by the administration of President Franklin D. Roosevelt through the Works Progress Administration. On the day of the storm, officials sent a train to evacuate the men, but it failed to reach the camps located on Lower Matecumbe Key. This image is an aerial view of the ill-fated rescue train taken three days after the storm. High winds and an estimated 18 feet (5.49 meters) of storm surge swept the train off the tracks. Author Ernest Hemingway, then a resident of Key West, captured public outrage about the episode in an essay entitled "Who Murdered the Vets?" published just days after the hurricane. A government inquiry investigated both the mishandling of the evacuation and the shortcomings of forecasting work done by the Weather Bureau in the days leading up to the storm's landfall. The official judgment ultimately assigned blame in both instances to nature, rather than to human error. Following the Labor Day Hurricane of 1935, the Weather Bureau established additional monitoring stations in southern Florida and took steps to improve disaster preparedness in vulnerable coastal areas. The Labor Day Hurricane still ranks as one of the most powerful storms ever to make landfall in the United States, but it likely will be remembered mainly as the tragic conclusion to the story of the Bonus Army.
6 posted on
09/30/2024 11:49:10 PM PDT by
Red Badger
(Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegals are put up in 5 Star hotels....................)
To: Beowulf9
9 posted on
10/01/2024 1:01:14 AM PDT by
SaveFerris
(Luke 17:28 ... as it was in the Days of Lot; They did Eat, They Drank, They Bought, They Sold ......)
To: Beowulf9
Yet the usual naysayers will still scoff that it’s just s storm, YAWN, and the reports of the damage being way overblown.
It was really just a big nothingburger. The warnings were just overhyped.
Meteorologists are regularly castigated for warning of folks of impending danger in storms and this is an example of why. Nobody knows for sure what each storm will bring and they all have the potential for loss of life and property.
So whether it’s many or few, or it directly affects you personally at all, for those who it does affect, it IS a big deal and the warnings were needed.
And this one is apparently going to affect us all in one way or another if this mine was heavily damaged. Not to mention the resources rebuilding are going to use up, causing shortages elsewhere and rising prices, and the affect the storm had on crops that were being grown this year.
These people need our prayer, not our scorn.
11 posted on
10/01/2024 1:13:43 AM PDT by
metmom
(He who testifies to these things says, “Surely I am coming soon.” Amen. Come, Lord Jesus”)
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