Posted on 09/12/2018 11:44:29 AM PDT by Red Badger
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People Are Fighting For Food As Authorities Warn Florence Could Produce A Disaster Comparable To Hurricane Katrina
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Hurricane Florence is about to make a direct hit on the east coast, and public officials are making one ominous declaration about this storm after another. Florence is being called extremely dangerous, a monster, the worst in 60 years and the storm of a lifetime. By the end of this week we shall see if this storm lives up to the hype, but at this point it is definitely an immensely powerful storm. Hurricanes of this magnitude very rarely come this far north, and panic is starting to set in all across the mid-Atlantic region as people realize that this is really happening. Over a million people are in the process of evacuating, and it is being reported that there is fighting for food at the stores that still have some supplies left
It was chaotic! Oh my goodness, long lines! said Fatimah Spivey.
Reilly Norman described it as a mess in there; its wiped out clean.
The water aisles were especially bare empty shelf after empty shelf.
We came around 1 and all the waters were gone, said Blake Swain. Now, its just people fighting for food.
Interestingly, federal officials actually conducted a simulation that involved a category 4 hurricane hitting the mid-Atlantic region back in late April and early May
Just months ago, disaster planners simulated a Category 4 hurricane strike alarmingly similar to the real-word scenario now unfolding on a dangerously vulnerable stretch of the East Coast.
That simulation produced catastrophic damage along the east coast, and as a result some experts are now concerned that Hurricane Florence could produce a disaster comparable to 2005s Hurricane Katrina
A fictional Hurricane Cora barreled into southeast Virginia and up the Chesapeake Bay to strike Washington, D.C., in the narrative created by the Federal Emergency Management Agency and Argonne National Laboratory.
The result was catastrophic damage, which has some experts concerned that Hurricane Florence could produce a disaster comparable to 2005s Hurricane Katrina and in a part of the country that is famously difficult to evacuate.
Let us hope that does not happen, because New Orleans still has not fully recovered from Hurricane Katrina after all this time.
But at this point things look very grim. The computer models are predicting a storm surge of somewhere around 20 feet and up to 45 inches of rain in some parts of North Carolina.
In addition, it is being projected that the insurance industry could be facing up to 20 billion dollars in losses.
And all of those numbers assume that this will remain a Category 4 storm. According to CNN, there is still a possibility that Florence could become close to a Category 5 storm before it slams into the Carolinas
As of Tuesday morning, Florence was hurling 130-mph winds. Before it pummels the US coastline, Florence could become close to a Category 5 storm meaning winds could approach 157 mph.
But even a Category 4 storm would be immensely devastating.
A 20 foot storm surge would cause more damage than the wind or the rain from the hurricane would. It would essentially be a giant wall of water that would swallow parts of the coast
Storm surge has the highest potential to kill the most amount of people, FEMA Administrator Brock Long said. It also has the highest potential to cause the most destruction.
Storm surge is basically a wall of water that could swallow parts of the coast.
This will have a storm surge in the 20-foot range, Myers said.
And meteorologists are warning that in a worst-case scenario we could actually see Florence stall along the east coast for an extended period of time. According to the Weather Underground, this is how that could happen
The steering currents driving Florence toward the East Coast will collapse on Friday, and models now agree the storm is likely to stall somewhere within 100 miles on either side of the coast, perhaps for one or two days.
The 12Z Tuesday run of the European model introduced a new and very distressing possibility: Florence stalling just offshore of North Carolina near Wilmington for roughly a day, then moving southwestward along and just off the South Carolina coast on Saturday, and finally making landfall close to Savannah, Georgia, on Sundayall while still a hurricane. This outlandish-seeming prospect gained support from the 18Z run of the GFS model. It painted a very similar picture, with a landfall a bit farther north, near Charleston, on Sunday. The 18Z track from the experimental GFS FV3 model is very similar to the GFS track.
In such a scenario, the damage caused by this storm would be multiplied.
To say that this storm is dangerous would be a major understatement. And let us not forget that there are 12 nuclear power reactors directly in the path of this storm. If things go bad, they could go really, really bad.
As the storm draws closer to the coast, federal officials are begging people to get prepared
Federal officials begged residents to put together emergency kits and have a plan on where to go.
This storm is going to knock out power days into weeks. Its going to destroy infrastructure. Its going to destroy homes, said Jeff Byard, an official at the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
Of course those that have waited until now may find that it is already too late.
Gasoline stations all over the mid-Atlantic are already running out of gas, and store shelves are being picked clean of essential supplies
Long lines formed at service stations, and some started running out of gas as far west as Raleigh, with bright yellow bags, signs or rags placed over the pumps to show they were out of order. Some store shelves were picked clean.
Theres no water. Theres no juices. Theres no canned goods, Kristin Harrington said as she shopped at a Walmart in Wilmington.
A perfect storm is literally heading for the east coast, and some believe that this could be a metaphor for what is happening to the nation as a whole.
For those of you living in the mid-Atlantic, please get out of the path of this storm, and our prayers are with you.
This article originally appeared on The Economic Collapse Blog. About the author: Michael Snyder is a nationally syndicated writer, media personality and political activist. He is publisher of The Most Important News and the author of four books including The Beginning Of The End and Living A Life That Really Matters.
“There is not a storm that Satan can throw at this nation our righteous leader cannot prepare for”
The supply chains the government buys into are far less capable than those used by grocery store chains, Wal-Mart and Home Depot.
In Florida, for a Florida hurricane, I plan on the stores being out for a week, the power out for two and the debris being out for a month.
It took two months for the federal government contractors to remove the tree debris. The contractors used Bobcats to compress the debris and place it into trucks.
It's got electrolytes, It's what the body craves
Most natural events are just too random and some are just overwhelming. You CAN do a lot as an individual to prepare for those extended outages. Hard for the government or the electrical company to have thousands of trucks on hand to fix downed power lines until after they can assess the damage.
It is one thing to evacuate and return to your undamaged home. Quite another to have a thousand electrical repair crews waiting just outside the zone and then realize the storm wasn’t as bad as predicted.
Heck - with Katrina you could have had 1,000 of crews available, and they would have needed to wait days/weeks for the water to go down anyway.
Think of any repair project around the home - you can be as prepared as possible for your Saturday project. Pipe, glue, new drain, wall board, etc. It still all takes time to replace that leaking pipe. And then of course when you see that the leak has been around for much longer than you thought, and the 2x4’s are rotted, and the 8”x12” beam has damage to it.
Correct. And the overwhelming majority always, always wait until the last minute. Small amounts of prep, over time, can help.
This has potential to be a lot worse than just a coastal damage event because of the slow-moving nature of this approaching hurricane and the possibility of Harvey-style rains in more inland portions of NC and even SC. Two or three days of relentless hurricane intensity rainfall could add up to several feet and that is mostly flat country that will take weeks to drain. I think this is the main fear, the coastal damage is almost inevitable with the combination of wind and surge expected.
“Hard to prepare for an earthquake..................”
Yeah, it would be a logistical shutdown.
Put your survival stuff in your car and at home and hope for the best.
Caches................buried in out of the way places.................
Those people were warned weeks ahead of the storm and yet they ....
It’ll be a tough challenge to top the utterly ridiculous “Snowmageddon” of “Snowpocalyse” (or whatever it was called). It was a complete flop.
Nudge...plural of “battery” is “batteries.”
I think. I’ve seen so much mangled grammar, spelling and punctuation that I have to now stop and question myself.
In California a year ago, people couldn’t move out fire debris without government approval and permits. If you did, you risked huge fines. Government wanted to keep hazardous stuff out of the landfill, but everything had been nicely incinerated.
On Tuesday, my sister was headed east into Knoxville on I-40 and passed a convoy of (her estimate) about 100 varied emergency vehicles headed that way. Mobile housing units, medical, etc.
Hillary sent them, of course.
Man, I love the Japanese... they are so civilized. And they haven’t at all gone down the cultural gutter like the West has. No coincidence that they also hang together in a crisis.
We used to be like that here. When we got bombed in the WTC in 1993 there were thousands of people packed in a hundred-story smoky stairwell three abreast, and everyone hung together to get out in an orderly manner without panic. When someone freaked out the people next to them calmed them and prevented the panic from spreading.
Most folks here in South Carolina are pretty civilized, so aside from isolated sketchy areas we should do well.
wasn’t my post
quite a few people read that site it is pretty well known
Panic-buying water is just the most bizarre thing. You’d think they didn’t have perfectly good potable water running out of multiple faucets in their homes or something. Fill the bathtub, fill empty jugs at home. For goodness sake, the bottled waters still wiped out here in northwestern NC from a previous forecast.
Well good for you!
And it’s all Trumps fault/s
“Hard to prepare for an earthquake....................”
You don’t have to board up the windows and stuff, but you do have to rotate the stock in your food, water and fuel stashes
“People never heard of water containers one fills up with the hose on the side of your house”
Growing up on the Gulf Coast it was just common practice filling everything you could when you first got any warning. Freeze containers also because ice will be scarce. It’s not rocket science to prepare when you have this much warning
Looks like they want to cause a lot of damage - even if the storm doesn't.
When they were predicting it being Cat 4 as it hit, the storm surge predictions were half 9or less) than the 20 feet in the article.
Not to mention that when the article was published, the predictions were for it to hit as Cat 3 or Cat 2 and the latest show pure Cat 2 when it reaches land.
Maybe they want Florence to become NOLA....
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