Posted on 09/02/2005 9:16:42 PM PDT by neverdem
Why is New Orleans in so much worse shape today than New York City was after the attacks on Sept. 11?
The short answer is that New York was attacked by fire, not water. But then why are urbanites so much better prepared to cope with fire than with flooding? Mostly because they learned to fight fire without any help from the Army Corps of Engineers or the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
For most of history, fire was far more feared than flooding. Cities repeatedly burned to the ground. Those catastrophes occurred sporadically enough that politicians must have been tempted to skimp on fire protection - like levee maintenance, it was a long-term investment against a calamity that probably wouldn't occur before they left office.
But urbanites learned to protect themselves through two innovations Benjamin Franklin introduced to America. He started a fire department in Philadelphia, as well as its first fire insurance company. Other cities followed, often with the firefighters organized by insurance companies with a vested interest in encouraging public safety.
Their customers had a vested interest, too, because they had to pay higher premiums if they lived in homes or neighborhoods that were prone to fire. As fire insurance became a standard requirement for homeowners, they and their insurance companies kept pressure on politicians to finance firefighting and tighten building codes.
As a result, the risk of a fire leveling a city like New York is lower than ever. Although the number of fires has dropped so much that experts routinely advise cities to close firehouses, voters' fondness for the stations makes local politicians loath to close any.
But as we've learned this week, few people seem to care passionately about maintaining levees or preparing for a predictable flood. They've left that to Washington, which promised to...
(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
Yep.
A silver lining in the clouds.
I figured you were quoting from the book version of "The Towering Inferno." Did I get it right?
Yes, you sure did.
One of the few books I read back then during my teen years, along with The Godfather, Excorcist, and Airport. :-)
LOLOLOL - smart@ass.
That is amazing ...can I steal that? because what happened in 1972 on Riverside drive...has kept me out of the church ever since. Of course, it never hapenned.
How fun you are, How smart. How nice to know everything.
At 7, I knew and understood all about the water tanks, that are ubiquitous to apartment buildings in Manhattan. If, as you claim, you lived there, why didn't you and why do you still not know?
And what has any of it to do with what's happened due to Katrina a levee breaks?
You wanna talk about flooding in Manhattan streets? Then do so! There have been enough massive water main breaks and flooding, in the past history of Manhattan, to fill several books on the subject. Ho read some.
Look down. 18, 30 floors - it is a long way down, not even real.
It doesn't get real, until you are 44 feet off the ground.
44 feet. That is when it becomes real.
Until then, you are just flying.
You actually thought I stole this?
Thanks, I think. LOL.
I've also been on quite a number of roof tops, or higher floors of Manhattan apartment buildings.
Just what exactly do you mean about things being "not real"? Just because something appears tiny, doesn't make it less "real".
In the story on your personal page, your father supposedly grew up in far upstate N.Y. and never lived in Manhattan.
Sooooooooooo, what's the fact and whats the fiction? Is there any truth in either tale?
sure, both tales are true.
This comparison pisses me off ! ! !
Katrina is an act of nature, absent malice.
9/11 is a premeditated, reheasred, and intentional slaughter of my people.
See what I mean ? This pisses me off even more !
Acts of nature have no malice, evil intent, premeditation to slaughter my people.
9/11 was an attack, a breach of the worlds most widely recognized civil and human rights, planned, rehearsed, exacted, and applauded by our enemy.
That's a new twist for the NYTimes, now it's Bush's fault for being too generous with FEMA money.
Bump!
I understand this reasoning. It is easy to point blame, especially since hindsight is 20-20. There are many other differences between the two tragedies. The infrastructure of NY vs. the lack of infrastructure of NO, the culture of the people, the leadership...The mayor of NY clearly emerged as a world class leader compared to the mayor of NO. The outrage of the incident in NY vs the shock of mother nature, which could strike anywhere.
Except for all the media sensationalism, which is feeding off other people's misery, it is clearly shown what a great and mighty country we live in to see the outpouring of aid and donations going to the New Orleans area. Of course, it is taking too long for aid to reach that area. We are also a complacent society, but it is clear that we are stepping up to the plate to alleviate the pain of these people.
I don't mean to take sides here, but I think we are talking about a powerful form of expression called allegory.
The representation of abstract ideas or principles by characters, figures, or events in narrative, dramatic, or pictorial form; an extended metaphor.
A story, picture, or play employing such representation. John Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress and Herman Melville's Moby Dick are allegories.
A symbolic representation: The blindfolded figure with scales is an allegory of justice.
Allegory: used only in Gal. 4:24, where the apostle refers to the history of Isaac the free-born, and Ishmael the slave-born, and makes use of it allegorically. Every parable is an allegory. Nathan (2 Sam. 12:1-4) addresses David in an allegorical narrative. In the eightieth Psalm there is a beautiful allegory: "Thou broughtest a vine out of Egypt," etc. In Eccl. 12:2-6, there is a striking allegorical description of old age.
Classic NY Slimes arrogance and condescending attitude.
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