Summary
Disaster survivors in Arkansas were “blocked from receiving federal recovery aid” after Donald Trump denied Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders’ request for a major disaster declaration.
The Trump administration stated the damage was “not of such severity and magnitude as to be beyond the capabilities of the state.”
Trump signed executive orders to shift disaster recovery responsibility to states, while aiming to eliminate FEMA.
Sanders appealed, writing, “the state and its citizens are in dire need of assistance.” Without federal aid, “volunteer organizations in Arkansas are stepping up” as the state faces “significant challenges” in recovery efforts.
AFAIK, all the tornado states voted heavily for orangeboi. So:
Unfortunately natural disasters don’t selectively target Trump voters.
Yes and no. The states most hit by climate change are the hurricane landing places in the south and the tornado alley. Which matches the GOP voter map quite good.
There are also climate disasters in blue states; LA just had historic urban fires fueled by climate change. We can’t fall into the trap of thinking that weather and climate change is some kind of demonstration of the will of God, because your backyard is next. They weren’t kidding when they put the “global” in “global warming.”
Nobody thinks it’s a will of God except maga, they were saying the Cali fires were punishment for their “communist experiment” as those tens-of-millioms of dollar properties burned
Anytime a person from a red state complains about California being communist, remind them their roads are paved with money from CA because their state collects welfare from the fed who collects it from Blue states
So maybe we can not do the same, since climate disasters don’t pick and choose who to hit.
Of course the global warming hits all. I know about the fires that hit the west (although a lot of the damage was caused by sheer stupidity - don’t have dry-as-cinder plants surrounding your stick-and-cardboard houses!). But I consider it a joke of nature that the states that most vehemently denies global warming are the ones that are hit hardest.
I’m sorry but whoever told you that dry plants around houses caused it was either misinformed or a liar. Hurricane force winds carried cinders for miles to start new fires, and every fire truck in the state lining up to fight it wouldn’t have stopped it.
This is kind of a sore subject for me since I spent a week breathing in the smoke from these fires.
I didn’t say it caused it, but it certainly added to the issue.
Every building could have been surrounded by concrete (and some were!) without significantly impacting the spread, which was primarily wind driven. Seriously, listen to what the firefighters and other experts have said about this.
Once the houses caught on fire they became the fuel, not dry grass. Combined with the water pressure dropping from 10,000 houses going up in flames practically simultaneously, it was impossible to control. The planes they normally fly in to drop retardant couldn’t even fly in the wind, because the water they dropped would just fucking float in the air before getting scattered. Nobody can stop that until the winds die down.
Which is getting somewhat off topic, but my overall point is that these climate disasters can happen anywhere. Blue states and red states are both going to suffer, and it’s deranged to pump your fist when people in a red state get hit just because they might have voted Trump. It’s not less deranged than it is when MAGAs celebrate the fires in California.
You two are clearly talking about very specific fires that occurred under very specific conditions. I’m not going to debate what happened or why. That’s for the experts to weigh in on.
I however would like to point out that there are “best practices” for communities and structures in the wildland-urban interface. Relevant to this discussion is the following…
These obviously aren’t going to protect every house from every fire. But that doesn’t mean people should ignore them.
I’m also not implying that anyone affected by the specific fires being discussed above didn’t exercise appropriate caution for where they lived. Certainly some did. Others possibly didn’t.
But the reason these guidelines exist is because there have been people who’s homes were affected by other wildfires, and experts have concluded that the the above conditions have, at times, contributed to the problem, and that people should do their part to mitigate the problems on their property, and help bring awareness to their neighbors.