Matt13C
Well-Known Member
And this, my friends, is why you don't build a house right next to the ocean.
I'm sorry but that's an incredibly arrogant, uneducated response to a huge tragedy.
Having been personally impacted by this storm, I can tell you that it was not as simple as you make it sound.
First, what you say sounds great in theory, but in practice the habitable space for humans would be incredibly small if we avoided potential danger areas. Hurricanes/Typhoons, fault lines, volcanic activity, snow storms, wind storms, fire, tornadoes, drought or simple lack of water. That eats up most of the country or world for that matter.
Second, this was not a known eventuality like an earth quake on the San Andreas fault, this was a massive storm the likes that we have never seen before. It's great to say, dont build on the coast. But when hurricanes, especially of this magnitude and size are rare to almost unlikely, its like telling a person not to build in Arizona because of the snow. Sure, Hurricanes happen up here, we've been through them before, just last year actually. They caused some damage but nothing like this. The devastation is much greater than what the cat 1 classification implies.
A full state inland, there are areas so badly hit that trees that stood for 50 years, weathered hundreds of thunderstorms and previous hurricanes lay toppled, on houses in mass numbers from this storm. I have seen this personally, walked streets where neighbors I grew up with are standing outside there house with multiple trees resting on it. Miraculously no one was hurt, houses can be repaired or replaced. But then again, I guess in your eyes it is their fault for building there.