Really we should be asking (I want to know) why FEMA invented their own USAR standards instead of adopting the INSARAG ones? Why the US have put so much more money into USAR and not flood and storm response? Surely after Harvey and Katrina, not to mention tornadoes, you've learned that having something like Australia's SESs would provide you with surge capacity of people skilled in storm damage mitigation and flood rescue? I really would like to know
jagungal
Well, poor black people at least
People getting brake and break mixed up annoys me, but I get it. If this is you, your car has brakes and you take a break from work after breaking your arm.
Like... a water tank?
Mitch Hedberg jokes while high is a pretty smart move. Either that or you're the only person who finds them funny and end up looking like an idiot.
1 in 1000 year events are poorly named. One because it describes a likelihood, so this storm had a 0.1% chance of occurring in any given year, so we'd expect to see a storm like this once every thousand years on average. It's not cyclical. Two, the likelihood of these storms is steadily increasing and so it's probably no longer a 1 in 1000 year event.
Almost certainly not. It's common in some communities for people to write their own image transcriptions.
All of these things are only valuable if you do not have the technical expertise required to analyse the validity of the conclusions the authors draw from the methods.
This is a good video about who shouldn't be sharing pictures of their keys online: https://youtu.be/6mr-7hjItX0?si=zx8QnEX1P_QpTN8U. If you're a nobody who doesn't share pictures of their home you will probably be ok.
None of them, they all grow it in their backyards or harvest it in the wild
No, it's make everyone's quality of life better! /j
Flooding leaves horrible mud in its wake. It's full of sewage, vehicle fluids, and heaps of nutrient for bacteria, leading to a terrible smell.