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|    alt.war.civil.usa    |    Discussing American civil war.. and 2.0    |    44,056 messages    |
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|    Message 42,880 of 44,056    |
|    Incompetent Biden-Harris to All    |
|    Sources: FEMA's Failure Leaves Hurricane    |
|    05 Oct 24 08:27:19    |
      XPost: talk.politics.guns, dc.politics, alt.usa.disaster       XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sac.politics       From: democrats@hate.america              The washed-out, mud-caked roads and bridges of Madison County, N.C., the       river-ravaged homes and businesses in county seat Marshall, and the       desperation of the Appalachian inhabitants are all testament to the merciless       destruction of Hurricane Helene.              That so many remain lost, trapped, hungry, and hopeless a week after the       hurricane unleashed historic rains and horrific flooding is testament, some       residents and family members say, to the abject incompetence of the       Biden-Harris administration and its        ill-prepared Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA).              Sarah Parkhurst, of Montgomery, Ala., born and raised in the small-town       shadows of Asheville, N.C., tells The Federalist that she thanks God for the       private citizens that have lent a helping hand because the federal government       hasn’t.              “The government is not there,” she told me in a phone interview Thursday       afternoon in between taking and making calls to bring relief to the mud-buried       communities in Madison, Buncombe and Yancy counties.              ‘We Need Rescue’       Parkhurst said her mother, who runs the nonprofit Hot Springs Health Program       in Hot Springs, has been literally begging FEMA officials for critical       supplies. They desperately need oxygen for stranded home-bound seniors. They       need food, clean water, and        shelter.              Sadly, they also need bodybags.              The heart-breaking work of collecting the dead is far from over, Parkhurst and       others on the ground say.              “My mom said so many people are still stuck. They’re asking for       bodybags,” Parkhurst said.              “This is not a recovery effort yet in a lot of these places. We need       rescue,” Parkhurst added. “We do not yet know the body count. We’ve got       starving babies and it’s about to get a lot worse when the temperatures drop       next week.”              The dead from Helene, as of last Thursday afternoon, numbered more than 200 in       six states. That figure was expected to climb as hope that rescue efforts       would find more survivors sank. North Carolina has recorded half of the       fatalities thus far, with        some 60 dead in Buncombe County alone.              It’s awful all over throughout large swaths of the Southeast. In Georgia,       Kobe Williams, 27, and her twin babies were found dead after a tree fell       through the roof of her home and crushed the mother and her newborns,       according to WJTV. In neighboring        South Carolina, John Savage told the Associated Press that his grandparents       died when the powerful winds felled a massive tree on the property, smashing       into the couple’s bedroom and killing them both. They were found holding       each other as they had so        often in life, Savage told the news outlet. As of Thursday evening, 39 people       in the Palmetto State had been killed as the result of the hurricane.              ‘Deep Frustration’       While the storm packed a crippling punch that nobody could have entirely       prepared for, sources on the ground in North Carolina say federal government       relief efforts in the small mountain communities have been lacking.              “There is deep frustration,” one North Carolina official who works with       groups in the Hurricane-battered areas told me. He asked not to be identified       because he did not want any criticisms of the Biden-Harris administration to       affect relief efforts.        It’s definitely not the rosy picture you’re seeing them trying to       create.”              President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris dropped into       hurricane-ravaged areas this week. Biden took an aerial tour of the       destruction in and surrounding Asheville, N.C., and said the federal       government has to “jump start this recovering        process.”              “I’m here to say the United States, the nation, has your back,” Biden       said at the Raleigh Emergency Operations Center. “They’re not leaving       until you’re back on your feet completely.”              In many cases, sources say, FEMA officials have yet to show up. The absentee       president spent last weekend at the beach as the the rains and overflowing       rivers deluged Appalachia.                     [continued in next message]              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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