Fortunate is a word often accompanied with thankfulness; the complicated conversations always begin with both. We are blessed, fortunate and thankful. Personally, I have tried to avoid the complicated conversations, choosing instead to throw the starfish back into the water one at a time.
According to most, hurricane recovery and restoration is complicated business. They are likely correct; however, I do not see a broom, mop, screw gun or sandwich delivered as complicated business, so y’all are not going to read analytics of the complex from me. Instead, the focus is on seeing a person with a problem and tackling it in a way to make their situation just a little bit better.
I’ve watched ants move rocks because rocks needed to be moved. The task did not seem complex, the only variable seemed to be the number of ants needed. I doubt they used extras. The ants somehow knew exactly how many of them were needed for the task and modified their assembly based on the terrain. If you watch closely, the ants keep arriving until exactly the rock moving number of ants are on task – and they move the rock.
Perhaps it is a complicated process for ants to move rocks. Is there a boardroom of ants, with ant planning and zoning? Or does one ant just start pushing on the obstacle and the other ants join in. I think the latter is more likely.
Need gasoline, we can get it. Need the road cleared, we got that too. We can make a sandwich, deliver fuel, saw, sweep, mop, scrub, clean and/or make just that little space closer to the normal of memory. It is entirely possible to replace a missing downspout, and it is entirely possible to provide an uncomplicated ear to listen. Both tasks are equally important during recovery because both outcomes reduce burdens.
Day 5 finds more ants arriving in the western impact zone of Hurricane Ian. Here’s the rock:
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Right now, there are tens of thousands of unemployed service workers looking for wages.
We need an uncomplicated way to put hands-on tasks and move the rocks.
More later….
Due to flooding, the land in low flood zones near the Mississippi river have been restricted in development. Perhaps its time to consider similar restrictions on near coast properties in Florida and the Gulf Coast. Much of the cost to repair damaged properties are being underwritten by Federal taxpayers thru the flood insurance program.
Sure, as a Gulf Coast beach front porperty land owner, just pay me the full market value of my land before you arbitarily place your Restrictions on it, and fine, restrict away.
Otherwise, it amounts to an illegal taking,…. and this property has been in my mother’s family since the 1830s and is currently zoned as an agricultural tree farm for tax purposes, but the beach front is valued at over $ 1,ooo a foot and it’s 4 acres wide and 40 acres deep. “Cha-Ching!”
I agree with you.
….. just pay me the “full market value” of my land …..
Sure. After we remove that unlawful, illegal, unconstitutional component of its current value that was added by the valuer in the form of the contribution of the confiscated wealth of better, wiser, Men,from whom the feds have stolen to gift your ilk with ‘flood insurance.”‘ And then you might find yourself feeling a little less cocky when confronted with its actual “full market value.”
Apparently there are a lot of those service workers bitching on FB about not having electricity, water, sewer, and food stores open. Demanding toilet paper.
Maybe they should call some of the college profs that mis-educated them and gave’em Safe Spaces and ask them what the meaning of COPE is?
Welcome to our world of sink or swim, Snowflakes.