Lara
Friend of the Arts
- Location
- Mid-Atlantic Coast
ABC News said tonight that some areas of Puerto Rico may be without power for 6 months. Water and supplies are now trickling in.
We've been really fortunate over the years in that our electrically heated home has never lost power for more than about 12 hours, though a couple of times it happened in the middle of some bitter cold weather. Once it went out while I was away in FL on a business trip in the middle of January. My poor wife was able to give me updates via her cell phone. Power came back after the electric company fixed something in the line under our street. My wife said the house got pretty cold. When we had a major ice storm here several years ago, our block lucked out, but much of our downtown was dark for a week. It was strange getting out of my car in a pitch black parking garage and finding my way to the train by tiny flashlight.
I can only begin to imagine how difficult it must be for those in Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands if you don't have a generator. I referred to this book in another thread, but the book "One Second After" goes into great detail about the impact on society when a small town (and the entire country) loses power after an EMP attack destroys the electric grid. It brought to light things like the shelf life of insulin and how it has to be refrigerated. All the little things we take for granted are gone in the blink of an eye.
I think there was a recent thread here on EMP and the potential devastation to humanity, as a result of either a celestial or man made event.
I recently watched the following video, very enlightening:
It will definitely be rough for the people in Puerto Rico.
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It would not surprise me at all if many people come to the United States. It may become a humanitarian option for the United States government to airlift the most vulnerable and distribute them to temporary homes on the mainland until repairs can be made.
My biggest concern for Puerto Rico is that they are the last in a string of natural disasters. Governments, charities and individuals develop a sort of giving fatigue after already helping so many people that it can leave these most recent victims in a precarious position.
My concern would be that Maria is another in a long string of disasters, worsening in number and intensity over time.