Diwundrin
Well-known Member
- Location
- Nth Coast NSW Australia
I'm not reknowned for a soft heart but what's happened to them is just gutting.
In the immortal words of the somewhat tri-national Russel Crowe.
"God Bless America, God Defend New Zealand, and Thank Christ for Australia!" because you wouldn't want to be a Fillipino today.
I guess you've been seeing the footage of the essentially utter wipe-out of their entire Country?
We have our hurricanes fires floods and assorted disasters but they never take the whole bleeding lot!
There's always a bit left untouched to support the damaged part. Even Fukashima hasn't had the impact this typhoon has wreaked on the Phillipines. The typhoon was bigger than the Country, there can't have been much that isn't at least damaged.
They have essentially nothing left. Anywhere.
If of course the reports aren't even more hyperbolic than usual, but the pictures tell the story. http://www.itv.com/news/2013-11-10/in-pictures-devastation-in-the-philippines-after-typhoon-haiyan/
No clean water. No food. No medical assistance. No power. No shelter, and little hope of seeing anywhere near enough of them in the near future. Even the cities are wrecked, we can only imagine how long the rural folk will have to wait for help to arrive.
They are suddenly back in the stone age. Millions of them. More than our entire population! I think the estimated death toll of 10,000 is going fall short as time passes and the injured succumb to enforced neglect.
All of our countries are sending in teams, full field hospitals, rescue teams, supplies, army personnel etc are on the way, but, where would you start? Who can forget Haiti post earthquake, or Japan post tsunami? This one could dwarf both.
Oh, and there's another typhoon building and showing signs of following the path of the big one. Just what they need least.
This last one was the 2nd 'record' breaker to hit them since just last December. They were still cleaning up after that one.
They're a resiliant, hard working people, but this will try them out, big time.
They're not sitting around wailing, they're doing all they can do for themselves with what they have left, clearing the roads of debris and looking for survivors while waiting for help and supplies from elsewhere. They'll need all we can send them.
It takes things like this to make us realise just how totally dependent we are on technology to support the human race doesn't it?
Without it most of us are just helpless creatures exposed to the elements.
In the immortal words of the somewhat tri-national Russel Crowe.
"God Bless America, God Defend New Zealand, and Thank Christ for Australia!" because you wouldn't want to be a Fillipino today.
I guess you've been seeing the footage of the essentially utter wipe-out of their entire Country?
We have our hurricanes fires floods and assorted disasters but they never take the whole bleeding lot!
There's always a bit left untouched to support the damaged part. Even Fukashima hasn't had the impact this typhoon has wreaked on the Phillipines. The typhoon was bigger than the Country, there can't have been much that isn't at least damaged.
They have essentially nothing left. Anywhere.
If of course the reports aren't even more hyperbolic than usual, but the pictures tell the story. http://www.itv.com/news/2013-11-10/in-pictures-devastation-in-the-philippines-after-typhoon-haiyan/
No clean water. No food. No medical assistance. No power. No shelter, and little hope of seeing anywhere near enough of them in the near future. Even the cities are wrecked, we can only imagine how long the rural folk will have to wait for help to arrive.
They are suddenly back in the stone age. Millions of them. More than our entire population! I think the estimated death toll of 10,000 is going fall short as time passes and the injured succumb to enforced neglect.
All of our countries are sending in teams, full field hospitals, rescue teams, supplies, army personnel etc are on the way, but, where would you start? Who can forget Haiti post earthquake, or Japan post tsunami? This one could dwarf both.
Oh, and there's another typhoon building and showing signs of following the path of the big one. Just what they need least.
This last one was the 2nd 'record' breaker to hit them since just last December. They were still cleaning up after that one.
They're a resiliant, hard working people, but this will try them out, big time.
They're not sitting around wailing, they're doing all they can do for themselves with what they have left, clearing the roads of debris and looking for survivors while waiting for help and supplies from elsewhere. They'll need all we can send them.
It takes things like this to make us realise just how totally dependent we are on technology to support the human race doesn't it?
Without it most of us are just helpless creatures exposed to the elements.