OT: anyone have friends or family in western North Carolina that we can be praying for?

msstatelp1

Well-known member
Aug 21, 2012
1,748
556
113
BTW this is what FEMA says.

 

SirBarksalot

Active member
May 28, 2007
2,962
264
83
The situation is starting to remind me a lot of Katrina. The only thing missing is somebody goes on TV and says that the President doesn't like hillbillies.
IMO, this is a lot worse than Katrina as a whole, and I think the final cost will exceed.
It’s really strange though. You could drive every interstate in NC in the affected area, and really most state highways and think that not much was wrong.
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: IBleedMaroonDawg

Pars

Well-known member
Oct 11, 2015
1,001
833
113
I seent it on the internet and that billionaire who’s been promotin his politics weren’t never lied to me
 
  • Like
Reactions: ChE1997

Pars

Well-known member
Oct 11, 2015
1,001
833
113
You liked the first comment that came in launching a political grenade and blaming the administration for blocking aid from unfounded internet rumors

Don’t come back clutching your pearls about making it political reverend.
 

preacher_dawg

Well-known member
Nov 12, 2014
2,319
1,279
113
You liked the first comment that came in launching a political grenade and blaming the administration for blocking aid from unfounded internet rumors

Don’t come back clutching your pearls about making it political reverend.
I strongly agree with one side, but in a thread about praying for people, it shouldn't be here. Do you know what number it was so I take back my like?
 
  • Like
Reactions: BulldogBlitz

Pars

Well-known member
Oct 11, 2015
1,001
833
113
Who cares what you agree with if it’s a thread about prayer?

Why do you feel the need to express that in a thread about prayer?

Prayer and politics shouldn’t mix but you’re doing a terrible job of not mixing them.
 
  • Like
Reactions: 17itdawg

preacher_dawg

Well-known member
Nov 12, 2014
2,319
1,279
113
Who cares what you agree with if it’s a thread about prayer?

Why do you feel the need to express that in a thread about prayer?

Prayer and politics shouldn’t mix but you’re doing a terrible job of not mixing them.
Again, just let me know the numbered post, and I will undo my like.
 

CochiseCowbell

Well-known member
Oct 29, 2012
11,735
5,831
113
Drove through S and N Carolinas this weekend. I didn't approach the flooded areas, but man there's a lot of damage. Some places looked untouched, then a mile later it looked like what we got here in Augusta. Passed a lot of power trucks. Those guys are busting their asses across 3-4 states. Was hoping we'd have power by the time we got back last night. Alas, not yet.
 

17itdawg

Well-known member
Sep 30, 2022
338
538
93
I'm not getting into the politics of this thread or how politics relate to recovery efforts. I'll just say southern Appalachia is going to need help for a long time. My family finally got power back Saturday morning. I spent most of the weekend helping one of my best friend's work in their neighborhood in a small community south of Asheville. The destruction there is unthinkable. Please keep praying for the region and it's people. The death toll especially in the rural mountain communities will continue to rise. We need all the help we can get.
 

00Dawg

Active member
Nov 10, 2009
3,073
340
63
The truth is always somewhere in the middle.

From first-hand accounts plus some clarification :
1. FEMA doesn’t have active workers clearing anything that I can find (if they ever did in their history). Their reps on the ground have said they’re present to help people get the monetary assistance they need. Definitely some poor planning to have an app/website as the main way of doing that.
FEMA’s mission statement says they should be coordinating relief efforts, but I’ve seen no sign they are, or that they’re capable of doing it (and not sure you would want them to.). All the “boots on the ground” stats they’ve released definitely include other government groups like National Guard/military, and I think they’re including a lot of volunteer efforts (not sure if it’s all). If there’s an organized overall HQ in the impacted area, no one in the national media or independent journalists has found it that I’ve seen. Contrast to the coverage when a general landed in New Orleans post-Katrina.
Given the interview with the Hickory Rock local government officials, someone in the North Carolina DOT (whether local or at the state level) had a plan quickly, and has been executing it.
2. There was definitely some sort of stoppage/restriction on flights impacting volunteer flights. I think there were actually two events, being Biden’s overflight, and another being someone (can’t tell if it was FEMA) attempting to get guidelines in place for the area. Both appeared to slow relief efforts, but I think temporarily.
3. The only first-hand accounts I can find of FEMA “seizing” anything was involving StarLink, and it sounded more like blocking/delaying and potentially claiming credit for than seizing.
4. There are first-hand accounts of supplies being turned down by “logistics directors”, in one case saying the group onsite (FEMA was not named) told the delivery convoy to come back in 24 hours when they’d be ready to take and distribute supplies. The response has generally been volunteer groups telling each other to deliver to churches as a first choice.
More than one locale has said they're at storage capacity now, but will need a steady stream of supplies in the days to come.
5. The number of helicopter flights cited by FEMA this weekend sounded abysmally low given military assets in North Carolina. Either there was a ton of activity not being recorded, or there needs to be some very difficult discussions afterwards. You shouldn't need mule trains in modern America...we have Chinooks.
6. The media coverage of Katrina vs this seems night and day. I know Asheville isn’t New Orleans, but I would have expected every news channel to be camped out in Asheville over the past week.
The best case scenario would be that none of them can afford to do so anymore. Also, remember the criticism W faced for waiting until day 3 to fly over the area impacted by Katrina?
They may also have simply decided not to visit places like Hickory Rock until the DOT reopens each city.
 
  • Like
Reactions: ChE1997

ChE1997

Active member
Feb 14, 2023
530
372
63
I’m not your mommy. Do a little leg work on your own. I already gave you two people to start with. And, femongering? Good grief
Ah another teacup flaoting in space.

Arguments presented without facts can be dismissed without facts.

What do you think FEMA does? What do you think they have standing by?
 

ChE1997

Active member
Feb 14, 2023
530
372
63
The truth is always somewhere in the middle.

From first-hand accounts plus some clarification :
1. FEMA doesn’t have active workers clearing anything that I can find (if they ever did in their history). Their reps on the ground have said they’re present to help people get the monetary assistance they need. Definitely some poor planning to have an app/website as the main way of doing that.
FEMA’s mission statement says they should be coordinating relief efforts, but I’ve seen no sign they are, or that they’re capable of doing it (and not sure you would want them to.). All the “boots on the ground” stats they’ve released definitely include other government groups like National Guard/military, and I think they’re including a lot of volunteer efforts (not sure if it’s all). If there’s an organized overall HQ in the impacted area, no one in the national media or independent journalists has found it that I’ve seen. Contrast to the coverage when a general landed in New Orleans post-Katrina.
Given the interview with the Hickory Rock local government officials, someone in the North Carolina DOT (whether local or at the state level) had a plan quickly, and has been executing it.
2. There was definitely some sort of stoppage/restriction on flights impacting volunteer flights. I think there were actually two events, being Biden’s overflight, and another being someone (can’t tell if it was FEMA) attempting to get guidelines in place for the area. Both appeared to slow relief efforts, but I think temporarily.
3. The only first-hand accounts I can find of FEMA “seizing” anything was involving StarLink, and it sounded more like blocking/delaying and potentially claiming credit for than seizing.
4. There are first-hand accounts of supplies being turned down by “logistics directors”, in one case saying the group onsite (FEMA was not named) told the delivery convoy to come back in 24 hours when they’d be ready to take and distribute supplies. The response has generally been volunteer groups telling each other to deliver to churches as a first choice.
More than one locale has said they're at storage capacity now, but will need a steady stream of supplies in the days to come.
5. The number of helicopter flights cited by FEMA this weekend sounded abysmally low given military assets in North Carolina. Either there was a ton of activity not being recorded, or there needs to be some very difficult discussions afterwards. You shouldn't need mule trains in modern America...we have Chinooks.
6. The media coverage of Katrina vs this seems night and day. I know Asheville isn’t New Orleans, but I would have expected every news channel to be camped out in Asheville over the past week.
The best case scenario would be that none of them can afford to do so anymore. Also, remember the criticism W faced for waiting until day 3 to fly over the area impacted by Katrina?
They may also have simply decided not to visit places like Hickory Rock until the DOT reopens each city.

 

MrKotter

Active member
Aug 22, 2012
848
448
63
Ah another teacup flaoting in space.

Arguments presented without facts can be dismissed without facts.

What do you think FEMA does? What do you think they have standing by?
I’ve given two people for you to check out who were are the forefront showing FEMA lack of response. You, obviously, were too lazy to even check out what you were spoon fed. You work entirely too hard at being an absolute imbecile.
 

MrKotter

Active member
Aug 22, 2012
848
448
63
What do you believe you are accomplishing by posting what FEMA claims they do? There’s a reason they have an absolutely terrible reputation and it’s well earned
 

kired

Well-known member
Aug 22, 2008
6,560
1,587
113
I’m in South Carolina, ~1.5 south of Asheville. Our hotel has been loaded with emergency personnel, they’ve just all been hanging out down in the lobby every time I’ve come thru. I asked one of the helicopter guys how many rescues they had made - he said they haven’t gotten approval to leave the ground since they got here 12 days ago. Now they’re leaving for Georgia to be staged for Milton.
 
  • Wow
Reactions: WilCoDawg
Get unlimited access today.

Pick the right plan for you.

Already a member? Login