What if Katrina hit San Diego?

Yo, did the Jump yesterday.  Feels like today since I haven’t been asleep in 24 hours, but such is the game sometimes.
Now, click here.  Two points…
1.  This is way nicer than the Superdome was during Katrina.  And trust me, those people could have used a good Swedish.
2.  Yoga, massages, buffets, bands, and ain’t nobody gotta go to work?  That smell…it ain’t a forest fire, if you get my drift.

14 thoughts on “What if Katrina hit San Diego?”

  1. The Katrina comparisons have gotten to be ridiculous. Far fewer people dead, and the vast majority of the evacuations are temporary. Within a couple of weeks, most of the people affected will be back to their daily routines and acting as though none of this ever happened.
    And if I see one more newcaster, especially the grade school dropouts on DC TV stations, talk about how much better Qualcomm is running compared to the Superdome, I’ll snap. Of course it’s running smoother, the streets aren’t buried under 10 feet of water, fuckwit.

  2. I’m sorry to see anyone lose anything. I have people out there who are terriified. Among those “SoCal hippies” are regular folks who weren’t prepared for this. I think “fuck them” is harsh as shit!
    The comparisons are striking – the services available for these people versus the Katrina victims pleas for food and clean water – it’s heartbreaking. The federal government still hasn’t correctly addressed the losses in the gulf – but I don’t begrudge anyone who’s lost everything a bit of comfort.
    It’s true -fewer dead…but – realistically Bro – what if it were your sister or father were one of those killed? Would you feel better knowing “fewer people dead”?
    Damn.

  3. I think the comparisons are way off-base. Katrina was a “you or me” situation in an area that was ill-prepared for a disaster like that.(Even though the city was built below sea level)
    California has squads and squads of people that are always ready to fight a wildfire, since they get them every year.
    It’s much easier to prep for fighting fires on a regular basis than it is to suddenly have to siphon an entire city out of 10-20 feet of water.
    And it looks to me like the SoCal-ers are helping each other out, not worrying about protecting what’s theirs. It seems to me like preparation is key.

  4. fuckwit has officially been added to my vocabulary.
    it’s refreshing to know that there exists a place where people can suffer in the lap of luxury…
    on a tangential note, i’m curious about how the federal government is prepared to handle atlanta’s impending water outage. will there be strangers from California flying over with checked luggage filled with bottles of fiji? will they pay extra for shipping the bags that are over weight? better yet, will they massage the families of the people who die of dehydration?
    will they help sanitize the city due to the piles of bodily waste that will be stuck in homes and backed up in the streets? will they offer yoga as an alternative to the various diseases that crop up as a result of unsanitary living conditions? hmm…

  5. On the real, the folks down there in San Diego aren’t hippies, it’s a strong GOP base in Orange County, thus the first class treatment. Don’t lose a tear for those folks because TRUST that their million dollar properties are fully insured.
    Further, we need to keep up the comparisons because the Katrina situation is still in disarray. It may not be an entirely even comparison, with one being fire and the other water, but the difference in response and treatment is startling and plain.
    To me, the article Bo linked says it all. They wasn’t giving out massages or pampering to the Katrina folks, they were talking noise at their attempts at foraging food to survive.

  6. Sure the devastation in SoCal is evident but what I don’t understand is why some of these folks will rebuild in the same place, only to be boohooing next year when the fires happen again. It’s like the brilliant folks who build their palatial homes on the sides of these unstable hills where mudslides happen every year. I can’t offer up any sympathy for these folks.
    As for the Katrina references…I am with Kirk on this one.

  7. Having lived in the area myself, the perception that people are rebuilding their homes over and over again in the middle of an annual S’mores Bake Off is wrong.
    Yes, there are fires every year, but typically not in the same places, and not nearly of the geographic scope and intensity that these are. The equivalent would be to ask why anyone stuck around near the Gulf for Katrina, considering that they had this one really nasty storm a few years back that flooded the local Denny’s and knocked out a couple of traffic lights.

  8. People people, the biggest difference here is that San Diego, where the stadium is, is not directly affected. It’s not like the fires are putting 10 feet of water in it like Katrina did to New Orleans. Qualcomm Stadium is not being damaged like the roof of the Superdome. Also, you can fuck up a fire with a plane, and planes get fucked by hurricanes. read a book

  9. Just in case anyone got confused…my comparison to Katrina was just in the stark difference between the conditions the evacuees in the different cities dealt with. Much of it was brought on by the point KingJ–Qualcomm wasn’t in the middle of the flames, while the Superdome directly affected by the storm.
    The main point, though–man, Southern California is its own universe. Who thinks “man, send those folks some masseuses in their time of need?”

  10. I agree with most of you. Folks just do it different in SoCal. As for the drought the Southeast, Atlanta is gonna run out of water. What will happen then? What if fire broke out in Birmingham or rural South Carolina? I’m sure then we would see more Katrina than Qualcomm.
    The major difference that you need to remember is people in Katrina lost their livelihoods, meager property and had little to no insurance. They said it was wind not water damage or water and not wind damage. The people in SoCal were white, rich, and insured. Now let State Farm tell someone they can’t get their money because it was arson! Then we will see the sparks fly!!

  11. Its funny, the “why do they build there” argument seems to “work” in this situation. It is some how the victims’ fault for building these houses in fire prone hills.
    But the same could be said about the NOLA area. Just watch that Spike Lee documentary for a scientifically correct explanation. NOLA should have never been built. Someone got the bright idea of building a city where a city should not have been built. Hurricane Katrina was the the first hurricane to decimate NOLA, and by all scientific accounts it will not be the last. Climatologists have hypothesized that they might need to change the rating scale (currently going up to category 5) to reflect the possibility of stronger hurricanes. Global-warming fueled super hurricanes are undeniably on the horizon.
    So we can pretty much ask the same question: Why are the folks in NOLA trying to rebuild there? It will most likely happen again. However, I don’t think one person on these boards would lob e-shots at Katrina victims for trying to rebuild.
    I think that regardless of race or class, it is human nature to want to ride for your piece of dirt, no matter where it is.

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