C'mon, you know you're taking this to it's furthest extreem to try to make your point.
My point is no more extreme than suggesting that there needs to be a little "cleansing of the gene pool" for those who experience a disaster.
Do you truely believe the people who's houses get washed away in a California mudslide, then re-build in the same place only to have it go up in flames the next year are doing any of us any good? Who's paying for that? That's right. I am and so are you.
They are paying for it through sky-high insurance rates and large deductibles. Oh, wait, that's right. In the Baldeagl world, there would be no insurance for anyone, they would just have to suck it up. Ever had your car wrecked? Bet you had insurance for it. But, since it is reasonable to assume every person who drives will be in a car wreck at some point in their life (statistically, it is 3 wrecks), I suppose we should apply the Baldeagl standard to cars, too. No car insurance for anyone. Experience a loss, and suck it up.
You seem to be under the delusion that those that experience a disaster get off without any hardship. Quite the opposite.
But I see you have changed to mudslides. Any particular reason? Perhaps you finally have realized moving the millions out of "flood zones, on fault lines, in hurricane prone areas" is simply not feasible, and now are trying to make it sound a little more reasonable? If so, then I hope you also recognize how ignorantly broad your original statement was.
How many times does someone need to be flooded out before they decide it's not a good idea to build in a flood zone? Once, twice, three times, more? How many times are you willing to go help them out with time or money?
Since the topic of the thread is "Cedar Rapids Flooding," your point is irrelevant since it has already been established that the floods in question are extraordinary and not at all common. Many of the people affected have never had such an event before, yet you paint them all with the same broad brush.
And for the record, as far as I am concerned anyone who experiences a loss of their home or business through no fault of their own is worthy of compassion, and certainly doesn't deserve to be blamed for their misfortune -- let alone have someone say they hope they would just die and clean the gene pool.
I can understand helping with rare natural disaters; those that will likely never repeat. But those that do, over and over like clockwork I'm not as pleasant about. Stay away.?
Please define for me just how often is too often. 500 years? 100 years? 20 years? At what point do you say it will
never repeat? There was a glacier covering Minnesota once, and very likely it will happen again sometime in the future. Can't say it will
never again happen, can you?
If the New Madrid fault goes off tomorrow with a 9.0, flattening every dwelling between Memphis and Milwaukee and from Columbus to Kansas City, are you going to say they all should have seen it coming and just moved? After all, it happend in the 1800s, surely it was forseeable it would happen again, right? Silly "idiots" should all just move, right?
I just think people need to have a little more common sense, and not only in relation to this topic.
I quite agree, but I also think you were the one showing no common sense with your first post.