This from TF Metals Report
http://www.tfmetalsreport.com/
Guest Post: On The Ground in NYC with Green Lantern
Longtime Turdite, "Green Lantern", generously offered
this fantastic summary and tucked it into the comments section of the
previous thread. He offers firsthand observations of post-Sandy life in
NYC and did such a great job writing it up that I felt it needed to be
elevated to the main page. Thanks, GL, and God bless. Hang in there and
keep us posted.
I
want to make some observations about what I am witnessing here in NYC
with Sandy. Some conclusions that you won't hear on the TV.
First,
the new Prep Friends and Community. If you don't have any, make some.
Take classes on how to make some if you are one of those irritable
types.
Millions
of people are struggling to get to work. There is very little gas! Due
to all the electricity problems. Either no gas or the stations have no
electricity. And obviously, limited public transportation and what there
is simply chaotic. Ok, this shouldn't be surprise but here is the story
they are not telling you, WHY do millions of people, even people whose
houses and lives have been destroyed waiting two hours for a bus, that
takes another two hours to get to work only to be exhausted, work a few
hours and do it over again? BECAUSE THEY CAN'T AFFORD NOT TO WORK. EVEN
FOR A FEW DAYS OR A WEEK. It's just terrible.
And
obviously no gas means no deliveries! Prep food. And by the way,
something I learned. Eat it for a week. Make sure you can live with it. I
thought I'd give it a try. I need to revaluate some of my choices.
My
wife can't get to work. Either no gas, or no public transportation. I
told her to sit her ass home until one or the other comes back on.
Companies are forcing their employee's to come in, go to meetings etc...
You must find a way! Message: companies can't keep up with their
bottom line without employees and employees can't pay their mortgage and
car payments if they don't come in. It's almost modern slavery.
RESULT: Utter Chaos! No time for grieving, no time for clean-up, no
time for volunteering to help others, get your ass into work or
else...We wouldn't have all the transportation chaos if people and
companies had the leeway to have their employees stay home. Other
message: Fed is going to have to print more to get such an important
economic center back on line.
It
doesn't have to be your neighborhood that gets devastated to effect
your life style. New Orleans goes down. No Seafood, Oil goes up. San
Francisco or Boston tech area's go down, or Kansas City wheat gets
messed up, you are effected.
We'll
have to wait to see the long term business impact of this storm but my
guess is a lot of people are going to have to go out of business
especially without government assistance. This should boost monetary
policy nicely. The hurricane besides the obvious devastation is only
highlighting the significant economic problems we are facing. There is
no reason so many people should be struggling to get to work under these
conditions!
Companies
and people are over leveraged and their lifestyle depends on their
ability to go to work tomorrow. The city has passed an HOV law that says
you cannot drive into the city if you don't have three people in the
car. When they interview people they say, I do not know two other people
or do not know how to find two other people!
COMMUNITY! Not Me, Myself, and I. That alone will not work.
Yes,
more and more looting is going on after the storm. Reports now that
people are pretending to be FEMA or other government officials and
knocking on doors. Government, federal, state and city cannot patrol
all the devastated neighborhoods and even neighborhoods just having a
hard time. People are crying for government to help them. Lesson:
Communities not government will determine your fate. I can't get to
parts of the city to help friends. Just no way.
Communities
are being forced to get together and become their own police. Those
that do are protected, those that don't.Oh, well. No food or food
supplies running low in many communities including many suburbs.
Especially the lower class neighborhoods on Rockaway Beach, nobody has
showed up except some religious groups who are feeding them and those
who are being helped by their neighbors. People who are flooded or have
damage are only getting by with the help of their neighbors who are
taking buckets and helping them.
Now
let's just say that instead of a hurricane the the cities and states
went broke. Transportation systems couldn't afford to run, massive
disruption of either food or gas supplies etc.... Many people would be
in similar situations. Little food and water, weak communities, and
definitely no government to bail you out.
Other
small lessons. Cell phones iffy. Towers down. DSL phone lines useless
in some parts. Have an old fashion phone that plugs into the wall. We
learned that lesson when the Northeast grid went down. Good reminder.
I
won't go on. You are all smart people. But I'll say this, do not wait
until the shit hits the fan to change your lifestyle. If you are living
beyond your means or just near the tipping point, reduce your lifestyle
and put the change in your pocket. Ditch the premium cable and the
fancy cell phones plans, stop getting your white wall tires hand
polished, going to the nail place and getting your hair done every week.
Vanity doesn't mean shit when you have to protect your family. I'll
learn how to paint my wife's nails with colored glue if my wife needed
it that bad. Our material based society is learning that it no longer
serves us. We need to become a community based society where connection
is more important than having that vice president title. There are quite
a few vice presidents now sitting in puddles without electricity. I
hope they have food and friends to help them out.
Lastly,
all the Long Island and Jersey Shore beach resorts. It's sad and
utterly devastating. My memories are on both. But I don't want
government money to come in to build new boardwalks, and roller
coasters. Private money fine. I doubt it will ever be rebuilt the way
it was. Put sand back on the beach. Life guard stands, some bathrooms, a
few hot dog stands and make some new memories. If that gets washed
away, no big deal.
People
should be allowed to rebuild right on the beach. But not with my money.
I drive 30 to 40 minutes to go to a beach. At the end of the day, i
don't have to look at the waves. Our society needs to start having some
more environmental awareness. I accept the risk of living surrounded by
water. If you live in San Francisco, you accept the risk of earth
quakes. If you live in the flood plains of the Mississippi accept that
risk. You have cognitive thinking abilities and the internet to access
records. It doesn't make it any less sad when disasters happen but we
as individuals and societies need to take responsibility to be aware of
our environments and the potential risks. It's not salt water taffy,
roller coasters, and boats that are key to your happiness. It's family
and community. When are we going to learn that? Of course, when it's too
late.
Amen to that!
ReplyDeleteThanks for posting this Steveo, it is a wake up call for us all.