Anonymous wrote:Forgot to add that parts of NOLA are already flooding today.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:New Orleans is incredibly vulnerable and will keep flooding over and over and over again. Honestly I think we need to stop rebuilding and accept reality.
The reality that the city is 20ft below sea level, and surrounded by tidal waters? That reality?
/quote]
I don’t think it’s quite 20 feet, but yeah. It’s really stupid to keep putting money into rebuilding parts of the city that will just flood again in a few years.
Yup. Also, lower Manhattan. Let's just abandon it. Right?
Anonymous wrote:
It's not the winds that will be the problem. It's like what happened in Houston . . . the amount of rain is the issue and it's already started. This is part of climate change.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It's not the winds that will be the problem. It's like what happened in Houston . . . the amount of rain is the issue and it's already started. This is part of climate change.
Check real graphs that date back into the 1800s, not truncated ‘newsy’ ones
Anonymous wrote:
It's not the winds that will be the problem. It's like what happened in Houston . . . the amount of rain is the issue and it's already started. This is part of climate change.
Anonymous wrote:
It's not the winds that will be the problem. It's like what happened in Houston . . . the amount of rain is the issue and it's already started. This is part of climate change.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:New Orleans is incredibly vulnerable and will keep flooding over and over and over again. Honestly I think we need to stop rebuilding and accept reality.
The reality that the city is 20ft below sea level, and surrounded by tidal waters? That reality?
I don’t think it’s quite 20 feet, but yeah. It’s really stupid to keep putting money into rebuilding parts of the city that will just flood again in a few years.