Flooding

Riddlewire

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Since pretty much all of our land is under water at the moment and I won't be doing any work for a while, I figured I'd let people know what is going on here in the lower Mississippi River Valley.
A triple dose of flood waters (rain, then snow, now rain again) is threatening most of the lands along the Mississippi River from Missouri down to the Gulf. Most people outside this area think "So what? Those dumb rednecks shouldn't live in a flood zone!". Yeah, maybe so. But this fascinating article suggests that our problems could become everyone's problem under certain conditions.


Mississippi Rising: Apocalypse Now?

But the real threat posed by this historic, gathering flood may well lie several hundred miles to the south, where the Mississippi crosses the Louisiana border. There, as the Corps well knows but dare not discuss, this historic flood threatens to overwhelm one of the frailest defenses industrial humanity has offered to preserve its profits from the immutable processes of nature. This flood has the potential to be a mortal blow to the economy of the United States, and outside the Corp of Engineers virtually no one knows why.
There is an event coming to the Deep South that is as inevitable, and as imminent in geologic time, and as unpredictable in human time, and as dangerous to human life and enterprise, as are the Great California Earthquakes. It is as easy to say as it is hard to imagine: the Mississippi River is going to change course, and when it does will reach the sea 65 miles west of New Orleans, at Morgan City.
If the river succeeded in doing what it had always done, it would leave high and dry the Port of New Orleans, devastate the city's economy as well as that of Baton Rouge, cut off nearly 20 per cent of the country's oil imports and 16 per cent of the nation's fisheries harvest, and choke off a major outlet for U.S. Agricultural exports. It would leave high and dry a chain of refineries and factories stretching from Baton Rouge to New Orleans that depend for their existence on the barges and the fresh water that the river wants to give to the Atchafalaya.
The river will win this war, and will go to Morgan City, and bring down the Control Structures and with them the economy of the United States. As a study conducted by the Water Resources Research Institute, at Louisiana State University, concluded: "It could happen next year, during the next decade, or sometime in the next thirty or forty years. But the final outcome is simply a matter of time and it is only prudent to prepare for it."Â￾

Yeah, that's a lot of reading to do. It's easier just to click on the link and read it at the website (and see the pics). And make sure to click on the 'Update' at the bottom. That's where you'll read this little interesting tidbit:
Yesterday, a Federal judge ruled that the Corps can go ahead with its plans to blow the levee at Birds Point, Missouri, in order to draw off surplus river water into a floodway that was prepared for that purpose pursuant to the 1928 legislation. But that floodway is now 130,000 acres of prime Missouri farmland. Although the purpose of using the floodway is to reduce pressure on the entire, gargantuan system of levees downstream all the way to the Gulf, Missourians have seized on the idea that it would benefit Cairo, Illinois, just upstream from Bird Point. The politicians have turned it into a state vs. state, farm vs. city, local vs. Washington kind of fight, with the extra garnish that the population of Cairo is mostly black, and Missouri farmers are mostly not.
 

Colonel_Reb

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I was thinking the same thing about Cairo being mostly black. Right now I'm waiting to see if I'm needed to help move things back in the Mississippi Delta.The water in some smaller rivers there is less than a foot from '91 flood levels, which are the highest since '37. This same debate over what to flood or keep from flooding is going on there and it seems the big farmers have won out over the average residents, as a lot of people already have flooded homes.
 

Michael

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Rivers move from time to time so people must adjust, and Whites historically have been great at adjusting to chancing conditions. Docks, refineries, fishing boats, etc would need to be move or built anew to reflect changing conditions.In a White nation, it would take a year or two and be back to normal. In a multicultural empire, lawsuits will block moving or building anew. The government will order the river to go back to its' original course and a fortune is spend to force the change. Yet nature will prevail.

The Whites will leave, the nonwhites will continue to pickup government checks, and a fortune will be spent as badly need resources and infrastructure are lost or not built and the Empire is weaken. When the Empire falls the ruins will be abandon to sands of time.
 

DixieDestroyer

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La. spillway to open, flooding Cajun country

By MARY FOSTER and HOLBROOK MOHR, Associated Press Mary Foster And Holbrook Mohr, Associated Press â€" 2 mins ago

LAKE PROVIDENCE, La. â€" In an agonizing trade-off, Army engineers said they will open a key spillway along the bulging Mississippi River as early as Saturday and inundate thousands of homes and farms in parts of Louisiana's Cajun country to avert a potentially bigger disaster in Baton Rouge and New Orleans.

About 25,000 people and 11,000 structures could be in harm's way when the gates on the Morganza spillway are unlocked for the first time in 38 years.

"Protecting lives is the No. 1 priority," Army Corps of Engineers Maj. Gen. Michael Walsh said aboard a boat from the river at Vicksburg, Miss., hours before the decision was made to open the spillway.

The opening will release a torrent that could submerge about 3,000 square miles under as much as 25 feet of water in some areas but take the pressure off the downstream levees protecting New Orleans, Baton Rouge and the numerous oil refineries and chemical plants along the lower reaches of the Mississippi.

Engineers feared that weeks of pressure on the levees could cause them to fail, swamping New Orleans under as much as 20 feet of water in a disaster that would have been much worse than Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

Instead, the water will flow 20 miles south into the Atchafalaya Basin. From there it will roll on to Morgan City, an oil-and-seafood hub and a community of 12,000, and then eventually into the Gulf of Mexico, flooding swamps and croplands.

The corps said it will open the gates when the river's flow rate reaches 1.5 million cubic feet per second and is predicted to keep rising, which is expected sometime Saturday. Just north of the spillway at Red River Landing, the river had reached that flow rate, according to the National Weather Service.

Some people living in the threatened stretch of countryside â€" an area known for small farms, fish camps and a drawling French dialect â€" have already started fleeing for higher ground.

Sheriffs and National Guardsmen will warn people in a door-to-door sweep through the area, Gov. Bobby Jindal said. Shelters are ready to accept up to 4,800 evacuees, the governor said.

"Now's the time to evacuate," Jindal said. "Now's the time for our people to execute their plans. That water's coming."

The Army Corps of Engineers employed a similar cities-first strategy earlier this month when it blew up a levee in Missouri â€" inundating an estimated 200 square miles of farmland and damaging or destroying about 100 homes â€" to take the pressure off the levees protecting the town of Cairo, Ill., population 2,800.

This intentional flood is more controlled, however, and residents are warned by the corps each year in written letters, reminding them of the possibility of opening the spillway.

Meanwhile, with crop prices soaring, farmers along the lower Mississippi had been expecting a big year. But now many are facing ruin, with floodwaters swallowing up corn, cotton, rice and soybean fields.

In far northeastern Louisiana, where Tap Parker and about 50 other farmers filled and stacked massive sandbags along an old levee to no avail. The Mississippi flowed over the top Thursday, and nearly 19 square miles of soybeans and corn, known in the industry as "green gold," was lost.

"This was supposed to be our good year. We had a chance to really catch up. Now we're scrambling to break even," said Parker, who has been farming since 1985.

Cotton prices are up 86 percent from a year ago, and corn â€" which is feed for livestock, a major ingredient in cereals and soft drinks, and the raw material used to produce ethanol â€" is up 80 percent. Soybeans have risen 39 percent. The increase is attributed, in part, to worldwide demand, crop-damaging weather elsewhere and rising production of ethanol.

While the Mississippi River flooding has not had any immediate impact on prices in the supermarket, the long-term effects are still unknown. A full damage assessment can't be made until the water has receded in many places.

Some of the estimates have been dire, though.

More than 1,500 square miles of farmland in Arkansas, which produces about half of the nation's rice, have been swamped over the past few weeks. In Missouri, where a levee was intentionally blown open to ease the flood threat in the town of Cairo, Ill., more than 200 square miles of croplands were submerged, damage that will probably exceed $100 million. More than 2,100 square miles could flood in Mississippi.

When the water level goes down â€" and that could take many weeks in some places â€" farmers can expect to find the soil washed away or their fields covered with sand. Some will probably replant on the soggy soil, but they will be behind their normal growing schedule, which could hurt yields.

Many farmers have crop insurance, but it won't be enough to cover their losses. And it won't even come close to what they could have expected with a bumper crop.

"I might get enough money from insurance to take us to a movie, but it better be dollar night," said Karsten Simrall, who lives in Redwood, Miss.

Simrall's family has farmed the low-lying fields in Redwood for five generations and has been fighting floods for years, but it's never been this bad. And the river is not expected to crest here until around Tuesday.

"How the hell do you recoup all these losses?" he said. "You just wait. It's in God's hands."

The river's rise may also force the closing of the river to shipping, from Baton Rouge to the mouth of the Mississippi, as early as next week. That would cause grain barges from the heartland to stack up along with other commodities.

If the portion is closed, the U.S. economy could lose hundreds of millions of dollars a day. In 2008, a 100-mile stretch of the river was closed for six days after a tugboat collided with a tanker, spilling about 500,000 gallons of fuel. The Port of New Orleans estimated the shutdown cost the economy up to $275 million a day.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/us_mississippi_river_flooding

Edited by: DixieDestroyer
 

Jimmy Chitwood

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this post could've been added in a number of different threads, so i hope Riddlewire doesn't mind me using his ... i'll only post a brief excerpt, and since it's from Lew Rockwell's site, there aren't any of the abundant race-related horror stories on the list. but those that did make it are certainly telling in the silence coming from the "real" news folks.

12 Things the Mainstream Media Is Being Strangely Quiet About Right Now

#1 The crisis at the Fort Calhoun nuclear facility in Nebraska has received almost no attention in the national mainstream media.


Back on June 7th, there was a fire at Fort Calhoun. The official story is that the fire was in an electrical switchgear room at the plant. The facility lost power to a pump that cools the spent fuel pool for approximately 90 minutes. According to the Omaha Public Power District, the fire was quickly extinguished and no radioactive material was released.


The following sequence of events is directly from the Omaha Public Power District website....
<UL>
<LI>There was no such imminent danger with the Fort Calhoun Station spent-fuel pool.
<LI>Due to a fire in an electrical switchgear room at FCS on the morning of June 7, the plant temporarily lost power to a pump that cools the spent-fuel pool.
<LI>The fire-suppression system in that switchgear room operated as designed, extinguishing the fire quickly.
<LI>FCS plant operators switched the spent-fuel pool cooling system to an installed backup pump about 90 minutes after the loss of power.
<LI>During the interruption of cooling, temperature of the pool increased a few degrees, but the pool was never in danger of boiling.
<LI>Due to this situation, FCS declared an Alert at about 9:40 a.m. on June 7.
<LI>An alert is the second-least-serious of four emergency classifications established by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
<LI>At about 1:15 p.m. on June 7, FCS operators declared they had taken all appropriate measures to safely return to the previously declared Notification of Unusual Event emergency classification. (See first item above.) </LI>[/list]


But the crisis at Fort Calhoun is not over. Right now, the nuclear facility at Fort Calhoun is essentially an island. It is surrounded by rising flood waters from the Missouri River.


Officials claim that there is no danger and that they are prepared for the river to rise another ten feet.


The Cooper Nuclear Station in Brownville, Nebraska is also being threatened by rising flood waters. A "Notification of Unusual Event" was declared at Cooper Nuclear Station this morning at 4:02. This notification was issued because the Missouri River's water level reached 42.5 feet.


Right now the facility is operating normally and officials don't expect a crisis.


But considering what has been going on at Fukushima, it would be nice if we could have gotten a lot more coverage of these events by the mainstream media.
 

Riddlewire

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Another white community to be destroyed by flooding, another bout of disregard by our globalist, minority-loving government.

Disastrous. Unstoppable. Historic. Unprecedented Flooding in Minot, ND.


(Well, at the moment the Minot local news website is down, so I can't retrieve any more links.)

Minot, ND., called "The Best Place to Raise a Family" in 2010, population 40,000 (93% white) will be heavily damaged by flooding of the Souris River. Many homes will be lost. Lives will be displaced. Fortunes destroyed.
But don't worry, Kanye West assures me that George Bush hates black people.

Edit: Addendum.

Some still call it a flood fight. It isn't.

Minot was a city in full retreat Tuesday. Many Minoters were moving as many possessions as possible out of homes, apartments and businesses through snarled traffic and muddy streets. Others surrendered, resigned to accept whatever emotional pain and physical damage the relentless Souris River chooses to inflict. All indications are it will be substantial.

"What I see right now is probably the most devastating in terms of the number of people directly impacted and what it will do to damage homes as water begins to overtop the levees and fill in behind," said Maj. Gen. David Sprynczynatyk, North Dakota National Guard, during a late Tuesday afternoon press conference at City Hall.

Sprynczynatyk has been involved in flood fighting for 40 years.

"I think this is going to be tough in terms of impact to the community as a whole, for Minot, Ward County and communities all up and down the river," added Sprynczynatyk.

The volume pouring down the Souris River Valley will prove to be an enormous test for Lake Darling Dam, where release are scheduled to hit 15,000 cfs by Thursday, generally considered more than enough to deliver a toppling blow to Minot and other points on the river. Sarcastically, the Souris in on target to deliver a follow-up knockout punch a few hours later.

"The forecast for flows have gone up for Lake Darling," said Schlag. "Now you are looking at roughly a 20,000 cfs discharge."

Emotionally drained Minoters looking to the future, wondering when they can return to their homes, may be in for a long wait.

LinkEdited by: Riddlewire
 

FootballDad

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Flooding on the Missouri River in Nebraska, Iowa, Kansas, and Missouri is reaching epic proportions as well. The saddest part however is that it was all preventable. The system of dams in the upper river system were designed to prevent events just like this, but over the last couple of decades, "environmental concerns" have taken precedence. Things such as wetlands, and the environmental-wackos desire to return the river to its "natural state" have precipitated this catastrophe.

Here is a well written article that details some of the changes politically and in the Army Corps of Engineers that have brought this calamity on the folks downstream, who are AT LEAST 90% white. Of course we KNOW that Obama hates white folks, and we don't care what Kanye West thinks
smiley2.gif
Edited by: FootballDad
 

Jack Lambert

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North and South Dakota are pretty seriously affected by the flooding as well right now. I'm in North Dakota right now, and I can tell you it's pretty bad.
 

FootballDad

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I live about 1/2 mile from the Missouri River. Fortunately, the town I live in is built on a bluff, so we're a good 80 feet above the river, but the "river bottoms" areas east and west are already starting to inundate, and the really high water isn't due for a couple of weeks. If the greenies had their way, however, mankind would be eradicated (except for them and their beneficence) and wonderful nature would take over.
 

Jimmy Chitwood

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an update on Minot, ND ... and it's not good news.

Official: Minot bracing for a 'Noah flood'

an excerpt is below:
Published: June 24, 2011 at 9:06 AM

<DIV style="BORDER-BOTTOM: medium none; TEXT-ALIGN: left; BORDER-LEFT: medium none; : transparent; COLOR: #000000; OVERFLOW: ; BORDER-TOP: medium none; BORDER-RIGHT: medium none; TEXT-DECORATION: none">


Minot, N.D., is bracing for a flood of historic proportions -- a "Noah flood" -- with more than than 5,000 homes expected to be inundated, officials said.


Eleven-thousand of the city's 40,888 residents had already been evacuated the Dakota Farmer reported Friday.


Authorities said the flooding in Minot likely will be far worse than had been predicted, with the Souris River topping a 130-year-old record by more than 8 feet.


"This'll be historic," National Weather Service meteorologist Harlyn Wetzel in Bismarck, N.D., told The Wall Street Journal.


"This is a Noah flood -- as in big, large, historic," U.S. Army Corps of Engineers district engineering Chief Michael Bart told The New York Times.


The river was expected to rise far higher and faster than first forecast, cresting as high as 1,565 feet above sea level, washing 2 to 3 more feet of river water over the city ...
 

Jimmy Chitwood

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FootballDad

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Like a great majority of our government, the Army Corps of Engineers is flooded with leftists. My signature has never felt more relevant.
 

Riddlewire

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Should I change the name of this thread to "Disasters"?

Nuclear weapons lab closes due to fire danger

LOS ALAMOS, N.M., June 28 (Reuters) - New Mexico fire managers scrambled on Tuesday to reinforce crews battling a third day against an out-of-control blaze at the edge of one of the nation's top nuclear weapons production centers.

The fire's leading edge burned to within a few miles (kilometres) of a dump site where some 20,000 barrels of plutonium-contaminated waste is stored at the Los Alamos National Laboratory, fire officials said.

Wow. That's a lot of potential (and actual, in Japan) Nuclear disasters all occuring really close together. If I didn't know any better, I'd say that some group wants to force the whole planet into some form of "green socialism" by creating a bunch of nuclear disasters that "require a fundamental transformation of our society".

I saw the stuff about Soros earlier on ATS. I'm pretty sure he's Satan's primary agent on Earth.
 

Jimmy Chitwood

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this isn't directly related to flooding, although Minot is mentioned. however, it does deal withour "benevolent" government taking control of farmland which has alreadybeen documented/discussed in this thread ... so i hope you don't mind me posting this here, Riddlewire.
[tube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_juUVKKBw-k[/tube]
 
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