Who's going to pay for all of this? If you want money spent out of your pocket to continually rebuild in NO and Florida or California when the earthquake's come, that's YOUR business. But you can't take money out of my pocket to pay for that idiocy!
Look, if you want to build your home in an earthquake zone, don't ask me to subsidize your risk. If you loose your home, don't expect me to pay for it. Serves you right for living there! Same with NO, you want to live where there's going to a flood now and again, don't come crying to me when your home is swept away!
I say do not rebuild NO. If you have to have a city there, fill in the bowl and raise the level to 20-30 ft above sea level and build on that. And forget about public money to rebuild, the only thing the public should be respnsible for is infrastructure, roads, water, sewers and storm drains and that's it. Everything else should be left to private investment.
Otherwise your subsidizing stupid human behavior, which is not somthing the founding fathers ever intended! Your tax dollars should be spent on your behalf, not on the behalf of people living in a hurricane zone. If they can't afford to take those losses, they shouldn't live there either!
Forget about the culture and the food and the history, it's not my problem, and it's not yours either. If your money is going to be spent, let it be something worthwhile for you. Protecting against a foreign power, fine. Protecting against a decline in our standard of living, yes, that's something I want. Rebuilding a city below sea level in a river delta!? What are you, a MORON!?
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Who's going to pay for all of this? Who paid for rebuilding the Twin Towers? Who rebuilt both San Francisco after the 1906 earthquake and most of Florida after the last several hurricane hits it incurred? There is no line in the sand on these things where, after a set number of disasters, you say these latest victims are out of luck.
What criteria do you base people's decisions on where they want to live? That if a good job offer comes in for Los Angeles, you decline it because some day an earthquake may wipe out the area? People chose these areas to live in for the quality of life they seek, or economic reasons, or ambiance or perhaps as simple as they were born there and have connections.
Normally, what happens is the government provides low interest loans for people to rebuild, for businesses to restock and refurbish. Essentially, they provide hope, and let's include in your list of where public money should be spent on rebuilding better levees around New Orleans. River deltas certainly are risky to live in, but landfill is not an unreasonable idea for this area. There are cities worldwide that exist and have existed for centuries behind a levee system and/or canal system, including my own city of Sacramento, Amsterdam, Strasbourg, Venice, and Prague. Seattle was raised a full building floor over the original city site because of tidal flooding. The point is, all of these places have long lasting human connections that needed care to support a viable city, and they have all faced nature's fury at one time or another, some for centuries, yet they survive because the people who live there could not consider any alternative. New Orleans needs to survive as well, and one hurricane should not deter that.
And how costly, exactly, do you think it would be for a million people to relocate elsewhere? The likelihood of creating a welfare burden on other areas would overwhelm those communities and who do you think will be paying to maintain all those people relocating? There are costs incurred no matter which direction is taken. Who has jobs to hire hundreds of thousands of workers in the next three months? But put them to work rebuilding their lives and homes in New Orleans and I guarantee they would jump at that chance, because I know many people with ties to New Orleans are willing to do whatever it takes to rebuild their homes and businesses back there.
Is it a hazard? Of course. It's a hazard living in Philadelphia during a freezing winter that shuts down the entire region. We live in the grips of Mother Nature everywhere, so let's move the people out of Kansas and Oklahoma to avoid deaths and infrastructure damage from tornados, the people out of the south to avoid those hurricanes, the people all along the California coasts living in earthquake zones, and the people in the northeast who suffer from blizzards that leave hundreds frozen who can't afford heating oil.
Just saying "it is not your problem" is truly the stupidest thing anyone could say about this. Saying you would rather fight a useless war in Iraq, is that "protecting against a foreign power" that you apparently are more ecstatic about having your government pay for then helping the people of New Orleans start up their economy again? Paying into a huge jump in the welfare state in order to, "protect against a decline in our standard of living" for the deplaced you want to keep away from New Orleans by putting them all on welfare until jobs magically appear in San Antonio, Houston, Kansas City and elsewhere to accommodate all these workers?
We all have an interest in putting New Orleans back on track. Reclaiming the area has been an issue in New Orleans since 1690, as it will be for the next three hundred years, but bear in mind the location of New Orleans at the mouth of the Mississippi and near the Gulf, with the resources of the area nearby, makes this city way too important to magically "relocate" somewhere else.
So if we need to spend money on helping the people there reestablish this economy, it clearly is in the interest of the rest of America to do so. Moreso, I might add, then if Philadelphia burned down due to an Eagle tailgate party.
What kind of a chickenshit would even suggest such a thing?