It's how you rook, you know.
The LA Times doesn't lose its cool when reporting the news, but Drudge does.
More than 1,100 homes, businesses and other buildings have burned and at least five people are dead in wildfires scorching communities across Los Angeles County, making this one of the most destructive firestorms to hit the region in memory.
Always, always, always read the sources.
From the Los Angeles Times here:
“There’s no water in the fire hydrants,” Caruso said. “The firefighters are there [in the neighborhood], and there’s nothing they can do — we’ve got neighborhoods burning, homes burning, and businesses burning. ... It should never happen.”
A spokesman for the Department of Water and Power acknowledged reports of diminished water flow from hydrants but did not have details on the number of hydrants without water or the scale of the issue.
In a statement, the DWP said water crews were working in the neighborhood “to ensure the availability of water supplies.”
“This area is served by water tanks and close coordination is underway to continue supplying the area,” the DWP said in its statement.
Providing basic fire fighting resources is a bare minimum function of local government, at which this very wealthy community is obviously failing, mirroring California government's overall statewide failure to reduce wildfires.
State Farm stopped insuring roughly 30,000 homes in California in the summer of 2024, in part due to the danger to its business there from catastrophic fires in communities where multi-million dollar homes are common, and too commonly go up in smoke.
You'd cut your losses, too, if you suspected the locals had become as hopelessly bad as the one party state under Gavin Newsom.
Look! Over there! A deer!
Story here.
Britain, Starmer, England: 14, 15, 20. H-1B nowhere to be found.
Experts say high food prices are here to stay. Here’s why
“Once food price goes up, it tends to stay up,” said Claudia Sahm, a chief economist at New Century Advisors. “The inflation may come back down, so you don’t see the big price increases. But outside of widespread depression, we don’t tend to see prices falling across the board.”
Sahm exaggerates because she knows there is almost no likelihood of real food price declines coming, but it wouldn't take a depression.
The last time we had actual food price deflation, on a sustained basis, was in the 1950s, with 1959 being the last time at -1.6%.
But yes, the biggest declines come during depressions, which are hardly desirable for the overall damage they do.
In 1921 this index hit -24%; in 1931 -17.5% and 1932 -16.8%.
But what good are low prices when you don't have a job? You'll still have to make those lard and dandelion sandwiches to get by because bologna will still be too expensive.
The real Adrian Dittmann: An Elon Musk fan in Fiji tricks the world
Did Elon Musk Use His Burner Account to Win MAGA Immigration Feud?
Who Is Adrian Dittmann? Why Some X Users Are Convinced It's Elon Musk
Thanks to this prick.
I can still remember the many accounts which claimed how outraged they were that they now had to pay to keep their verification blue check marks, but now they all pay.
So, non-paying accounts will soon experience more of being unable to reply because everyone will fall in line, effectively making the platform the little toddler's echo chamber.
Oh yeah, and he wants nothing but happy talk, too.