This is a pretty surprising image to see out of Sydney, where (apparently) you can lose your car to a flood while on top of a high bridge above other water:
This is a pretty surprising image to see out of Sydney, where (apparently) you can lose your car to a flood while on top of a high bridge above other water:
At Slate, a review of a book about the incredible scandal that is Alex Jones and the Sandy Hook "truther" movement. Just an appalling situation that it has taken so many years for the American system to deal with.
* Forgot to say during last week's flood event - doesn't anyone question the number of private pontoons that are allowed on the Brisbane river? I mean, the last big flood taught us that they need to be super secure or else they cause havoc downstream, but this time there seemed to be dozens nonetheless careening down the river.
* I couldn't believe some of the stories from Hertz in America, where they report a car stolen if a credit card is knocked back when someone rings up wanting an extension. Then years later, hapless renters can be arrested even when they know the card payment later went through and the car was returned. Just hopeless administration, probably worsened by having so many different states with different laws complicating matters further.
* You want to know about an academic who seems to be a one person grievance industry? (I think Greg Jericho, who I think is sensible on most things except trans matters, re-tweeted - them? - complaining about the ABC doing something apparently wrong when referring to drag and trans during the Gay Mardi Gras telecast). Here are some selection from their (I think that's right?) twitter account:
And yet, I still don't think the West is militarily weak and swooning for Putin and Christofascism is the way forward.
* Speaking as I was of the Brisbane River - it makes no sense whatsoever that my city, with its shallow, flood prone river, and big but shallow bay with one deep channel through it, should be being considered at all for a new defence base for nuclear submarines, as I heard on the radio this morning.
* Trump, being an idiot, all over again.
* Helen Dale, writing about the Ukraine war on 28 February, makes some bad calls:
We now know that not only does Nato lack the capacity to intervene militarily on Ukraine’s behalf, but it also can’t even impose effective economic sanctions. Germany is so dependent on Russian gas that, while Western powers work to suspend Russia’s participation in the SWIFT international banking system, Germany has won itself a special carve-out, otherwise it won’t be able to pay Gazprom and German grannies will turn into popsicles next time there’s a cold snap. ‘We are currently seeing the downsides of a sovereign nation constructing a barrel-shaped pipeline and then obligingly bending over it,’ Bond observes drily.She should stick to esoteric fiction.
Am I alone in this? When I see pictures of Russian owned "superyachts" that look like this:
my thoughts run to "why does anyone want to own something that looks a mini cruise ship anyway?"
I mean, they must cost a mint to operate (although maybe that can be charged to a company?), but seriously, who has that many family and friends that they can entertain on it and make it seem inhabited? I imagine most of the time they are far from fully occupied, and feel kind of empty and wasted.
And if you let people you don't know well take a holiday on them, as some sort of reward for hard work, or for sleezy deal making, don't you get problems with bad behaviour?
There are storms and heavy rain passing through Brisbane this morning, but it seems more like the "normal" fast moving storms...so far. Some big wind damage at Beerwah, north of Brisbane, they were saying on TV this morning, but without any images yet.
The news from Ukraine is sort of moving slowly now, it seems, making the doom scrolling feel a bit tedious. (Makes it sound like I'm demanding more disaster so I can be more engaged with twitter - sorry.)
Anyway, on the up side, even if it is sort of taking some pleasure in negatives: seems to me a lot of people are over Stan Grant's weird positioning into some sort of soft-ish left wing contrarian, willing to entertain the "it's the West's fault that they've gone all squishy liberal and can no longer understand salt of the Earth conservatives like Russians". Bernard Keane's been a strong critic of Grant and his fatuous writing:
Gray Connolly has copped a lot of flak for his SMH article too, which I didn't bother reading as I've already decided he way, way over-rates himself as a pretend historian. He's just too full of conservative Catholic biases to be taken seriously.
Oh, and I just looked at Twitter and see this idiot making a deeper idiot of himself:
Update: Bernard Keane mocks John Pilger as a Putin apologist, too. (And from the photo in the article, Pilger could now pass for the decrepit as John Laws now. Not a good look.)
Just noticed this tweet, which I would say is very effective (and super efficient) in explaining to the public that rail services in Brisbane (and elsewhere) are out for good reason.
At least (one of the) fridges got cleaned out. I'm pretty sure that if this hadn't happened, in 30 years time, my kids when dealing with the last of their parent's deceased estate would have have been throwing out egg whites in a plastic freezer bag from 2012.
Update: power's back. Yay. (And ancient frozen egg whites collected in the rubbish today.)
Graham Readfearn in The Guardian notes:
The Bureau of Meteorology has been checking the rainfall data from the floods in south-east Queensland, revealing a string of broken records and a stunning amount of rain.
In the six days from 23 to 28 February, at least 33 places recorded more than one metre of rain, including an astonishing 1.77 metres falling at Mount Glorious, just east of Wivenhoe Dam that helps reduce flooding in the city.
Parts of south-east Queensland and north-east New South Wales had at least 2.5 times their average rainfall for the month, with some areas getting five times the average.
In Brisbane, 792.8mm fell into the city rain gauge over the six days to 9am on 28 February, which is above the previous six-day record of 655.8mm set in January 1974.
For the first time ever, the city had three consecutive days when more than 200mm fell. Before last month, there had only been eight previous days when the city had seen more than 200mm in one day.
The BoM national manager of climate services, Dr Karl Braganza, said this meant the city had received almost 80% of its annual average rainfall in only six days.
In northern New South Wales, several places in the northern rivers region had daily totals above 500mm up to 9am on 28 February.
Braganza said preliminary analysis of rainfall in Lismore, which is currently inundated, suggested more rain had fallen in the town than the previous record in March 2017 when the remnants of Tropical Cyclone Debbie passed through.
As I've been noting for years - climate change and its effect on rain and floods was the massively disruptive and costly effect that was not discussed enough in early talk about climate change, and just imagine how much worse it may get with another .5 to 1 degree temperature rise.
It seems the estimate for the repair time for power to houses in my neighbourhood has stretched out to Friday! I know this happened to other houses in my area in the 2011 floods (5 to 7 days with no power), but my particular neighbour only lost it for one day. Hence we were not particularly worried when it first went off yesterday morning.
Now, a friend has lent us a generator. Noisy, smelly things they are. But I think the idea is to run them for a couple of hours to get the fridge cold, then turn it off for an hour and don't open the fridge. We have eskys and plenty of ice too. And a gas stove (yah).
Speaking of gas stoves, I know they are getting so much bad PR for their health effects now, but I'll put on my populist "it didn't affect me, so it can't be so bad" hat now and mention that I grew up in a house with town gas and therefore a gas stove top and oven, in a rather small three bedroom house in which I sometimes shared with older brothers who would smoke in bed. (!) I have now lived in a house for nearly 20 years with a gas stove top from bottle gas.
No one in my family (6 siblings, and parents) ever suffered asthma or any lung disease*. Neither of my kids (now adults) suffered asthma. Same with allergies to anything (which I mention because of asthma's connection to allergy.)
Is it because I live in a warm climate, where kitchen windows are nearly always open during cooking? But my life experience is not consistent with "gas is really bad for health".
Anyway, back to the floods. This report concentrated mostly on suburbs on my side of town, so I'll put it here.
The estimate of the number of houses affected seems to be about 15,000 to 20,000.
But the Lismore flood is more remarkable - highest known historical flood exceeded by 2m! I mean, that's really incredible.
* Whoops - I forgot that I had included both parents in that explanation, but my father did die of lung cancer. However, he was a life long smoker who gave up only a few years before the cancer was diagnosed. All of my brothers eventually gave up smoking - I think by their 40's at the latest.
By the way, Morrison did turn up in Brisbane yesterday afternoon, and did an underwhelming TV appearance. I think everyone seeing it probably thought "you're only here because of Hawaii." Amusingly, I didn't see his visit even covered on the evening news, which I'm sure must have irritated his minders a lot.
I'm sick of having to constantly delete Graeme Bird's anti-Semitic conspiracy comments, which are at full blown fever level due to the situation in Ukraine.
So all comments are going into moderation for now.