Do I need more, Mr. Agitatedly Typing?mainejeff wrote:Is that all you've got?CID1990 wrote:
The only thing agitated is your spelling.
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Do I need more, Mr. Agitatedly Typing?mainejeff wrote:Is that all you've got?CID1990 wrote:
The only thing agitated is your spelling.
Can't help those who don't want to help themselves.Gil Dobie wrote:
Yeah, rebuild that power grid yourselves, you buncha bums!AZGrizFan wrote:Can't help those who don't want to help themselves.Gil Dobie wrote:
Well I was speaking specifically to the first part, but sure if you want to go there. Rebuild the power grid yourselves, you're so goddamned certain you want your independence. There ya go.Grizalltheway wrote:Yeah, rebuild that power grid yourselves, you buncha bums!AZGrizFan wrote:
Can't help those who don't want to help themselves.
The majority of them want statehood, not independence.AZGrizFan wrote:Well I was speaking specifically to the first part, but sure if you want to go there. Rebuild the power grid yourselves, you're so goddamned certain you want your independence. There ya go.Grizalltheway wrote: Yeah, rebuild that power grid yourselves, you buncha bums!
Air Drops....very effective.Pwns wrote:If only it were as easy to get relief supplies to an island country with schit roads and infrastructure as it is to move troops within the mainland.
I'm sure decades of corruption at Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority certainly had nothing to do with their problems...nothing whatsoever.Grizalltheway wrote:Yeah, rebuild that power grid yourselves, you buncha bums!AZGrizFan wrote:
Can't help those who don't want to help themselves.
SAN JUAN, PUERTO RICO —
Individuals long familiar with the inner workings of Puerto Rico's publicly owned power authority say it should come as no surprise that the island was left entirely without electric power by Hurricane Maria or that, more than two months later, more than half its residents are still without electricity.
The late September storm hit the U.S. territory with unprecedented strength, leveling buildings and even whole forests with winds in excess of 250 kilometers per hour (155 mph). But former and current officials of the Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority (PREPA) say a decades-long culture of neglect and corruption had left the system unnecessarily vulnerable to Maria.
Skjellyfetti wrote:
At least we didn't accept free blankets that were from smallpox victims......Chizzang wrote:
Exactly, protect America not PRGrizalltheway wrote:Yeah, rebuild that power grid yourselves, you buncha bums!AZGrizFan wrote:
Can't help those who don't want to help themselves.
Chizzang wrote:
It's a perfectly relevant observation89Hen wrote:Chizzang wrote: