Live updates: Brush fire burns in Pacific Palisades as Santa Ana winds blast Southern California - Live video at link

I hope they force all the LA refugees to stay within this shit hole state when they get displaced.

While I genuinely feel for any normal people fucked over by decades of bad policy and general shittification of California (and I only feel bad because I understand how hard it can be to move and they probably didn't choose to be born in California just like nobody would choose to be born in Sudan), the last thing any sane state nearby wants is these homeless and fag fucks to leech off their towns for the next 20 years.

Shuttle them all to San Francisco or some other already blighted city in Cali, nobody there will notice an extra four or five homeless tents per block on their way to their hipster coffee shop.


There's plenty of cities in California not on fire these people can be sheltered at that won't fuck up other states resources. California needs to handle their own with how often they harp about being one of the highest economy states.
 
The US has 2 types of Hydrants depending on where they are. Wet Hydrants and Dry Hydrants.

With Dry Hydrants the actual valve is several feet down on the level of the water main. The knob on top of the hydrant just turns a shaft that opens the valve below. You can shear the physical hydrant off and no water will come out. By design. These were designed for the cold weather states to prevent the hydrant from freezing in winter. And to prevent a broken hydrant from creating a massive pool of ice.

With Wet Hydrants the valve is at the base of the hydrant itself. So the only part that does not always have water is 2-3' of the fireplug itself that sits above ground. These are much cheaper. Easier to install and maintain. But are really only used for places that do not freeze. In theory Wet Hydrants should shear off just above the valve, preventing a geyser. In practice results may vary.

But that top head of the hydrant isn't really holding the Valve in place. Or rather it works the opposite of what you seem to be saying. If the top part of the hydrant is removed the valve will fail in a closed state. The top "penis head" of the hydrant is the solid brace that lets you push down on the valve mechanism with the screw shaft to hold it open.
But do crackheads know this?
 
Letting 3 fires in one county get above 10,000 acres would be a bad look even for Cal Fire.
Honestly with the winds they had today, there was next to nothing they could do to really slow things down. I doubt if plowing firebreaks through the communities would slow it given how easily its hopped Interstates. Nothing today was the firefighters fault. They were completely at the mercy of the wind and the water. Too much of one, practically none of the other.
 
Sad to report that The Bunny Museum has been lost. Thankfully its furry residents were able to be evacuated before it went up in flames.

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The cesspit known as Hollywood being spared while this harmless little museum wasn't is one of Nature's cruel jokes.
Praise the Lord that the owners and all of the animals made it out alive. I couldn’t stomach the thought of innocent bunnies and kitties being left behind.
 
I’m torn between fire cool and frankly this kind of damage sucks. But we’re past nothingburger stage to actual happening so it can quit now if it would like please. Is it just cope that “winds are dying down” or is there a chance of proper containment now.
 
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The worst thing Doug Walker ever did was give these coattail riders a platform to establish themselves.
Elon musk stated he will provide starlink service to LA from what I'm hearing. Which would be necessary since all utilities are basically burnt down.
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Doug Walker got blamed for both media literacy and He-man gay jokes. How soon until he gets blamed for LA being on fire with zero irony?
 
Mayor’s Absence Is Considered a Sign L.A. Underestimated Fire Risks
The New York Times (archive.ph)
By Soumya Karlamangla, Orlando Mayorquín, and Tim Arango
2025-01-09 05:51:41GMT
Some residents said Mayor Karen Bass should have canceled her trip to Ghana when weather warnings in Los Angeles grew increasingly dire.

bass.jpg
Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass, second left, and California Gov. Gavin Newsom, second right, get a briefing about an area damaged by the wildfire in the Pacific Palisades neighborhood of Los Angeles on Wednesday.Credit...Allison Dinner/EPA, via Shutterstock

When a series of dangerous, wind-driven fires broke out on Tuesday in the Los Angeles area, Mayor Karen Bass was on the other side of the globe, part of a delegation sent by President Biden to Ghana for the inauguration of its new president.

Ms. Bass, a former Democratic congresswoman who became mayor in late 2022, did not return to Los Angeles until Wednesday afternoon, by which point more than 1,000 homes had burned and 100,000 people across the region had been forced to flee from their homes.

The mayor’s absence has drawn criticism from some Angelenos. Many said there was insufficient warning from officials about the likelihood of devastating fires, even as weather forecasts predicted extreme danger this week.

By Thursday last week, the National Weather Service in Los Angeles had begun warning of “extreme fire weather conditions.” By Sunday, the warnings had become even more dire — “rapid fire growth and extreme behavior with any fire starts.”

But Mayor Bass posted her first warning on X about the wind storm on Monday, when she was already in Ghana. Her office did not send out a news release about fire risk until nearly 11 a.m. on Tuesday morning, after the blaze in Pacific Palisades had already broken out.

“There was zero preparation. There was zero thought here,” said Michael Gonzales, 47, whose home burned down in Pacific Palisades, a wealthy neighborhood that overlooks the Pacific Ocean. His family of five was camped out in a hotel in Santa Monica on Wednesday as they began figuring out where they will live.

Mr. Gonzales, a lawyer, said he believed Mayor Bass made a poor decision to remain overseas despite forecasters warning of the most dangerous fire conditions in more than a decade.

“It was an utter breakdown in leadership and it starts with the mayor’s office,” he said in an interview.

In her first news conference since returning to Los Angeles, Mayor Bass on Wednesday defended her administration when asked about criticisms of the city’s response to the fire. She said the disaster was the result of months of little rain and winds that had not been seen in the city for at least 14 years.

“We have to resist any, any effort to pull us apart,” she said.

Ms. Bass said that she returned home as quickly as she could after the fires tore through Pacific Palisades and other parts of Southern California.

“I took the fastest route back, which included being on a military plane,” she said.

Rick Caruso, a real estate developer who lost to Ms. Bass in the mayoral race in 2022, said that he had a team of private firefighters in Pacific Palisades on Tuesday night helping to protect a major outdoor retail space he owns, as well as some nearby homes. All night, he said, they were telling him that water was in short supply.

City officials confirmed that water tanks ran dry during the intense firefight early Wednesday in Pacific Palisades because demand surged to four times the normal rate for 15 hours. they system, they suggested, was not designed to supply so much water in such a short period.

“The lack of water in the hydrants, I don’t think there’s an excuse,” Mr. Caruso said. “This was very predictable,” he said, referring to the forecasts that predicted the devastating windstorm.

Mr. Caruso, who served two stints as president of the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, said that it will take to time to account for why firefighters struggled to get enough water to fight the fires.

“This is a massive failure of epic proportions,” he said. “To know the storm was coming and then to leave, and not rush back. Leadership matters and the first thing is to be present.”
 
you've got honest to god blue eyed americans that stuck out there, either because all their folk are buried there and they have parents to care for, or because they don't have family or friends elsewhere and can't afford to move
It’s me. I’m making the best of things but it does break my heart to watch my home get worse every year. There are so many beautiful places in California and it’s a shame they are being ruined by a cascade of bad choices and bad people. It doesn’t have to be like this.
Speaking of which, I’m expecting shit to get really fucking bad around LA even after the fires are put out. Stores had already been pulling out of their neighborhoods, muggings/thefts and violence was already part of everyday life, so how much more is all of that going to be after billions of dollars in shops and infrastructure just went up in ashes?
Yeah the real cost isn’t going to be tallied by tomorrow. This is going to have lasting consequences for years and years to come for all of California, be it financial or social or whatever. So many small businesses, family homes, all of it.

All right I polished off my bottle of Chardonnay and now I’m sad so I’ll sign off. Hopefully the judgement fire doesn’t make its way to me tonight.
 
Over the past summer, the media and intelligentsia spent a lot of time and effort trying to convince the public that a Black woman was capable of rising to the challenge of leading America.

Considering Kamala, Claudine Gay and Karen Bass (among many, many others), I'm not sure that Black women are capable of rising to the challenge of managing a McDonalds.


 
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