Disaster "Mass casualty incident" declared after Key Bridge in Baltimore collapses

No article yet as this just happened, but could be big. One of the largest bridges in the world according to Wikipedia.


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In Navy bootcamp we had one nigger recruit who could not swim to save his life. He was taking swim classes but had failed the test twice and had one more chance to take the test and pass. This nigger was so retarded he asked me to go take his third and final swim test for him. He literally thought the instructors were so stupid they would not realize the guy answering to Leroy Jefferson had suddenly turned lily white over night.

In Navy bootcamp, I took the swim test to qualify for the Navy Diver program, and I made the mistake of showing off by doing it underwater and holding my breath.

My company commander saw my swimming skillz fu, and he decided that I was going to be the guy who helped the half a dozen niggers in the company who literally couldn't swim to save their own lives to pass the final swim test.

I learned real quick to stay well away from niggers in a pool, because they will latch a death grip on any white savior that gets too close to them when they're sinking like stones.

I can remember starting off with them in the shallow end of the pool and having them put their faces in the water and blow bubbles like they were 6 year olds.

In the end, two of them refused to even try the swim, and they washed out. Four of them(just barely) made it, and one of them did it by basically crawling along the bottom of the pool for the last 20 feet or so.
 
In Navy bootcamp we had one nigger recruit who could not swim to save his life. He was taking swim classes but had failed the test twice and had one more chance to take the test and pass. This nigger was so retarded he asked me to go take his third and final swim test for him. He literally thought the instructors were so stupid they would not realize the guy answering to Leroy Jefferson had suddenly turned lily white over night.
Things might have changed now. But during the height of War on Terror recruiting you could take almost any Navy or Coast Guard basic swim test while wearing a life preserver. There were hordes of niggers who were working on ships who could not tread water for even a single second without panicking. And they would be passed right through the same way someone from a college water polo team would be.
 
We did not get life vests but part of the test involved removing your dungarees and using them as an improvised flotation device.
 
I was just wondering after events like this how does the insurance market respond? I assume they are all intertwined and something this big probably impacts general insurance prices like cars and property in order to recoup costs.
 
I can't believe this managed to get upto 88 pages. Not even the local people here seem to care that much anymore.

I was just wondering after events like this how does the insurance market respond? I assume they are all intertwined and something this big probably impacts general insurance prices like cars and property in order to recoup costs.
I think the shipping industry has it's own insurance companies. I doubt state State Farm or Allstate handles it.
 
Baltimore’s economy has been humming. Then a bridge collapsed (lite) (archive)

By Bryan Mena, CNN
Tue April 2, 2024

The tragic collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge last week claiming the lives of construction workers who were all Hispanic has rattled the Baltimore region to its core.

As the local community begins the difficult work needed to return to some sense of normality, experts say that, at the very least, the local economy will likely withstand the effects of the bridge’s collapse.

The collapse will indeed have some economic impact, but it will likely be limited. Baltimore’s regional economy has a lot going for it such as low unemployment and low inflation.

The Port of Baltimore is a key economic engine, employing tens of thousands, but it is currently immobilized with debris littering the Patapsco River. Officials have said they’re tapping into billions in emergency federal dollars to remove the wreckage to allow ship traffic and rebuild the bridge as quickly as possible. Insurers are also stepping in to cover costs.

“Baltimore County and the city have very high credit ratings, which means they have broad, diverse and strong tax bases that would be resilient to one-time shocks like this,” Orlie Prince, a senior vice president and manager at Moody’s Ratings, told CNN.

The firm assesses the creditworthiness of local governments, which takes into account the economy’s overall health, and stated in a recent analysis that “a successful resumption of port activity in coming weeks, combined with substantial federal funding for an eventual bridge replacement, will reduce risk of long-term damage.”

Here’s a snapshot of Baltimore’s regional economy and why it’ll be likely spared from an economic disaster.

Low unemployment​

The Baltimore metropolitan area, which encompasses the nearby cities of Columbia and Towson, registered a low 2.8% unemployment rate in January, according to Labor Department data.

That’s well below the national rate of 3.9% in February and ranks 43rd out of 389 regions across the country with more than one million residents. It’s lower than in other eastern US cities such as Boston, Orlando, and Atlanta and the same as Washington D.C.’s.

The region’s job market is diverse, powered by health care, education, financial services and government. The Port of Baltimore is also a big source of jobs in the region, accounting for about 19,970 direct jobs, or 1.4% of total nonfarm employment in the greater metro area, according to a Moody’s analysis.

The fate of those jobs is unclear at this point, but they probably won’t disappear permanently. The port will eventually reopen and there are other employers in the area doing similar work with similar jobs, so those workers could also easily find new employment if necessary.

“While the port is closed and debris is getting cleared up, you still have Tradepoint Atlantic, which is a private port facility that’s still open and there are companies in the area like Amazon which are looking to expand and fast track their plans to develop warehousing there as well,” Matt Jaffe, an analyst at Moody’s, told CNN.

“I think the job market is definitely resilient,” Jaffe said.

Low inflation​

The US economy is still dealing with high inflation, but that’s not much of a problem for the Baltimore metro. Consumer prices in the region were up just 1.7% in February from a year earlier, according to the latest Consumer Price Index data. That’s much lower than the national rate of 3.2% that month and ranks among the lowest of the 23 metro areas with more than 2.5 million residents for which the Labor Department publishes inflation data, according to a CNN analysis.

That’s also below the Federal Reserve’s target for its preferred inflation gauge, the Personal Consumption Expenditures price index.

Inflation in Baltimore slowed dramatically last year from April to June, falling to a 2.8% annual rise from April’s 5.3%. Food and beverage prices fell 0.6% during that two-month period while the energy index saw an even steeper drop of 1.8%.

“Inflation continues to be lower in Baltimore than the national average, so the cost of living is cheaper here than elsewhere in the state and in the US as a whole and I think that that only helps make Baltimore an attractive city to call home,” Christina DePasquale, an associate professor of practice at Johns Hopkins Carey Business School, told CNN.

Like across the country, rising energy prices have recently pushed up overall inflation in the Baltimore metro.

Decent housing market​

Baltimore’s housing market is relatively decent. The median price for a home in the Baltimore metro was $383,900 in the fourth quarter of 2023, according to the National Association of Realtors. That’s just slightly below the national median price, which was $384,500 in February, NAR reported last month.

However, housing affordability nationwide became strained as the Fed began to jack up interest rates two years ago in a bid to combat the highest inflation in decades. The Fed doesn’t set mortgage rates, but its rate decisions do influence them.

The average 30-year fixed mortgage rate reached a two-decade high of 7.79% in late October, according to Freddie Mac, and the latest data show that it’s currently at 6.79%, but that’s higher than anything seen from 2008 to 2022.

Still, the monthly-mortgage-payment-to-income ratio and the median-home-price-to-income ratio were lower in Baltimore last year than in the nation as a whole, according to NAR’s analysis of the metro’s housing market.

The 12-month sum of building permits for one housing unit through December stood at 3,679, which was “below the long-term average,” but “construction is on the rise relative to [the prior] year, suggesting that the local inventory has stabilized,” the NAR report said.
 
Baltimore’s housing market is relatively decent. The median price for a home in the Baltimore metro was $383,900 in the fourth quarter of 2023

You just need a full military plate carrier assembly and ballistic helmet to get your mail!

Low unemployment​

The Baltimore metropolitan area, which encompasses the nearby cities of Columbia and Towson, registered a low 2.8% unemployment rate in January,
Yeah, all the leeches have been on gibs for generations, so of course they're not looking for a job and not counted.
 
Holy fuck imagine paying $400k and still being in Baltimore.

In other news they have an “alternate channel” open for critical ships - lol they go under the non collapsed part of the bridge.

They released a video that I’m too lazy to find but it does show how the perspective in these recordings is all sorts of fucky.
 
I was just wondering after events like this how does the insurance market respond? I assume they are all intertwined and something this big probably impacts general insurance prices like cars and property in order to recoup costs.
Should be fine. The various claims will be spread around a great deal, the ship, the vehicles, the life insurance policies if any. The bridge won't factor into that, the guv'mint pays for that.

When a claim is too much for an insurer it kicks up to their insurers, the 'reinsurance market'. This is where everything does get mixed together into risk pools that are huge and easy to manage risk for. Those guys getting in trouble is rare. That the whole industry has been in trouble at least twice in the past 25 years is highly unusual (9/11 and 2008, with a couple minor murmurs around big hurricanes and stuff).
Holy fuck imagine paying $400k and still being in Baltimore.

In other news they have an “alternate channel” open for critical ships - lol they go under the non collapsed part of the bridge.

They released a video that I’m too lazy to find but it does show how the perspective in these recordings is all sorts of fucky.
The perspective is had enough to make out that the first time I saw the video I thought the ship was going the other way.
 
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MENA, really? A bit on the nose there, casting. Generican casting has gotten lazy.

Leaked documents show Baltimore high schoolers perform math, reading at grade school level​

80% of Baltimore high schoolers are braindead. Baltimore has such a great future!
 
Things might have changed now. But during the height of War on Terror recruiting you could take almost any Navy or Coast Guard basic swim test while wearing a life preserver. There were hordes of niggers who were working on ships who could not tread water for even a single second without panicking. And they would be passed right through the same way someone from a college water polo team would be.
Up through WW2 the Imperial Japanese Navy never bothered to institute a swimming test for recruits. Viewing it as "planning for failure".
 
Boeing should never have been allowed to remove two of the three (no longer redundant) sensors it depended on for attitude control. Fuck Boeing.
They weren't removed, they didn't exist in the first place. They took a sensor that was only meant for advisory input (like beeping at you) and made it flight critical. They way they achieved this was by saying 'nuh-uh, it just augments flying characteristics, so its not critical' and then it flew multiple planes into the ground.
 
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