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Postcards: No One's Coming to Save Us
Nearly a year after Hurricane Ian, Ft. Myers Beach still looks like a bomb hit it.
Dear Fellow Expat:
Fort Myers Beach sits five miles from my home.
Last year, the beach town suffered a direct hit from Hurricane Ian.
A nine-foot sea wall pushed through the entire area, wiping out buildings and taking innocent lives. And even now, it’s fueling a desperate sale of property on one of the most beautiful beaches in Florida.
Drive past it now - it still looks like a hurricane hit last week.
Piles of rubble are still scattered across the landscape.
“For Sale” signs stretch every 15 yards.
Then, go on YouTube or read partisan Tweets or Xes or whatever-they-are-now from people with political axes to grind. They’ll tell you we deserved it because of our governor, or the federal government left this entire area to the wolves. It’s become a free-for-all on a free-for-all in real estate.
The middle working class is gone… In come the billionaires.
Leaders and media elite in Washington don’t like our governor.
Fine, but they largely abandoned the people in Western Florida.
So, imagine my horror when I read the stories of the events in western Maui.
More than 1,000 people remain missing after a deadly wildfire spread across the region, including historic Lahaina.
The local government didn’t sound alarm sirens.
The county water manager delayed releasing water for five hours.
He’s resigned since.
One Associated Press report seemed to indicate that state troopers, who were trying to block access to downed power lines, may have barricaded a route to safety, turning people back into an uncertain fate.
In some cases, the people who survived were those who defied the orders. One family went off the road and drove into oncoming traffic to escape the fire.
Another cut through the woods.
The headline tells you all you need to know moving forward.
It tells you that those who took their lives into their own hands… survived.
This is starting to feel like a theme in this decade.
$700?
The state and federal government response to the crisis and its immediate aftermath has been pretty embarrassing.
How embarrassing? Well, the federal government is about to mail a check for $700 to every resident who lost everything.
That’s not a typo.
Seven hundred dollars. American dollars, even.
To quote Lewis Black, “they’d be better off if someone just came to their door and pissed on their foot.”
Meanwhile, we’ve authorized another $13 billion for Ukraine.
The optics are stunning.
Hurricanes, earthquakes, floods – none of them can manage to mount an adequate response.
It doesn’t matter if they’re Republican or Democrat… Whig or Tory… Bull Moose or Radical Socialist… Nothing changes.
They don’t care.
They live off you.
We have an incompetence problem, and it needs to change.
It has become increasingly apparent to me that Washington has zero interest in helping the American people. Instead, I only see people raiding the Treasury and lining their pockets.
In Florida, I’ve lived this for the past 11 months – and I hope that people see it now.
Maui is a staggering example of government failure at the local, state, and federal levels.
This is not a government for or of the people.
It’s parasitical.
I’ve simply walked away from our system. Opted out. I encourage you to do the same.
It’s not about left or right…
It’s about up and down.
And it’s a reminder that no one is coming to save us.
What’s worse… they don’t seem to care what happens.
Our best option is to enrich and empower ourselves.
Stay positive,
Garrett Baldwin
Postcards: No One's Coming to Save Us
It has become apparent that our nation’s resources have been and are being allocated to the wrong places and projects. Our focus is no longer on a hierarchy of the need of the people and their well-being, but on power, dominance, influence. A changing of the guard is needed… a new type of leadership.
Garrettt, what's happening in Fort Myers Beach, as with other coastal places that have been devastated by water/storms is easily explained, although it does take up some bandwidth. As a premise, use your fantastic access to knowledge bases and find out what percentage of homes had a mortgage on them. Once you have that number, I can give you the formula for demise, which includes such things as insurance, first or second home, lack of savings accounts, and a couple more. Unfortunately, the good Lord saw fit not to wipe out the area over the bridge (west of you), but that's another story.