This is Katrina by the bush bastards in Khaalifornia.

I am laughing at the two instances of K, anyone with clue ?

dry and wry and vile bushes on fire.

Bushes have gone mad with oil.


The fact is that for a long time, the yanks in the RED states
were very jealous of Khalifornia and its wealth. They hatched
many plans to steal the wealth. These racists hated the non-white
freedoms and prosperity in Khaalifornia.

First they started the Enron scam.

This is what happens when you have all the manpower sent to Iraq to
steal their oil. Vile and Odious Anti-CHRIST-FASCISTS who worhip that
which is between their legs, like Dr Scott from stanford, (at another
time I will talk about Donald Knuth and his "love" for the gospel but
suffice to note that he did not left a finger in the service of truth
even though his mother lived in NewYork on 9/11 and he was probably
there around that time.).

God Bless Alex Jones.
God Bless Dr Steven Jones.

LOS ANGELES, Oct. 22 - More than a quarter of a million people were
urged to flee their homes on Monday as wildfires ravaged Southern
California for a second day, destroying hundreds of homes and
businesses and charring swaths of scrub and forestland.

Residents of Santa Clarita in Los Angeles County watched the advance
of the Buckweed fire.

The fires, a Hydra with at least 15 separate burns in seven counties
fed by gale-force winds, burned some 267,000 acres from Santa Barbara
to the Mexican border. Engines and firefighters from as far as Nevada
and Arizona were summoned as resources were stretched to the limit.

Houses burned with no firefighters in sight as emergency crews on the
ground and in the air struggled to keep up with shifting wind that
fanned new fires and made others recede and reignite.

Officials marveled that there had been just one death, in a fire in
southeastern San Diego County on Sunday that also injured several
people, including four firefighters. But thousands of residents
remained just one step ahead of the flames.

His face smudged with ash, Bruce Gallagher fled in a motor home as
flames approached his house in Ramona, San Diego County. He roamed the
parking lot of a mall in Escondido, carrying two large plastic bottles
in search of water.

"I have a feeling it's probably gone," Mr. Gallagher said of his home.

About 1,500 National Guard troops, including 200 diverted from the
border, were deployed to help with evacuation and crowd control,
mostly in the San Diego area, which appeared to be the hardest hit.

There, seven fires intensified and forced the largest evacuation ever
in San Diego County, including entire towns like Ramona and Rancho
Santa Fe in the rustic northern stretches. A total of 250,000 people
were urged to evacuate.

Nearly 600 homes and 100 commercial buildings have burned in Southern
California, most in San Diego County. Late Monday, about 15,100 were
considered threatened.

State emergency officials said they feared that the fires, devouring
some of the thickest and driest brush in years, could surpass the
destruction of 2003, when California experienced its worst fire season
on record.

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, who had declared a state of emergency in
seven counties on Sunday, said President Bush had called to offer
federal assistance with the blazes, which could take several days to
extinguish.

In San Diego, some worry the flames will advance from inland mountains
to the Pacific Ocean.

"This is a major emergency," said Ron Roberts, chairman of the San
Diego County Board of Supervisors. "The speed with which these fires
are moving, because of the wind, they are probably unlike anything
we've seen before."

Thousands of uprooted people in San Diego County descended on Qualcomm
Stadium near downtown and the Del Mar Fairgrounds north of the city,
both of which opened as emergency shelters, while other people jammed
freeways or made desperate bids to save their homes with garden hoses.

San Diego is particularly haunted by wildfires. The worst one in state
history burned nearly 750,000 acres in 2003, destroyed 3,600 homes and
other buildings, and killed 24 people across Southern California, with
much of the damage and more than a dozen of the deaths in San Diego
County.

Officials there said those memories prompted swift action this time as
the latest fire burned in much of the same area and same direction as
2003.

The San Diego Wild Animal Park, a major tourist draw, was closed and
the animals were moved to safer quarters while owners of horses
throughout northern San Diego also rushed to save their animals.

Because of the fires' erratic nature, state officials had difficulty
compiling accurate data on the scope of the damage or progress in
controlling them. Just as state officials at a midmorning news
conference in Malibu were declaring a fire in suburban Los Angeles the
state's top priority, San Diego officials were issuing sweeping
evacuation orders and television showed images of scores of buildings
burning in a remote area of Los Angeles.

The hot, gusting winds, not expected to let up until late Tuesday, at
times grounded fire-fighting airplanes, which are pivotal for their
ability to dump tremendous amounts of water and fire retardant.

"We have to just pray the wind slows down because the wind is the No.
1 enemy in the dry weather," Mr. Schwarzenegger said in Malibu, where
a large fire destroyed landmarks Sunday and flared anew after dying
down somewhat overnight.

Some of the fires appeared to have been started by downed power lines,
but a few were thought to have been caused by arson.

Brush and small trees burned in most cases, but firefighters faced a
difficult problem northeast of Los Angeles at the Lake Arrowhead
resort, where a forest fire erupted early in the afternoon and added
to the plume of smoke hanging over most of the region. Towers of flame
tore through houses and other structures there, and water-dropping
aircraft did not arrive for a few hours as they fought a larger fire
70 miles away in heavily populated Santa Clarita Valley, a typical
dilemma firefighters faced.

Scenes of residents taking matters into their own hands played out as
some fires burned for long periods without a firefighter in sight.

Dozens of men, women and children in Canyon Country, north of Los
Angeles, grabbed shovels and garden hoses and fought flames creeping
up a canyon within 50 feet of their homes.

About seven children and young teenagers worked in tandem with their
parents as the flames approached their back fences.

"That was hot!" said Steven Driedger, 14, as he examined his scratched
legs for signs of a burn. "But I'm fine."

Steven's mother, Carolyn Driedger, said the family, along with their
neighbors, had been battling the blaze since 4 a.m.

"Our neighborhood has really come together," Ms. Driedger said, as a
firefighting crew finally pulled up in the late morning. "We had to.
These are the first official firefighters we've seen."

In some of the day's only good news, firefighters made significant
progress in surrounding a fire in Orange County without a single home
lost.

Reporting was contributed by Will Carless from Escondido, Ana Facio
Contreras from Irvine, Larry Dorman from Poway and Regan Morris from
Canyon Country.

-- 
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Reply via email to