Anonymous ID: ed2449 Jan. 30, 2022, 9:43 a.m. No.15501521   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1961 >>2340

United Airlines CEO Scott Kirby, pictured above (on both sides), loves mandating the jab and forcing tyranny on thousands of people.

 

He’s also a tranny-looking freak show and a mentally deranged sexual sadist who appears to sexually satisfy himself by asserting dominance over pilots and ground crews resulting in imminent danger for your traveling loved ones.

 

He also loves fan mail.

👇🏼

Scott.Kirby@United.com

 

https://gab.com/RealStewPeters

Anonymous ID: ed2449 Jan. 30, 2022, 9:51 a.m. No.15501590   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1961

>>15501565

The next Cascadia earthquake could be devastating. Start your preparationsBridget Good

Fri, January 28, 2022, 2:00 PM·2 min read

Oregon Department of Transportation's two-year, $18 million I-105 Bridge Preservation Project repaired, repaved and added seismic upgrades to the bridges and ramps between downtown Eugene and Delta Highway on I-105. The work was completed in 2020.

Oregon Department of Transportation's two-year, $18 million I-105 Bridge Preservation Project repaired, repaved and added seismic upgrades to the bridges and ramps between downtown Eugene and Delta Highway on I-105. The work was completed in 2020.

Jan. 26 marked the 322nd anniversary of the last major Cascadia Subduction Zone (CSZ) earthquake. As a Community Emergency Response Team (CERT) member living in Salem, I’ve spent the past six years working to motivate community preparedness around this topic.

 

You can see a tornado travel; you can watch it shift direction. You can see floodwaters rise and landslides and avalanches flow. You can watch a volcano spewing and wildfires and storms approaching.

 

Earthquakes are different. They are some of the greatest ghost stories ever told —suddenly everywhere around us at once, unseen but for the destruction they cause. They can’t be predicted, and there isn’t an earthquake season. The precious few seconds’ warning that ShakeAlert can now bring will be all you get.

Bridget Good

Fri, January 28, 2022, 2:00 PM·2 min read

Oregon Department of Transportation's two-year, $18 million I-105 Bridge Preservation Project repaired, repaved and added seismic upgrades to the bridges and ramps between downtown Eugene and Delta Highway on I-105. The work was completed in 2020.

Oregon Department of Transportation's two-year, $18 million I-105 Bridge Preservation Project repaired, repaved and added seismic upgrades to the bridges and ramps between downtown Eugene and Delta Highway on I-105. The work was completed in 2020.

Jan. 26 marked the 322nd anniversary of the last major Cascadia Subduction Zone (CSZ) earthquake. As a Community Emergency Response Team (CERT) member living in Salem, I’ve spent the past six years working to motivate community preparedness around this topic.

 

You can see a tornado travel; you can watch it shift direction. You can see floodwaters rise and landslides and avalanches flow. You can watch a volcano spewing and wildfires and storms approaching.

 

Earthquakes are different. They are some of the greatest ghost stories ever told —suddenly everywhere around us at once, unseen but for the destruction they cause. They can’t be predicted, and there isn’t an earthquake season. The precious few seconds’ warning that ShakeAlert can now bring will be all you get.

 

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Forty-six of these megathrust CSZ earthquakes have occurred over the past 10,000 years, averaging one every 223 years.

 

The next one will undoubtedly overwhelm local emergency responders. Roads and bridges will be heavily damaged. Most communication systems will be down. The Willamette Valley is expected to go as long as 50 days without natural gas, 100 days without electricity and a whopping 400 days without water/sewer.

 

Responders from outside the disaster area will take time to arrive — how much time will depend on the area of devastation.

 

Cascadia megathrust earthquakes appear to have triggered San Andreas earthquakes roughly two-thirds of the time over the past 3,000 years. New research by UC Davis and San Diego State finds that roughly 20% of San Andreas earthquakes have coincided with earthquakes on the San Jacinto Fault. Further research has shown that roughly 20% of CSZ earthquakes have been followed by a Cascade Range volcanic eruption within a reasonably short time frame (days to months).

 

There is no doubt that a major tsunami, much larger than the one that came to our shores on Dec. 15 of this year, will follow a CSZ earthquake.

https://news.yahoo.com/next-cascadia-earthquake-could-devastating-190016579.html?fr=yhssrp_catchall