Anonymous ID: 5f1c3b Dec. 7, 2018, 1:26 a.m. No.4194599   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4793 >>5028 >>5131

>>4194426

2nd pic. Those are 2 totally different sections of road. The Dec 4 pic is either way further back than the Nov 30 pic, or they are completely different areas all together. There's no way in hell that Dec 4 pic is fresh asphalt.

 

Having said that I could see either scenario where the first images were completely staged fake news, which is entirely possible, or the second pics were strategically taken to make this look as if it were a miraculous repair. The first scenario is more likely, since fake news likes to make things a hundred times moar dramatic than they really are. However, judging by your response, perhaps the second image was strategically taken to stir up general distrust, making people think that every road should be fixed in an unreasonable amount of time. I understand that there are fewer people in Alaska, so repairs could be made a lot quicker with less traffic, but still if the ground was affected that badly from an Earthquake, there is no way in Hell that those roads could be repaired that quickly with virtually no signs of construction other than some fresh paint. Look at the ground on the side of the road. Did the cracks just seal themselves back up leaving the topsoil completely intact? I'm gonna call this one Fake AF News.