When the CEO of a very successful business says it's time to GTFO the state that's both telling and sad ps welcome to the USA and the southeast, Texas and Tennessee will appreciate you more than nasty Cali
That place is synonymous with California It’s also a very Christian company , they print proverbs on their cups
Don’t forget the Jews The woke there hate the Jews They sending all their kids to Christian and southern universities @tallanvor @CrixusTheUndefeatedGaul
He doesn't have to be in the state to take care of the people who suffered financially through the freeze. In fact I would rather him be an advocate for aid than be in Texas putting on a show not accomplishing anything. However I will admit the optics look bad. He didn't make the same mistake again during Harvey/Hill Country floods/deaths.
Karen Bass is "lifting spirits" while people remain unable to rebuild their homes... which burned because they didn't fill up the reservoir. Shocking levels of Democrat incompetence on full display.
Traitor George parroting the convenient lie about the reservoir. for the education of the willfully ignorant Traitor George, Water doesn't put out large fires. Here's the fire triangle: On a big fire, you can't take away oxygen because, you know, we have an atmosphere on this planet. When it's windy, you get more oxygen and it drives the fire faster, even downhill. On a big fire, you can't just squirt water on it. The difference between campfire/housefire and 100 acres or 1000 houses is huge. The only thing to do on a large fire in heavy fuels is to break up the fuel bed. On wildland fires, we do this by digging line and burning out fuel from that line towards the main fire so that when it arrives, there is little fuel left for it to consume. That's it. That's the tactic we've used since forever. Aircraft can help cool and slow a flame front, giving firefighters time to build line and burnout, but nothing happens without addressing the fuel continuity. For wind-driven fires, there's not much to do except either wait for the winds to stop or back off to a point where you can safely do a burnout into the wind, which is tough to do and not fun at all because you're constantly worried about a spot fire behind you trapping firefighters between it and the larger fire. When the fuel is houses, you're probably waiting until the winds die down enough for you to make a stand at a street or a drainage.