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Author Message
Petra
Posted: Sat Aug 25, 2007 5:19 pm
Guest
On Aug 25, 5:02 am, Weatherlawyer <Weatherlaw...@hotmail.com> wrote:
Quote:
On Aug 25, 2:39 am, Petra <petras...@hotmail.com> wrote:





On Aug 24, 3:08 pm, Weatherlawyer <Weatherlaw...@hotmail.com> wrote:

On Aug 24, 9:48 am, Petra <petras...@hotmail.com> wrote:

On Aug 21, 9:07 am, Weatherlawyer <Weatherlaw...@hotmail.com> wrote:

On Aug 20, 10:10 pm, Petra <petras...@hotmail.com> wrote:

The folks living in Peru greatly need assistance. If you would like
to read the latest news about their difficulties in overcoming their
losses from their recent M:8.0 quake please follow the link below.

80,000 people are homeless.

If you can help, donations can be made through this site. Please send
the hug that counts

Money talks.

Living in Peruhttp://www.livinginperu.com

Thanks,

Petrahttp://www.petrachallusquakepredictions.com

Nice to see you back here Pet.

But it Peruvians not Pervs.

Hi Michael,

After the Folkstone earthquake did they have any relief organizations
helping those people? They had considerable damages to homes and
automobiles and only from a M:4.3 earthquake.

No. British help grinds slow but it turns out to be just as effective
as Fema.

It Portsmouth bought it it would get help but if Portsmouth bought
such a thing they'd have bought the farm. Like Gibraltar it is riddled
with tunnels packed with ordnance.

Folkstone is just a gateway to France or Belgium. Not much call for
help from a cellar full of wine or cheese.

We have bigger problems from flooding and poor animal hygiene on
farms. All our major waterways are either constrained to bursting
point or have been converted to sewers.

Most other slow quaking stuff is from abandoned mines and clay
slumping.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -

The news article I have about the event said there was 5 million
pounds in damages. Are you saying there was assistance, no
assistance, or you're unsure?

I don't remember it. Most local town councils run their own help
services linked to the fire and ambulance departments.

If uninsured people are stuck without family to help, they can get
social services to house them and whatever.Most property owners here
are locked into a chain or a cycle of buying bigger and better
property that means they will always have a mortgage to pay and that
would require insurance.

What have you heard?- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -

Michael,

I haven't heard enough. I'm a stickler for details and especially
regarding aid to earthquake victims and I need to know more about what
your country/region/provinces provide. Do you want to research that a
little further?

Petra
Weatherlawyer
Posted: Sat Aug 25, 2007 6:07 pm
Guest
On Aug 25, 10:19 pm, Petra <petras...@hotmail.com> wrote:
Quote:
On Aug 25, 5:02 am, Weatherlawyer <Weatherlaw...@hotmail.com> wrote:



On Aug 25, 2:39 am, Petra <petras...@hotmail.com> wrote:

On Aug 24, 3:08 pm, Weatherlawyer <Weatherlaw...@hotmail.com> wrote:

On Aug 24, 9:48 am, Petra <petras...@hotmail.com> wrote:

On Aug 21, 9:07 am, Weatherlawyer <Weatherlaw...@hotmail.com> wrote:

On Aug 20, 10:10 pm, Petra <petras...@hotmail.com> wrote:

The folks living in Peru greatly need assistance. If you would like
to read the latest news about their difficulties in overcoming their
losses from their recent M:8.0 quake please follow the link below.

80,000 people are homeless.

If you can help, donations can be made through this site. Please send
the hug that counts

Money talks.

Living in Peruhttp://www.livinginperu.com

Thanks,

Petrahttp://www.petrachallusquakepredictions.com

Nice to see you back here Pet.

But it Peruvians not Pervs.

Hi Michael,

After the Folkstone earthquake did they have any relief organizations
helping those people? They had considerable damages to homes and
automobiles and only from a M:4.3 earthquake.

No. British help grinds slow but it turns out to be just as effective
as Fema.

It Portsmouth bought it it would get help but if Portsmouth bought
such a thing they'd have bought the farm. Like Gibraltar it is riddled
with tunnels packed with ordnance.

Folkstone is just a gateway to France or Belgium. Not much call for
help from a cellar full of wine or cheese.

We have bigger problems from flooding and poor animal hygiene on
farms. All our major waterways are either constrained to bursting
point or have been converted to sewers.

Most other slow quaking stuff is from abandoned mines and clay
slumping.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -

The news article I have about the event said there was 5 million
pounds in damages. Are you saying there was assistance, no
assistance, or you're unsure?

I don't remember it. Most local town councils run their own help
services linked to the fire and ambulance departments.

If uninsured people are stuck without family to help, they can get
social services to house them and whatever.Most property owners here
are locked into a chain or a cycle of buying bigger and better
property that means they will always have a mortgage to pay and that
would require insurance.

What have you heard?- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -

Michael,

I haven't heard enough. I'm a stickler for details and especially
regarding aid to earthquake victims and I need to know more about what
your country/region/provinces provide. Do you want to research that a
little further?

Not really, any further and I'd be perilously close to France. I am
not that bothered about anything less than 6.9.

Where I live there are a lot of recently abandoned mines. They caked
over most of them and build houses on them so that should be fun if I
live long enough to enjoy my old age.

Since coal mines were more or less stil a government concern when
Thatcher closed them all, any damage caused by them is a government
concern.

Most of the pictures of the Folkstone earthquake shows rather old
housing. What we call terraces. Closely built workers housing dating
from late Victorian times.

They won't take kindly to fairly small quakes. There will be some sort
of semi public semi private set-up to deal with their situation.
Something typically British, all cobbled together, fatuous with an
Orwellian hope that everything will turn out for the best mixed up in
it.
 
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