--- In [email protected], "shempmcgurk" 
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> --- In [email protected], "sparaig" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:
> > --- In [email protected], "shempmcgurk" 
> > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > In light of both last year's tsunami and Katrina, the issue has 
> > been 
> > > brought up in the media that the loss of human life and damages 
> in 
> > > BOTH cases could have been greatly minimized had proper 
> preparation 
> > > been made.
> > > 
> > > It wasn't that experts didn't envision that a tsunami could 
> happen 
> > > or that the levees in New Orleans could have broken, it's just 
> the 
> > > odds seemed to make it so unlikely that public policy in this 
> area 
> > > didn't make spending the millions or billions to prevent what 
> could 
> > > have been prevented.
> > > 
> > > I contrast this with the building of hydro-electric dams.  The 
> > > little I know about them is this: a dam is built in order to 
> create 
> > > a massive reservoir of water so that the power of the water 
from 
> > > these masses can be channeled into turning turbines which, in 
> turn, 
> > > create electricity.
> > > 
> > > But the danger inherent in every dam in spillover: too much 
> water 
> > in 
> > > a reservoir can either destroy the environment or -- as is the 
> case 
> > > with Hoover Dam -- destroy the generating facility. 
> > > 
> > > So with every dam is built a "spillway", a structure in which 
> > > spillovers can be safely channelled away from creating a 
> disaster.  
> > > At Hoover DAm you can see a massive concrete tunnel beside the 
> > > facility built specifically for this purpose.
> > > 
> > > I once took a tour of a hydroelectric dam in Northern Quebec at 
> > > James Bay.  At one point beside the reservoir near a dyke was a 
> > > massive set of concrete steps that, I was told, cost hundreds 
of 
> > > millions of dollars to build and, at the top of the stairs 
built 
> > > into the side of the reservoir was a gate that could be opened; 
> a 
> > > spillway in other words.
> > > 
> > > The tour guide mentioned that, statistically, overspill would 
> > happen 
> > > only once every 100 years!
> > > 
> > > Yet the company spent hundreds of millions of dollars to plan 
> for 
> > > something that the builders would, statistically, not even see 
> in 
> > > their own lifetime, not ever see the practical benefit of.
> > > 
> > > This type of planning happened with private enterprise (note 
> that 
> > > Bechtel built the dam, please!) Perhaps there is a disconnect 
> > > between this type of planning in private enterprise and public 
> > > policy enterprises...
> > 
> > You don't read much on this group. The $250 million that was to 
be 
> > spent last year on strengthening New Orlean's levees was spent on 
> the 
> > war in Iraq instead.
> 
> 
> Yes, I read that (I believe it was Judy who posted the article).  
> Indeed, it only strengthens the argument that I am making...perhaps 
> private enterprise would have had their priorities right.

Are you saying that private enterprises don't control the federal 
government's budget?





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