Perhaps it is best to think of this as a teachable moment instead
of a thoughtless troll.  One way to look at the original post is to
see it as divorced from reality, made by someone whose knowledge
of a situation is not based on experience but on filtered media
reports that have only a limited amount of time to present what
is actually happening somewhere.  It is like talking about schizophrenia
and never having met someone with schizophrenia, one's knowledge
is abstract, detached from reality, and dehumanizing.

I call this situation "virgins talking about sex syndrome", that is,
persons with no real experience talking about things that they have
only learned about indirectly, from valid and invalid sources.  Or, in the
worst case, just allowing their pre-existing biases govern how they
talk about something while engaging in the confirmation bias.

As a Manhattanite who only got electrical power back on Friday
night (in Manhattan, below 39th street, all power was out except
for those locations that had their own power generation capability,
places like NYU, the business Goldman Sachs, and similar
situations that only allowed the privileged few in their area to
have access to heat, light, and water; it should be noted that in
Manhattan, building that are 6 storeys or less, the natural water
pressure allows them to get water while buildings taller than this
have to use pumps to get the water moving up into the building --
NYU residences for students and faculty are all high rise but
these are off NYU's power grid so they were all without light, heat,
and water -- all of the other high rise buildings, from public housing
"projects" to luxury apartment towers were in similar situations.
Fortunately, power in lower Manhattan has mostly returned
(there are still pockets with outages) which means that stores
can re-open, especially food stores, and simple things like
reliable cell phone service, cable TV, Wifi (all public Wifi services
disappeared shortly after the blackout started at 8:30pm on Monday
night). This also means that people in lower Manhattan no longer have
to go above 39th street to find food stores, hot food and coffee,
diapers and baby food, and some respite from the conditions
downtown.

And I won't even get started on how NYU medical center had
to be evacuated followed by the evacuation of Bellevue hospital
when their back-up generators failed.  For more details, the
interested reader is directed to read the following:
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/01/nyregion/bellevue-hospital-evacuates-patients-after-backup-power-fails.html?_r=0

But there is a point that I want to emphasize:  what I have said
above is the "good news".  The "bad news" is that places like
Staten Island, Brooklyn, and Queens got hit much worse, indeed
Staten Island has the greatest number of deaths associated with
Sandy; see:
http://www.silive.com/news/index.ssf/2012/11/five_more_deaths_push_sandys_s.html
These areas may not get electricity back for another week or two.
And that on top of having houses either destroyed or seriously
damaged.  Since pictures can have a greater impact than words,
consider these images:
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/hurricane-sandy-strikes-east-coast-gallery-1.1194577
And for those seeking a NYC perspective on events, see the website
for the local cable news channel NY!:
http://www.ny1.com/

And the weather has turned cold, 30 degrees F at night and 40-50
degrees F during the day.  It is becoming harder for recovery efforts
and we expect another severe storm to come by around Wednesday.

So, perhaps people have good reason not to want to have the  marathon
run now.

To be fair, there are reasons to hold the marathon; some of these are
presented here:
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-11-02/marathoners-wonder-whether-storm-battered-new-yorkers-will-cheer.html

Quoting from the article:
|About 47,000 participants had registered for the race, including about
| 20,000 from overseas, according to NYRR spokesman Richard Finn.
|The event accounts for 40,000 more hotel rooms than usual per day
|for at least five days, said NYC & Co., the city’s tourism office.
|
|‘I’m Angry’
|
|Toni Chaplin-Armer, an executive assistant for University of Cumbria Vice
|Chancellor Peter Strike in Carlisle, England, spent about $3,500 and
|arrived in New York on Nov. 1 eager to run the race for the first time.
|
|“I’m angry,” Chaplin-Armer, 48, said in a telephone interview after learning
| of the cancellation. “To cancel at this late stage, it has a negative effect
|for people that came from outside New York. I can appreciate how the
|locals feel, but I don’t appreciate the fact that I flew all the way out here
|and then this happened.”
|
|An economic study done for the NYRR estimated the city reaps a
|$340 million economic impact from the marathon, not including promotion
|of the city in televised coverage.

And so it goes.

Just to change the subject slightly, I have focused on NYC but New Jersey
also got hit really badly.  I hope that Miguel Roig and other Tipsters
who might have been affected by Sandy are doing well.  My best wishes
to them and others affected by Sandy.

-Mike Palij
New York University
[email protected]



On Sat, 03 Nov 2012 20:41:09 -0700, David T. Wasieleski wrote:

At the risk of giving this post more attention that it deserves...

My sister lives in Staten Island, and her brother in law was killed during the
storm. The school at which she teaches has families without homes, and the
marathon would have been run through neighborhoods right near where people lost
homes, and where some perished. Assuming the track wouldn't have been
restructured, it would have been tacky to run the marathon on its traditional
route. My sister and her neighbors thought it should have been cancelled
sooner,the people of Staten Island did not want it run, and I think they know
better than any of us living outside that area.
David Wasieleski

 ,Sent from my iPad

On Nov 3, 2012, at 11:38 PM, "michael sylvester" wrote:
>
>for canceling the NYC marathon.

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