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  1. Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Posts
    45,927
    #3621
    look what i found

    posted Sept 2007

    http://tsikot.com/forums/miscellaneo...56/index5.html

    Quote Originally Posted by uls View Post
    I was just thinking about what happened in New Orleans after hurricane Katrina left it in ruins.

    There was total collapse of infrastructure and law and order. People looted, there was anarchy, the very young and old and sick died...

    It made me think how totally dependent we are on man-made infrastructure.

    Things we take for granted like indoor plumbing, electricity, roads, telephones, supermarkets, hospitals, law enforcement....

    Our ancestors hunt for food and lived in caves. They drank from streams. They can survive on the barest, crudest essentials. We cant. Many people wont even drink tap water.

    Our modern civilization is totally dependent on very fragile infrastructure. (remember how uncomfortable life was after Milenyo struck?)

    Think about it... our lives are totally dependent on availability of food from the market, grocery and food stores. We buy water from refilling stations. If there are none of these providers, we cant just shift to hunting and drinking from streams. Many people would starve to death.

    People are being kept alive by pharmaceutical drugs and doctors and hospitals. If there's no medicine to buy, no doctors to see, no hospitals to go to, many would die.

    We need emergency rooms. We need telephones. We need traffic lights. We need all this stuff to live.

    The infrastructure is extremely fragile as demonstrated in New Orleans.

    Imagine if something like New Orleans happened on a global scale...

    We are actually weaker that our caveman ancestors. They didnt need all this stuff to survive.

    Though we do live longer now thanks to vaccines and modern meds, our longer lives are dependent on all this man-made infrastructure. If and when something happens to this infrastructure, the human race is screwed.

    And that will be the end of the world as we know it.
    Last edited by uls; November 12th, 2013 at 01:17 AM. Reason: forgot to post the link

  2. Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Posts
    12,683
    #3622
    Crazy weather! Can't feel my ears!



    Sent from my GT-N7100 using Tapatalk

  3. Join Date
    Nov 2008
    Posts
    1,383
    #3623

    Ugly Pinoy looter featured in a Japanese newspaper.

    SHAME!
    Last edited by marg; November 12th, 2013 at 08:28 AM.

  4. Join Date
    Sep 2003
    Posts
    25,189
    #3624
    Mga kuripot....

    http://sinosphere.blogs.nytimes.com/...ctims/?hp&_r=0

    November 11, 2013, 6:15 am 79 Comments
    China Offers Relatively Modest Aid for Typhoon Victims
    By JANE PERLEZ

    As international aid pours into the Philippines for victims of Typhoon Haiyan, China has offered $100,000 in cash, a figure that seems modest compared with its other recent contributions for humanitarian relief abroad.

    Qin Gang, spokesman for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, told reporters on Monday that China would send that amount to help the Philippines recover from a disaster that has left as many as 10,000 people dead. Asked if the donation was scaled according to the current chill in relations between China and the Philippines, Mr. Qin declined to answer.

    In September, China said it would give a $1.5 million cash grant to Pakistan, its close friend, after an earthquake killed an estimated 500 people in the province of Baluchistan.

    After a tropical storm hit the Philippines in 2011, China pledged $1 million in humanitarian aid. That was before relations between the two countries soured over disputed islands and reefs in the South China Sea.

  5. Join Date
    Sep 2003
    Posts
    25,189
    #3625

  6. Join Date
    Jul 2004
    Posts
    8,584
    #3626
    Quote Originally Posted by Monseratto View Post
    The Russkies are also sending help...







    Read more: Russia to Send 200 Rescuers to Typhoon-Hit Philippines | News | The Moscow Times
    The Moscow Times
    It is true na may white Russians and their descendants in Eastern Samar.

    This is where most of the Czarist/Loyalist fled during the October Revolution

  7. Join Date
    Jul 2004
    Posts
    8,584
    #3627
    Quote Originally Posted by Monseratto View Post
    Take the $100K and use it to build Philippine structures on the West Philippine Sea.

    After all, apektado din ito at kailangan i-rehabilitate


  8. Join Date
    Jan 2005
    Posts
    6,107
    #3628
    Quote Originally Posted by marg View Post

    Ugly Pinoy looter featured in a Japanese newspaper.

    SHAME!
    Dapat dito sa mokong na ito masunugan pa ng bahay.

    Sent from my Nexus 7 using Tapatalk 2

  9. Join Date
    Oct 2002
    Posts
    17,338
    #3629
    Quote Originally Posted by Balikpinoy View Post
    According to our yaya who hails from the same area and where her parents still live, the convoy was stopped by the NPA and made off with one of the trucks.
    Gad. So my hope that these NPAs and other irrelevant rebels would be washed off the mountains and into the sea did not materialize.

    Quote Originally Posted by uls View Post
    OB would be very, very proud of you. :D




    Actually, to prepare for a storm of this magnitude will really require a citizenry educated on how to be disciplined and deal with such calamities of such magnitude; training, purposely built evacuation structures, and logistics. It's a painful lesson to learn and we never stood a chance with all the money going to God-knows-where. Japan has that and they are able to survive and cope with such situations in a real effective way.

    I was at the grocery last night and the place was really a mess in a nice way as people were buying up goods for distribution and relief efforts. I have not yet put out the cash or goods to do my own little part as i'm still trying to see what i can do and how can i effectively do it. For starters, I'm trying to help those whom i can help directly; I spoke with our househelp who was affected and since they were thankfully able to set aside food rations, the focus is to help them rebuild their home and rebuild it sturdily. The next is our office staff/messengers who have family in Guiuan Samar that they have not heard from yet. I discouraged them from making a haphazard trip by motorbike as they don't have much resources and they are risking their lives unnecessarily, and that they have their own kids here in Manila to look over. Once information comes in and people know how to go about in reaching the place, that's when I'll give them the help/goods they can bring or send there.

  10. Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Posts
    9,431
    #3630
    Quote Originally Posted by marg View Post

    Ugly Pinoy looter featured in a Japanese newspaper.

    SHAME!
    nakakahiya yan. saan naman niya gagamitin yung pang ground ng meat? kamay niya?

  11. Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Posts
    45,927
    #3631



    re looting

    it's not just desperation

    people who loot may be desperate but many have other motives

    i keep hearing people in the media say it's coz desperado ang tao

    didnt they go to sociology class?

    everybody sees other people do it so everybody joins in --- it's call collective behavior

    Collective behavior - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    The expression collective behavior was first used by Robert E. Park (1921), and employed later by Herbert Blumer (1939), Ralph Turner and Lewis Killian (1957), and Neil Smelser (1962) to refer to social processes and events which do not reflect existing social structure (laws, conventions, and institutions), but which emerge in a "spontaneous" way. Collective behavior takes many forms but generally violates societal norms (Miller 2000, Locher 2002). Collective behavior can be tremendously destructive, as with riots or mob violence, silly, as with fads, or anywhere in between. Collective behavior is always driven by group dynamics, encouraging people to engage in acts they might consider unthinkable under typical social circumstances (Locher 2002).

    Emergent-Norm Theory - according to Ralph Turner and Lewis Killian (1957), crowds begin as collectivities composed of people with mixed interests and motives. Especially in the case of less stable crowds—expressive, acting and protest crowds—norms may be vague and changing, as when one person decides to break the glass windows of a store and others join in and begin looting merchandise. When people find themselves in a situation that is vague, ambiguous, or confusing new norms "emerge" on the spot and people follow those emergent norms, which may be at odds with normal social behavior. Turner and Killian further argue that there are several different categories of participants, all of whom follow different patterns of behavior due to their differing motivations.[/B]
    mixed motives

    there are people who are motivated by hunger and thirst --- taking only food and water

    but others have other motives

    how often can you go into a store take what you want and leave without paying

    many looters are just taking advantage of an opportunity

    they see someone leave the store with a TV or washing machine

    when a crowd is presented with an opportunity to get free appliances they don't want to let that opportunity pass so they join in

    it's a spontaneous decision

    that's the psychology behind that kind of collective behavior
    Last edited by uls; November 12th, 2013 at 11:23 AM.

  12. Join Date
    Sep 2013
    Posts
    1,832
    #3632
    magpapadala na din daw ang china ng tulong :D

  13. Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Posts
    6,502
    #3633
    dont know kung repost na eto:

    Microwave Pulse gives birth to Typhoon Haiyan? [VIDEO] - LIBRARY OF MOST CONTROVERSIAL FILES

    buhay na naman ang mga conspiracy theorists

  14. Join Date
    Oct 2002
    Posts
    17,338
    #3634
    Nasaan na rin ang mga maka-BAYAN na militante aktibista? Baka magprotest pa sila sa mga dadating na US aid imbes na magbigay tulong.

  15. Join Date
    Aug 2003
    Posts
    9,720
    #3635
    Quote Originally Posted by uls View Post
    i wonder if that pawnshop got robbed. Siguro kahit bakbakin yung pader para makuha yung safe, wala ring makapigil

  16. Join Date
    Oct 2002
    Posts
    40,599
    #3636
    dapat yun mga BDO branches inuna nila... parang sari-sari stores sa dami ng branches

  17. Join Date
    Oct 2011
    Posts
    26,781
    #3637
    looting is just not right. kailangan may shoot to kill din.

  18. Join Date
    Nov 2009
    Posts
    12,364
    #3638
    Pede rin galing ibang province na hindi naman takaga victims, mga oportunista lang talaga. Ang pinoy masyado maabilidad kaso sa kagaguhan minsan ginagamit.

    Yung branch nila esmi sa robinson tacloban nalimas laman ng atm including the vault nabuksan din daw.

    Which makes me wonder how can an ordinary citizen open a bank vault.


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

  19. Join Date
    Oct 2011
    Posts
    26,781
    #3639
    Totoo kaya ito? ano masasabi ng mga kapatid natin sa Iglesia?

  20. Join Date
    Nov 2009
    Posts
    12,364
    #3640
    Quote Originally Posted by Retz View Post
    Totoo kaya ito? ano masasabi ng mga kapatid natin sa Iglesia?
    May thread na about jan retz. Check religion and politics.


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

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