Funny how
having an unexpected tornado literally in your back yard
can make you sensitive to how
even a hurricane could happen here.
Making Light, based in Brooklyn, has picked up
Bruce Sterling’s
find of an
NYC Post-Disaster Competition
and run with it.
The competition pages themselves are a wealth of information,
for example storm paths and damage estimates for the hurricanes
of 1893, 1938 (Long Island Express), 1954 (Carol), 1960 (Donna), 1985 (Gloria),
1991 (Bob), and 1999 (Tropical Storm Floyd).
Funny how when you start paying attention, it only could happen here,
it has, repeatedly, and could again much worse.
Making Light extends on that with numerous bits of information
and comments from interested parties, perhaps because
Cripes, I almost feel like I live there.
— What if New York City gets socked by a category-3 hurricane? by Patrick Nielsen Hayden, Making Light, 12 October 2007
Echoes of New Orleans are not hard to find:
On the other hand, it takes something on the order of dynamite to get us out of spaces where we’ve resided a long time. My guess is that a lot of people who should leave won’t, but they’ll be very helpful and cooperative about it.
Maybe we all do live there.
-jsq
Finally – The new antihurricane technology is development. PCT/SK2006/000003 (WO/2006/085830) A METHOD OF AND A DEVICE FOR THE REDUCTION OF TROPICAL CYCLONES DESTRUCTIVE FORCE http://www.ahtfund.org
Antihurricane Technology Fund