PungoteagueDave
Well-known member
ridiculous assertions, completely devoid of facts. There is no place that the ocean will advance a hundred miles. Crazy talk. You have ANY idea what the forward flood maps look like? My waterfront properties in Palm Beach and Virginia will be just fine. We'll lose a few feet at our waterfront tidewater oyster farm in Virginia, zero land area at our waterfront place in Florida, even with eight feet of sea rise, far more than predicted.“Future generations of taxpayers” will actually be quite thankful to be alive and spending quality time at a beach located just a few miles and not a hundred miles from current shorelines. Literally everything we do today to shift to EVs is a necessary and worthy investment, squabbling over a few $Ks will look ridiculously like rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic to future generations.
The handwringing is absurd. I've spent a lot of time in the Netherlands, have bicycled every river route there. They have prepped for 45-50' of sea rise, are fully prepared for any contingency. They are WAY ahead of us but we will be ready when truly necessary. The U.S. west coast needs almost nothing in terms of hardening, and the east coast needs moderate relocation, but mostly just mitigation. Billions will be spent, but totally manageable. The handwringing types need to get on the stick and stop worrying so much. Planning for change instead of wailing about it is way healthier for everyone.
Have any idea how many occupied residential barrier islands there were in Virginia in 1920? Twenty-three. There are zero today. Entire towns are gone. Major hotels and resorts disappeared. The 1932 hurricanes did much of the "convincing" - well before AGW. There's a great museum in Machipongo called the Barrier Islands Center that documents the families and buildings that had to relocate. Change happens. People adapt. Some of the relocated families are now our friends in Pungoteague, VA. We'll be fine folks. Tax credits or not.
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