American Wildfires

Don't Bogart

Well-Known Member
Ironic that the US and Canada have, by far, the largest collection of fresh water on Earth in the Great Lakes. International treaties prevent the piping of any great lakes water over any border illegal without the consent of all 7 states and 3 Canadian provinces. Which, of course, will never happen.
Careful. Any of the southwestern states start eyeing any idea like that and within a decade you'll hear the sucking sound at the lakes like the sound of a straw at the bottom of a soft drink.
 

mooray

Well-Known Member
I know a fellow down south in a tight water restriction area that once has a $1000 water bill, admittedly during a period of high usage. I'm worried that water is becoming a classist commodity and that water "theft" is going to be become commonplace, seeing cars with little harbor freight trailers towing small water tanks into remote areas to pump out of lakes/creeks/rivers, with poorer people being fined/arrested for trying to supply their family with basic needs.
 

smokinrav

Well-Known Member
Oh lordy, i had blocked Strohs from my memory. Another bad Wisconsin beer. Some other brands Strohs bought...
Goebel, Schaefer, Schlitz, Augsburger, Erlanger, Old Style, Lone Star, Old Milwaukee, Red River, and Signature
 

captainmorgan

Well-Known Member
I used to drink some Strohs Bock beer back in the day, it was seasonal, also drank most of the list above lol.
 
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smokinrav

Well-Known Member
Old Style, Lone Star, Old Milwaukee, and Schlitz were not seasonal in Wisconsin or Chicagoland. Source: Me. I lived in Madison and Milwaukee for 10 years. Old Style, the for Beer of the Chicago Cubs, was particularly vile
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Heat wave update: 486 sudden deaths reported in B.C. over 5 days | CTV News

Heat wave update: 486 sudden deaths reported in B.C. over 5 days

VANCOUVER -- A staggering 486 sudden and unexpected deaths were reported across British Columbia over the past five days as the province suffered under a blistering heat wave, coroners said Wednesday.

That includes 98 sudden deaths in Vancouver, where police said two-thirds of the victims were age 70 or older.

The government is still working to determine how many of the fatalities are directly related to the sweltering heat that's broken dozens of local and national temperature records, but the B.C. Coroner Service said it's likely the majority are connected to the weather.

Chief coroner Lisa Lapointe urged the public to touch base with family, friends and neighbours, particularly those who live alone, to ensure their safety until the heat wave is over.

"People can be overcome by the effects of extreme heat quickly and may not be aware of the danger," Lapointe said in a news release.

"Please arrange regular check-ins with those who live alone, and encourage everyone you know to drink water, stay in the shade as much as possible and visit cooler environments whenever they can."

The 486 sudden deaths reported between Friday and Wednesday afternoon represent a 195 per cent increase over the number of deaths that would normally be expected over a five-day period, officials said.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
I was happy to see Biden is trying to get out front of this season's fires.


It floored me that the fire fighters were only making about $13 an hour. Biden bumped it up to $15, but even he said that is stupidly little to be paying people risking their lives.
 
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