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Trump dismisses criticism of P. Rico response as ‘fake news,’spends day watching golf

Nowhere near as dense as you are a well documented jackass. Do we not have a Navy? An Army? All available assets should have. immediately been diverted....but they weren't because someone saw dollars to be made at the expense of non whites.

Now he lifts the Jones act after some advice centered around the political **** storm that would be descending on Trump once people started dying was given.

Thank God not every person inside this joke of an administration is an incompetent putz. Even if it's politically motivated.

in your own words... you just can't make this **** up...

https://pilotonline.com/news/milita...cle_be0098a4-5f46-52f7-bf14-c9c5f9d79d3f.html

The U.S. Navy will divert an amphibious assault ship that has been providing hurricane relief on the Caribbean island of Dominica to assist in Puerto Rico, the latest piece in an expanding Defense Department mission to provide assistance there, U.S. military officials said Friday.

The USS Wasp will respond with a few hundred additional sailors and Marines and their equipment, most notably helicopters. The 843-foot ship initially deployed from Norfolk on Aug. 30 on its way to Japan, but has been providing hurricane relief for weeks, following both hurricanes Irma and Maria.

...

The U.S. Navy will divert an amphibious assault ship that has been providing hurricane relief on the Caribbean island of Dominica to assist in Puerto Rico, the latest piece in an expanding Defense Department mission to provide assistance there, U.S. military officials said Friday.

The USS Wasp will respond with a few hundred additional sailors and Marines and their equipment, most notably helicopters. The 843-foot ship initially deployed from Norfolk on Aug. 30 on its way to Japan, but has been providing hurricane relief for weeks, following both hurricanes Irma and Maria.

but, wait, eflie ... there's more...

https://www.vox.com/science-and-hea...tarian-disaster-electricty-fuel-flights-facts

Puerto Rico is an island, which complicates recovery efforts. Supplies have to be flown in or arrive via ship. Residents can’t drive to a nearby state or city for shelter to wait out the worst of it.

But help is on the island, and more is on the way. Some 4,500 troops and National Guard members are on the ground in Puerto Rico. The Coast Guard and Army Corps of Engineers are working to reopen more ports on the islands. But on Friday, the three-star general heading up the military response, Army Lt. Gen. Jeff Buchanan, admitted it’s “not enough.”

FEMA has more than 800 people on the ground coordinating relief efforts. It reports that millions of meals and millions of liters of water have been distributed with more arriving each day.

On Friday, the US Navy announced the USNS Comfort, a combat surgical hospital ship, was en route to Puerto Rico.

Still, the relief efforts will take time to make their way to communities across the island. “I know the FEMA people are working hard and they’re doing their best, so this is a message for President Trump, thank you for calling San Juan yesterday and listening for our mayday call,” San Juan Mayor Carmen Yulín Cruz told CNN on Friday. “But sir, there’s 77 other towns that are waiting. They’re waiting anxiously and will be very grateful to you and to the American people if you continue to step up to the moral imperative that you’ve taken on all over the world to help those in need. So help us.”

And many are arguing that help isn’t coming fast enough, or in high enough quantities.

“Given the size of Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands, and the scale of devastation, it may take a task force of 50,000 service members to fully meet the needs of Americans suffering after Maria’s passage,” Phillip Carter, a fellow at the Center for a New American Security, argues at Slate.

and still, more...

http://www.cnn.com/2017/10/02/us/puerto-rico-reels-hurricane-maria/index.html

The Port of San Juan, where much of the humanitarian aid is arriving, doesn't have enough truck drivers. Even if it did, many trucks don't have enough diesel fuel to deliver food, water and other essentials. There's little cell service for those with the aid to communicate with towns, drivers and locals. Banks can't get enough armored trucks to deliver cash too.

On top of all that, roads are marred with fallen trees -- or the road just doesn't exist anymore. In one town, residents strung a cable across a river to ford it in knee-deep water because the bridge connecting the two sides had been washed a football field's length downriver.

Meanwhile, hospitals and food banks are running low on fuel for their generators to keep the lights on and preserve fruits, veggies and meat.

maybe educate yourself a little more on what is actually being done and what is actually occurring before you start running your cum dumpster.
 
I am surfing the web today, and I keep seeing all these stories about how Puerto Rico still has only about 5% power, 10% cell service, etc. Here is the problem. The infrastructure there was **** to begin with, before any hurricanes. They have power outages on the regular. Their electrical grid is 1940's technology. Their entire electrical grid is going to have to be completely rebuilt from the ground up. Started from scratch. Same with many of their utilities, as they aren't much better. It is going to take a long time to rebuild. It isn't like West Penn Power can just reattach a couple of downed wires and everything will be hunky dory. Their entire electrical infrastructure has to be rebuilt, unless they want to see this same thing next time around.

Rebuild whatever it takes. Then make them pay Federal income tax to pay for it.
 
in your own words... you just can't make this **** up...

https://pilotonline.com/news/milita...cle_be0098a4-5f46-52f7-bf14-c9c5f9d79d3f.html



but, wait, eflie ... there's more...

https://www.vox.com/science-and-hea...tarian-disaster-electricty-fuel-flights-facts



and still, more...

http://www.cnn.com/2017/10/02/us/puerto-rico-reels-hurricane-maria/index.html



maybe educate yourself a little more on what is actually being done and what is actually occurring before you start running your cum dumpster.


How long did it take to mobilize moron? It took them 9 DAYS TO SEND THE COMFORT! 9 DAYS... WE HAVE MANY, MANY MORE ASSETS THAT COULD BE BROUGHT TO BEAR!This administration is OBVIOUSLY racist, and the incompetence is just an unbelievable bonus.

Let's hear what General Honore has to say about Trump.............



" The SOB that rides around in Air Force 1.........." Couldn't have said it better myself.
 
in your own words... you just can't make this **** up...

https://pilotonline.com/news/milita...cle_be0098a4-5f46-52f7-bf14-c9c5f9d79d3f.html



but, wait, eflie ... there's more...

https://www.vox.com/science-and-hea...tarian-disaster-electricty-fuel-flights-facts



and still, more...

http://www.cnn.com/2017/10/02/us/puerto-rico-reels-hurricane-maria/index.html



maybe educate yourself a little more on what is actually being done and what is actually occurring before you start running your cum dumpster.



https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...co-now-its-on-the-way/?utm_term=.a188ce7fbe71



Clinton pressed Trump to deploy hospital ship Comfort to Puerto Rico. Now it’s preparing to go.


By Dan Lamothe September 26


The USNS Comfort, the Navy’s East Coast hospital ship, has not been sent to provide hurricane relief in Puerto Rico. (Bill Mesta/Navy)

As the devastation from Hurricane Maria became more apparent Sunday, former Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton implored President Trump and Defense Secretary Jim Mattis to help the people of Puerto Rico. Send the Navy, she tweeted, especially the hospital ship USNS Comfort.

Two days later, Federal Emergency Management Agency Director Brock Long announced that the Navy will soon do exactly that. The decision, disclosed in front of the White House on Tuesday afternoon, was later confirmed by the Navy. It comes after days of critics saying that the U.S. government isn’t doing enough to support hurricane relief in Puerto Rico, a U.S. territory of nearly 3.5 million people that faces months without electricity and a long rebuilding process.

Navy Cmdr. Mike Kafka, a service spokesman, said that the ship will leave within the next four days, and it will take up to five additional days to reach Puerto Rico. He called the move a “prudent decision in light of current conditions on ground.”

Clinton’s tweet lacked important context: The Navy already had two amphibious ships off the coast, the USS Kearsarge and the USS Oak Hill, so the few thousand Marines and sailors aboard could launch relief operations. But her call to action took off, with a petition on the website Change.org garnering more than 100,000 signatures in three days and critics expressing frustration with the hashtag #SendtheComfort.

Since then, the call for the Comfort has come to symbolize something larger: A call for the Pentagon to send more.

More food. More water. More generators. More aircraft.

More everything.

Trump described the U.S. government response to the devastation in glowing terms Tuesday morning, saying officials were “doing a really good job.” He plans to visit next week, once it is no longer a disruption to first responders, he said.

“It’s very tough because it’s an island,” Trump said. “In Texas, we can ship the trucks right out there. And you know, we’ve gotten A-pluses on Texas and on Florida, and we will also on Puerto Rico. But the difference is, this is an island sitting in the middle of an ocean. And it’s a big ocean; it’s a very big ocean.”

Facing growing criticism about its response, the Pentagon on Monday argued that its efforts over the weekend marked only the beginning. Army Col. Rob Manning, a spokesman, told reporters the U.S. military was focused near-term on search-and-rescue operations and delivering generators to hospitals. Other plans called for the arrival of eight Army Black Hawk helicopters from Fort Campbell, Ky., a fleet of Air Force jets arriving with supplies, and disaster-assessment teams determining what else is needed.

“This is a long-term effort,” Manning said. “It’s a marathon, not a sprint, so [the Department of Defense] will continue to support them as long as support is needed.”

The Pentagon’s effort is complemented by the U.S. Coast Guard, a part of the military overseen by the Department of Homeland Security. The sea service had 13 ships off Puerto Rico by Monday, and was working long shifts to fix ports and launch search-and-rescue missions.
Play Video 2:48
The U.S.-Puerto Rico relationship: It's complicated
Hurricane Maria's devastating blow to Puerto Rico has renewed interest in how the island's relationship with the U.S. functions. (Claritza Jimenez/The Washington Post)

The U.S. military provided a new list of other efforts related to Puerto Rico on Tuesday, noting that it had set up a staging base to deliver supplies at Dobbins Air Reserve Base in Georgia and delivered small numbers of troops from bases ranging from Fort Bragg, N.C., to Fort Stewart, Ga.

But the Navy’s presence was scrutinized. Thomas LaCrosse, the Pentagon’s director of defense support to civil authorities, said Monday that U.S. officials discussed sending the Comfort to Puerto Rico last weekend, but ultimately decided not to because ports were not ready to handle a ship that large after the storm.

The Comfort, homeported in Norfolk, is one of two hospital ships in the U.S. military, and the only one kept on the East Coast. The 894-foot vessel has about 1,000 beds for patients, 12 operating rooms and a flight deck for heavy-lift helicopters. It has been used following numerous natural disasters, including Hurricane Katrina in 2005 and the earthquake that devastated Haiti in 2010.

But LaCrosse and other defense officials argued that the situation this time was different. The Puerto Rican government did not ask for more Navy ships, but logistical support that includes getting its 60-plus hospitals up and running, LaCrosse said. In light of that, the Pentagon made the judgment call to send in a fleet of Air Force jets loaded with supplies and medical personnel beginning Friday, after the Army Corps of Engineers reopened Luis Munoz Marin International Airport in San Juan, he said.

Marine Corps Gen. Joseph F. Dunford Jr., chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told Senate lawmakers Tuesday that the military continues to respond to the crisis, with FEMA in charge. Air Force Gen. Lori J. Robinson, the chief of U.S. Northern Command, is making suggestions and recommendations along the way, he said.

“There’s literally hourly meetings between FEMA and the government officials in Puerto Rico, to make sure that we are doing all we can,” Dunford said. “The guidance from Secretary Mattis has been clear. What they need, they get. Just make it happen.”

Kafka, the Navy spokesman, said that the military actually was better positioned to respond to Hurricane Maria in Puerto Rico than it was during previous storms in the Caribbean islands. The Navy and Marine Corps already were working off the Kearsarge, Oak Hill and a third ship, the USS Wasp, to help following Hurricane Irma’s devastation there earlier in the month, and moved south out of Maria’s path before quickly returning, he said.

The size of Maria and its unpredictable course also may have played a role in how the U.S. military responded. The Navy had several ships, including the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln, providing hurricane relief off the Florida Keys. But commanders sent them back to port in Norfolk and Mayport, Fla., rather than leaving them off the east coast of Florida or in the Caribbean.

Still, the response and the characterization of it is in contrast with how the military responded to Irma in Florida and the Caribbean islands. In that case, the U.S. government deployed at least eight ships, and Tom Bossert, Trump’s homeland security adviser, described the effort as both “unprecedented” and “the largest flotilla operation in our nation’s history,” though more ships had been used in other similar operations in the past.

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Rep. Adam Smith (Wash.), the ranking Democrat on the House Armed Services Committee, said Monday night that at minimum, Trump should establish a “coordinated military effort” overseen by a three-star general, a move that occurred after Hurricane Katrina and other disasters, such as a typhoon that hit the Philippines in 2013.

“The Trump administration’s response to the destruction in Puerto Rico has been wholly inadequate,” Smith said. “A territory of 3.5 million American citizens is almost completely without power, water, food, and telephone service, and we have a handful of helicopters involved in DOD’s response. It’s a disgrace.”

Related on Checkpoint:

White House says its military response to Irma is ‘unprecedented,’ but there’s a history of similar operations

The Coast Guard makes sense of its grueling response to Hurricane Harvey
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Lol, Hillary Clinton.....World Savior. I'm sure Trump wouldn't have done anything if she hadn't pressured him.
 
Hillary ******* Clinton is as relevant to this conversation as she is to gun laws.
 
they have electricity at the t-shirt plant where she makes her tshirts.

san-juan-mayor.jpg

:hitit:
 
Fellow Puerto Rican Mayor Contradicts San Juan Mayor’s Criticism Of President Trump

October 1, 2107

Washington, D.C.- Emerald Robinson

San Juan Mayor Carmen Yulin Cruz received much praise and publicity for Friday’s criticism leveraged at President Trump and the federal government’s response to the disaster in Puerto Rico. However, a Daily Caller interview with a colleague and fellow mayor in Puerto Rico paints a very different picture of FEMA’s response. Mayor Angel Perez told Daily Caller reporters Alex Pfeiffer and Peter Hasson that his experience with the federal government had been very different from Cruz’s.

According to Perez who is the mayor of a neighboring Guaynabo, Mayor Cruz has not been attending meeting with FEMA officials and other federal agencies. He says his experience is very different from Mayor Cruz’s highly publicized claims. He said that specifically he asked FEMA for blue tarps to prevent further damaged in homes with missing roofs. He said FEMA quickly responded, saying that the tarps were on their way.

To Mayor Cruz’s passionate claim the Trump Administration’s response could be likened to “genocide,” Mayor Perez said he doesn’t know why she would say that. He added that he didn’t understand how she could make such criticisms of agencies like HUD and FEMA when she has not attended the meetings held by these agencies for officials in Puerto Rico.

Mayor Perez admits that there are logistical problems with the disaster relief efforts. According to Perez, the breakdown in getting supplies from port to the victims results from the lack of truck drivers. The mayor suggests that drivers who were also hit very hard by the storm are caring for their own affairs at home with their families and not showing up to drive the supplies.

Despite the continuing dire circumstances, Mayor Perez told Hasson and Pfeiffer that he is hopeful because he knows that the government is helping and he expects the next week to be a turning point. He reiterated that Puerto Rico needs the help from Congress and the President because of the financial crisis that has left the small island bankrupt. He added that, without the help of the federal government, it would take nearly 10 years for Puerto Rico to rebuild on its own.

Mayor Perez told Hasson and Pfeiffer that he is “over the moon” about the President’s upcoming visit. He says that this visit, along with Marco Rubio’s visit to Puerto Rico, proves that the government does indeed care about it’s terriroty.
 
The USS Wasp

I spent 2 weeks on the 2nd of that ship type. The amphibious assault stuff was cool to watch.
 
Elfiero, how much did the Clinton Foundation get for opening a dialogue with the current administration to send aid? Cause you realize, that's how the Clintons work... They don't just DO **** for free...
 
Elfiero, how much did the Clinton Foundation get for opening a dialogue with the current administration to send aid? Cause you realize, that's how the Clintons work... They don't just DO **** for free...

I don't think that happened, but whatever makes you happy wig. Oh maybe the Secret Service can donate to the Clinton Foundation for their expenses concerning this matter.....

Oh wait...their budget for this year is gone(first time in the history of the Secret Service) because the two bit, Trump University, con man in chief figured out what his hustle would be as soon as he got in the white house: "split the SS detail between New York and Florida, then up the fees and rents at both places so I can rob the treasury blind."

Keep trying champ.....
 
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