January 12, 2025
Lovely snow cover significantly eroded by the end of the day.
Finished The Joiner.
Listening to videos of the Los Angeles fires. Catastrophic. Every now and then a house or two stands untouched in the midst of ruin. 10,000 buildings consumed. Some suggest the fires were deliberately lit. It began Tuesday; today is Sunday. It is my understanding that it hasn’t ended yet. I don’t like the idea of being helpless, utterly without a useful suggestion to make, a remedy to offer. One man wept bitterly for the dogs he’d left in his house. One woman screamed from her car, “I have to find my father!” It was foolish to keep watching after I began to sob.
Our hurricane and California’s fire bring something into cruel focus. Our emergency services are not up to the task, nor are they intended to be. Biltmore Village stands empty and dark. Roads into the mountains will never be rebuilt. FEMA stops paying hotel bills for people who have nowhere else to go. Firefighters and linesmen, etc, are not part of this issue: they worked until they fell in their boots, and no one can level criticism at them, heroes all. Nor can the victims be blamed: we dragged people out of the water, cooked meals, opened our homes; Californians stand on burning roofs trying to save the houses of their neighbors. The people behind the desks are a different story. They scrimp in the name of economy, but that economy serves mostly to get money into the pockets of the rich. Let’s see how little can be enough, until we’re exposed by the next disaster. It will be worse with the incoming administration, which says outright that its purpose is to get money into the pockets of the rich. The American government does not exist to enable or defend the welfare of its people. It is a miraculously well concealed plutocracy, and somehow the masses buy into it. I wish I could fly over LA like a thunderbird, shedding rain from my winds.