Mindanao has Lost Its One Saving Grace

For all that is wrong with this island:

1) 4 Islamic Insurgencies

2) 3 Communist Insurgencies

3) Soldiers giving gasoline enemas out of glass sodapop bottles

4) Endemic Kidnapping for Ransom

5) Protection Rackets

6) Monthly earthquakes

7) Volcanoes

8) Tsunamis

9) Flooding

10) King cobras

11) Scorpions

12). Crocodiles

13) Ebola

14) Dengue

15) Malaria

16) Drug Resistant TB,

and most any other man made and natural disaster...did I include cannibalistic armies of child soldiers who lop off heads and drink the blood while using kneecaps as sacred medallions...one thing we never had to worry about was Typhoons. Mindanao sits far outside the Typhoon Belt. Joysa's island, Luzon, where Manila is located, literally gets 30 plus each year. Imagine a region of America getting 30 odd hurricanes each year? Remember, such storms come in a three to four month season, so Luzon is getting basically 8 a month. Of course only 7 of the 30 odd storms equal a Class 3 Hurricane but still, that is A LOT.

Here on Mindanao we could at least feel blessed seeing Luzon on the telly. Some readers may recall that less than a month ago Joysa and her family were sitting on their roof and getting food packages (rotten by the way) from Air Force helicopters.

So, we had one reason to feel fortunate. Lo and behold, out of nowhere we got slammed by a major typhoon, moving off now. Since 4PM Friday until now, we have been pounded, even had to go onto generator power for most of the last 20 hours. I had my mobile as always and hardly felt the effects. We live in cement homes, thick brick walls, unlike 95% of the island. The usual home is a bamboo framed, split bamboo floored and Nipa Palm leaf thatched hut, one room. I have posted photos in the past of these "nipa homes."

From 4PM Friday until Saturday morning 8AM, there were 256 known deaths here, meaning at least 1,000 actual deaths in real terms (many here don't even have birth certificates. Every coastal town has stilt homes extending out into reefs offshore, all collapsing like tents when the winds get heavy). In that same time period, 4PM Friday to 8AM Saturday, 16 hours, we had- officially- 180 fucking milimeters of rain. Now forget the winds, 180 mm of water, for you Metrically challenged Americans that is 7.86 inches of rain, coming down hard and fast.

I have spent Monsoon in Munai, in India, and never came close to that number. Anyway, I've included some photos. If you ever feel like your life has gone to shit, take a peek at these photos.
 
Heh. There should be an option when posting to disable smileys-- check it out. In the meanwhile, I've fixed your post.

Sorry to hear about the monsoon. The office manager at my work is originally from Luzon, and she has taken her family over there for the holiday to meet her sisters and their extended family. I'm sure I'll be hearing all this from here when she gets back; no doubt it's big news, as it's so unusual to get typhoons that far south.
 
On smileys, on Mobile there probably isn't but I will look more intencely next time.

On the storm, Typhoon Sendong, the official toll is at 560 and change but thousands are missing and so, in all liklihood, this one has killed 10,000 people. Amazing, it probably hasn't rated a mention on Western media outlets, but let Israel evict squatters and it makes front page news and three days of follow up. Fucken disgusting. In Cagayan del Oro they have begun throwing bodies in mass graves with no attempt at ID to try and avoid disease outbreaks. Yet, one happy story, 200 villagers were swept out to sea and most were rescued alive, they are calling it a "Miracle" though whatever it is, it beats the mass graves, we have too many of those already.

Luzon? I'm sure she is excited, fun going home. I will probably try to get up there myself at least for New Years Eve to spend it with Joysa but tough getting planes out now. Maybe Ill hitck a ride with the army, not in the mood for three days at sea in Monsoon.
 
Oh, no-- word has gotten out here; albeit not banner headline material, unfortunately. Regardless of one's political leaning, such suffering should take priority over political news, if for no other reason to try to get more help. Sadly, that's not how the world works at the moment.

Yeah, she was giddy for the months leading up to it. The rest of her family went down on the weekend, which I'm sure was an interesting flight.

Smileys: if a smiley gets through and you'd rather it didn't, just fire me off a quick PM and it'll get sorted pronto. You can also look in your Blog Settings (toward the top of the screen, just below the 'What's new' BL tab); underneath the 'Blog Description' field there is a check box that should allow you to disable smileys in any of your blog posts.
 
Its always fun for me in New York when I fly back here. All the Filipinos super excited. Most come only to work and haven't seen spouses and kids for three to five years, dragging huge Balikbayan (phrase given to overseas Filipinos) boxes of household supplies and clothes. The poverty here is unimaginable. On the planes they don't stop smiling for whole 23 hours, that's a lot of smiling. Thanks on Smileys, I hate that shit. So cheesy, like "emoticons" of mugs of beer or cannabis leaves, haha, but some like them, what can you do, right?
 
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