Powerful earthquake hit central Mexico last Tuesday September 19, 2017, that cause more than 225 people to death. Building and school collapsed for the second time in just two weeks.
After the said commotion rescuers were stressed digging out people trapped under and this includes the children buried or covered their school. In that day 21 students confirmed and believe to have been killed in the collapse of the school.
According to the investigation the earthquake struck at exactly 1 p.m. About 100 miles far from the Mexico City. It registered a preliminary magnitude of 7.1 caused heavy and prolonging shaking in the capital.
About 40 buildings and other structures in Mexico collapsed and this includes one other school in the said city.
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Volunteers kept lists of every dead child’s name that was confirmed by the rescuers as they emerged from the wreckage. Frenzied parents paced the scene, wondering about the fates of their sons and daughters or screaming in agony upon seeing their bodies.
Buildings also collapsed across the neighborhood of Condesa, another fashionable district in the city constructed atop soft soil and extremely vulnerable to earthquakes. Outside, thousands and thousands stood in the streets, avenues and sidewalks, filling the popular neighborhoods with a sense of dread
The sound of shouts filled the air, men barking orders at one another. Then came a call for silence to listen for the voices of anyone trapped inside, screaming for help.
There were also reports of deaths and extensive damage in Jojutla de Juárez, Morelos, a city about 60 miles west of the epicenter. Residents said that many buildings, including businesses and homes, had been destroyed. Electricity was cut, and water was scarce because water tanks
The damages were catastrophic as houses lay in ruin and debris littered the roads. There were mudslides and fallen rocks that paved the roads and made them impassible for vehicles to get through. Ultimately by the roads being clogged up the response time by rescue workers and essential personal were hampered. This also made it exceptionally difficult for supplies to be rushed to the locations for the earthquake survivors. As some were digging and excavating for survivors they were being halted by aftershocks and falling debris from above. Approximately 8000 people were killed either by their houses caving in or by the other disasters this earthquake triggered. It was a real life tragedy that
“Mohawk Interruptus: Political Life across the Borders of Settler States” recounts the situation of indigenous peoples living in their original lands, but refusing to accept “gifts” of state citizen and cultural recognition, as it’s not good for them. The author specifically addresses the situation of the Mohawk peoples who require self-autonomy and their own government as oppose to belonging to a sovereign state such as the United States or Canada.
The 9th of February 1971 an earthquake occurred in the lower parts of the San Gabriel Mountains in southern California. The San Fernando earthquake was measured to have a magnitude of around 6.5, which caused severe damage to buildings and major freeways in the Los Angeles area. Two huge health care buildings in San Fernando caused the majority of deaths when they collapsed at both sides. The epicenter of the earthquake was located in the mountains and the most severe damages occurred in northern San Fernando Valley. However, the event impacted other densely populated areas in Los Angeles and caused huge difficulty for transportation as a result of failure in several roadways and freeway interchanges.
After the explosion caused many buildings to collapse, people had to clear out the debris and the remains of the building.
This earthquake occurred on July 27th, 1976 northern eastern part of China in Tangshan. The earthquake had a magnitude of 7.5, but there was a major aftershock 15 hours later. The actual number of people dead was never really confirmed, but people say that over 244,000 people were killed.
One of the most greatest appearing earthquake in San Francisco in the year of 1906. It was approximately 7.8 earthquake. The earthquake had hit buildings, schools, streets and houses. Killing hundreds of people and injuring thousands. This earthquake began at an opera house and ended up all throughout the streets in San Francisco. The Great San Francisco Earthquake may be studied by examining the earthquake, the spread of fire, and the aftermath of the worst natural disasters.
According to the court clerk of the U.S. District Court of San Francisco, the earthquake lasted around a minute, however that minute was enough to inflict one of the most devastating disasters in United States history. The earthquake was felt from Oregon to Las Angeles as well as Nevada with the epicenter occurring 2 miles away from San Francisco in the Pacific Ocean. The quake resulted in water mains and gas lines breakages, and the fires raged unchecked which spread to over 500 blocks in San Francisco. Although the earthquake of 1906 is known as the San Francisco earthquake, the cities of Santo Rosa and San Jose were affected as well and lost much of their infrastructure.
“One out of four civil servants living in the capital were killed sixty percent of the city's government buildings and 80% of its schools were destroyed or damaged. Haiti was already the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere” (Economic Impact of the Earthquake). ‘’Haiti was especially vulnerable to damage from natural disasters” (“Earthquake Caused Lasting Damage”). Being a poor country many of the nation relied on the agriculture. “Transportation and communication were also damaged by the earthquake” 80 percent of the generation is living on $2 or less per day or week( "Earthquake Case Study).One hundred fifteen thousand tents and “shelters provided support for people without jobs, which equates to nearly 70% of the population, through cash/food-for-work projects” ("Earthquake Case
New York Times reports that this event killing nearly 1100 people, because the building was unstable in their giant cracks in the foundation and walls.
The government today encourages the exposure of truth, but what if telling the truth was punishable by death? In George Orwell’s 1984, the protagonist encounters situations that show the government’s fear of the truth. Orwell once wrote that “in a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act.” Orwell uses the fear of truth to show that it is both consequential and valuable. In 1984, the separation of power between the government and use of literary elements show that revealing the truth is a revolutionary act.
The January 12, 2010 Haiti Earthquake caused an enormous destruction in the Caribbean nation. Hospitals and government buildings collapsed along with an unbelievable amount of homes. Tens of thousands of people were killed, and many more were wounded. The disaster added more misery to people already struggling to get by with everyday life. Haiti is one of the poorest nations in the world. The January 12 quake demolished almost every major building in Port-au-Prince, Haiti's capital. About 5,000 schools in the city were destroyed or damaged. Throughout Haiti, more than 220,000 people were killed, and more than 1 million were left homeless. A few days after the quake, the number of survivors stood at 121 as hopes of finding more became
It was exactly thirty-seven minutes ago that the shaking started. I’ve felt earthquakes before, but none were anywhere near what this was. Within the first two minutes, the buildings all around me were reduced to rubble. I was very fortunate to be in my car in the center of the freeway. The large steel factories and tall skyscrapers that I normally looked at in the distance were now nowhere to be found. The shaking lasted for years. That’s what it felt like,
The most recent large-scale earthquake along the Peru-Chile Plate was the 16 September earthquake, which happened in 2015. It measured an M 8.3, one of the largest on record. 5 were killed, and over 1 million were evacuated from greatly affected areas. However, compared to other earthquakes that have taken place in Chile, this one was moderate.
Lasting less than a minute, the immediate impact of the earthquake was disastrous. The earthquake also lead to several fires around the city that burned for three days and destroyed nearly 500 city blocks (archives.gov).The earthquake and fires killed an estimated 3,000
Heitmeyer points out that there are “unclear dividing lines between racist and xenophobic violence, on the one hand, and right-wing extremist violence, on the other” (Heitmeyer 2003, p. 400). The difference is the underlying ideology. Right-wing extremist violence is motivated by its ideology and it aims to promote power in social environments as well as in political contexts, whereas racist violence is lacking these ideology. Instead racist violence is a result of “nonspecific demonstration of power in a particular situation” (Heitmeyer 2003, p. 400). Heitmeyer states the right-wing extremist violence is often not be seen as such violence in the eyes of politicians if it occurs in a country where the far-right political party has no strong