Home video of Tsunami

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Old Dec 29, 2004 | 04:35 PM
  #1  
JDaddy's Avatar
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From: Wisconsin
Home video of Tsunami

This was on CNN here is a link of the video. I guess the man survies but the women has not been found.

http://www.dailyfoo.com/?i=2386
 
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Old Dec 29, 2004 | 05:33 PM
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From: The Netherlands
Unhappy Some people!!/comments

[myg0t]MAKONG said: that's ***** ****.. all those guys were pussies.. fxck them. especially the dead ones.

wrar said: rifl fxcking gooks got jizzed on water will be good for their rice fields at least


These guys probably don't know that hundreds of Americans are missing too.

(I am not sure but I think these comments were made by americans)

Very sad.
 
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Old Dec 29, 2004 | 06:23 PM
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From: Susquehanna Valley, pa.
Wow. Its sad to watch knowing those two poor people probably died.
 
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Old Dec 29, 2004 | 07:05 PM
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From: The Netherlands
http://www.dagbladet.no/nyheter/2004/12/27/418679.html

All I can make of that scandinavien language is that the guys on the right from Sweden and Norway tried to save the couple from England.
I don't know what happened to the woman but I think the man is in a coma lying in a hospital.

"Mannen ligger i koma pĺ sykehuset."
 
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Old Dec 29, 2004 | 07:13 PM
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I would never goto any of those countries at all, they are just not a safe place to be at any time of the year.

When they build these places 2' above sea level, how can they expect them to survive anything? Its like those in Florida building on the beach.

All those government were warned about building a tidal wave warning system, they ALL decided it would cost too much. It would have given them 4 hours warning.
 
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Old Dec 29, 2004 | 07:47 PM
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From: Susquehanna Valley, pa.
jinjimbob
And you live in CA.
 
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Old Dec 29, 2004 | 09:27 PM
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From: Pacific North West, WA
Originally posted by lees99f150
jinjimbob
And you live in CA.
hehe, yup for the time being, but my area isn't crazy.
 
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Old Dec 30, 2004 | 07:56 PM
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Hell like a place like New Orleans is any safer from a thing such as this
 
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Old Dec 30, 2004 | 08:32 PM
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From: Lancaster, PA
Originally posted by GBTexas
Hell like a place like New Orleans is any safer from a thing such as this
well, actually it IS much safer from tsunamis...
 
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Old Dec 31, 2004 | 10:13 PM
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From: River Ridge, LA, USA
Being from the Greater New Orleans metro area, I have to post. Inbred: as you are aware, Houston and New Orleans are geographically similar in that they are relatively flat, get inundated every spring with heavy thunderstorms, are within 50 miles of the Gulf of Mexico, have the largest Port's in the South, and neither can get enough of the "radio gawds"!

Hurricanes are just part of living along the Gulf of Mexico and every year we know in advance where, when, and how. In sunny California, you don't know where, when, and how. I would not want to live in the unknown. It must be nerve-racking. When I worked in Torrance, CA, one night the hotel I was staying at began to shake. I then called the desk and the clerk stated that it wasn't anything and for me to go back to sleep. Needless to say, I couldn't sleep.
 
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Old Dec 31, 2004 | 11:36 PM
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From: Sunny FL
The hurricane season is a real drag though
 
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Old Jan 1, 2005 | 12:37 AM
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From: NH
I loved living in California because with earthquakes there is nothing to really worry about. As was mentioned no one really knows when one is going to hit and if it will be the “big” one.

So, one hits and you either live or die, nothing to worry about since it happens quickly. Not like watching the sky waiting for a tornado to form or waiting on a hurricane to hit the coast. Those all require you to sit around thinking about what might happen.

A little shack and bake without any prior knowledge no problem, once the ground stops shaking you go right back to BBQ or what ever else you were doing, no nailing up boards or hiding in a little bitty hole out back…
 
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Old Jan 3, 2005 | 12:18 AM
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From: south western NYS Latitude: 42.34 N, Longitude: 78.46 W
Originally posted by 01 XLT Sport
I loved living in California because with earthquakes there is nothing to really worry about. As was mentioned no one really knows when one is going to hit and if it will be the “big” one.

So, one hits and you either live or die, nothing to worry about since it happens quickly. Not like watching the sky waiting for a tornado to form or waiting on a hurricane to hit the coast. Those all require you to sit around thinking about what might happen.

A little shack and bake without any prior knowledge no problem, once the ground stops shaking you go right back to BBQ or what ever else you were doing, no nailing up boards or hiding in a little bitty hole out back…

That is a big "if" the ground stops shaking, just keep a careful watch over your shoulder for a wave.
 
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