Yeah, thousands didn’t die in Puerto Rico after Maria, nor did anyone die after Katrina did in New Orleans. The BS can get pretty thick in here.
Yeah 304 looks low. Interestingly 11% of the 1800 or so deaths attributed to Katrina were heart failure. Heh.
I’m not sure how one attributes that 30 years of dietary decisions to a hurricane, but anyway... LOL. Maybe the other site left those out, don’t know. Many disaster managers use both direct and indirect numbers for deaths in natural disasters.
(And if you’ve been to Louisiana, you’ll wonder how that heart attack number wasn’t higher than 11%. Lol!)
The interesting thing about Katrina when we talked at length to a NO resident when we were there, is how very small the flooded area of the city was. We toured it. The guy doing the tour said many who live there were always surprised at the weird TV coverage only showing the Ward that the levee broke in.
(That dude was also beaded for a massive heart attack. Seriously. He was past Fluffy on the Gabriel Iglesias scale that ends with “Damn!” in his comedy routine. LOL!)
It was also quite interesting that in this relatively small area of the city how entire blocks still have abandoned houses with the occasional rebuilt one right in the middle of the block.
When we asked about this, the tour driver said a number of them were owned by celebrities who made a big show of rebuilding theirs, but left the rest of the block to its own resources. He named the specific celebrities by house. LOL. He also named a handful that actually helped the city and what they fixed or invested in. He did mention that a number of those were investments and those celebs made their money back and then some.
We have a non-zero number of people drop dead shoveling snow of heart attacks here, too. Not sure I couldn’t chuckle a bit if someone blamed the storm on that. And yeah, I knew one personally. Dropped dead in his garage trying to pull frozen sandbags (for traction) out of the bed of his pickup truck.