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Why does god hate trailer parks

2022.01.07 19:37




















You must be logged in to post a comment. This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed. Primary Menu Skip to content. Search for:. Harris politically incorrect at any cost Twisted Trailer. It needs to be a federal-mandated national requirement. Officials in Lee County, Alabama, recently asked the Federal Emergency Management Agency to include the county in a federal grant program that would help its residents build storm shelters.


After all, this is the county that experienced the deadliest American tornado in six years this March, when 23 people were killed in and around the small community of Beauregard. Of those 23 deaths, 19 happened inside mobile homes. Because mobile homes have no foundation or basement, they are more easily destroyed in a tornado.


They can be lifted up and turned over, thrown onto one another, ripped open and apart. Tornado survivors describe being tossed around rooms. And that danger increases when states fail to enforce building codes requiring owners to securely anchor their mobile homes to concrete slabs. Given the vulnerability of people living in mobile homes, FEMA should help the residents of Lee County, and of other counties in tornado-prone regions, build these life-saving shelters.


As the calendar moves past one of the deadliest tornado seasons in years—beginning with the tornadoes that struck Lee County in early March and ending with an unprecedented day streak of tornadoes in late May—the National Weather Service has compiled a preliminary report on killer tornadoes in the United States in Of the 38 deaths by tornado across the country this year, 26 happened inside mobile homes.


According to a recent study , 39 percent of Americans killed by tornadoes from to died in mobile homes. That's especially significant considering how few Americans—about 6 percent —lived in mobile homes during that period. But the program is an after-the-fact response. Local governments and non-profit agencies apply for the grants on behalf of their communities after a disaster hits.


If awarded, qualifying residents are reimbursed for 75 percent of the cost of a storm shelter. For Jesus was rather specific in His preferred choice of home construction.


The type of people He loves has substantial residences built on solid rock foundations. In other words, not you. If these folks knew anything about helping themselves, they wouldn't need a FEMA trailer in the first place.


So even if Jesus saw fit to Hoover your mother up from her disintegrating linoleum as she knelt in prayer to Him, or violently hurl elderly Medicare leeches into the highest branches of towering spruce trees and cell phone towers, it is not ours to question why! Perhaps if residents of your community had shown enough drive and perseverance in life, they could have taken up residence on a God-approved cul de sac of two-story fieldstone colonials with solid rock foundations.


We said terrible things. We said stupid things. With time has come perspective. And humility. And a respect for trailers as shelter and conveyance. A few years back, I wrote a book on food trucks. Once I got beyond the hype and chickpea frites, I recognized that food trucks are trailers, too. Operated by new immigrants.