Jim Stone: Hurricane Advice and More Massive Fraud
9/08/2017 07:53:00 PM Corruption, Fraud, George Soros, Hillary Clinton, Secret News, Trump, USA
This obviously means there are that many more below the age of 112 used as fraud accounts!
The claim is that it will be too much work to find the fraudsters. That's a lie. If you can pay a claim, you know the address, and can go there looking for someone seriously elderly. BUT THEY WILL NEVER DO THAT, AND I KNOW WHY.
1. Because that's too much money being handed to the likes of George Soros and Hillary Clinton, who pocket the money and then:
2. Use it to put falsely identified people on buses, to rig the vote 6.5 million times over! Or simply collect the cash and do mail in votes. SO THEY COLLECT THE CASH, AND FRAUD THE VOTE. BUSTED BUSTED BUSTED, and at least the amount of fraud is documented, see this FOX NEWS REPORT. which is actually a total white wash, they blow right past the obvious like a party balloon caught in Irma.
Do you think Trump can drain that swamp? NOT HARDLY, that swamp needs to be drained with the second amendment.
A lot of people are posting advice for the hurricane
Many people are trapped where they are, and can't evacuate even if they want to. Here's my advice with that, which is basically tornado advice.
Obviously with a hurricane there is more warning. Tape your windows off at a minimum. It won't stop them from breaking, but it will help control flying glass (for whatever that's worth, which will amount to what a piece of tape can do against a hurricane.) If you can't get wood to board up your windows, thick cardboard over them will be a lot better than nothing, and it will have to be nailed like wood. Find small pieces of wood at least, and nail through the small pieces into the cardboard so the wood will hold the cardboard.
Some people won't be able to do even that. If you can't get to a shelter and are stuck in your home, stay away from ALL WINDOWS. When a storm breaks a window, it is not like Hollywood. Your window won't start cracking to give you a warning, it will instead suddenly explode into thousands of tiny shards (unless it is broken by flying debris, which is actually better than having it explode.) The shards will fly faster than wind speed and stick in everything. The bottom line is that you can't be near windows at all.
If you are alone and can't get below ground, one of the safest places is to lay down in a first floor bathtub (if the house is coming apart). Obviously it can't have glass shower doors if you do this. It would be best to find a way to cover it in case there is falling debris, but it is still fairly well protected. The bathroom is a small room that is stronger than the larger rooms. If you have a bathroom with a door to the hallway and no windows because there is a bedroom between it and the outside, the bathtub in that bathroom is the safest place in the house. Being in it won't do any good if you have to share it and can't lay flat, on the bottom of it. If two people can lay sideways together and stay below the top, that's OK too. But you can't just sit in it with your head exposed.
The next safest place would be a hall closet. Then the hall. Then the bathtub in a bathroom that is not in the center of the house if the house has no hall. This might be somewhat equal to a bedroom closet which is not a very good choice because it is not much stronger than the rest of the house.
Zero trailers will survive Irma anywhere near landfall. All houses will be destroyed or damaged also. So your survival plan will be one which takes into consideration that the house will come apart. The last thing to go is always the bathtub.
Cut your own power
Don't wait for the power to go out by itself. When the storm is obviously getting nasty, go to the breaker panel and cut the power yourself. That will prevent a catastrophic death of the grid from sending surges to everything in the house and destroying everything that way.
Make plans in case you get lucky and have a few walls or more standing. If that happens, the fridge might still be there. So right now, turn your fridge and freezer to the coldest setting to give it a head start and help it through an extended power outage. Freeze as much water as possible. Load the shelves in the fridge as much as possible also, to weight it down (for whatever good that does, but it might help)
If it is there after the storm, when you get something plan ahead and be ready to grab whatever you want quickly so the door is not open any longer than it has to be.
Fill all empty containers right now. If you don't usually drink city water, it will still be better than puddles.
Turn all propane tanks off, at the tank. It would be good to put anything that can cook with propane, (plus the tank) in an area you think will stay safe.
There are little butane stoves that fit in a small back pack. They are the best for survival. They look like a small single burner stove. If you come across one, get it and a couple extra cans of butane. The butane cans don't look like Coleman canisters, they look like big cans of hair spray. The stoves are the ultimate in portable, and work great.
---
MASSIVE social security and obvious vote fraud!
Fewer than 35 people in the world are age 112 and over. Yet the social security office is paying out benefits to 6.5 million over the age of 112!!!
This obviously means there are that many more below the age of 112 used as fraud accounts!
The claim is that it will be too much work to find the fraudsters. That's a lie. If you can pay a claim, you know the address, and can go there looking for someone seriously elderly. BUT THEY WILL NEVER DO THAT, AND I KNOW WHY.
1. Because that's too much money being handed to the likes of George Soros and Hillary Clinton, who pocket the money and then:
2. Use it to put falsely identified people on buses, to rig the vote 6.5 million times over! Or simply collect the cash and do mail in votes. SO THEY COLLECT THE CASH, AND FRAUD THE VOTE. BUSTED BUSTED BUSTED, and at least the amount of fraud is documented, see this FOX NEWS REPORT. which is actually a total white wash, they blow right past the obvious like a party balloon caught in Irma.
Do you think Trump can drain that swamp? NOT HARDLY, that swamp needs to be drained with the second amendment.
9/08/2017 07:53:00 PM Corruption, Fraud, George Soros, Hillary Clinton, Secret News, Trump, USA
This obviously means there are that many more below the age of 112 used as fraud accounts!
The claim is that it will be too much work to find the fraudsters. That's a lie. If you can pay a claim, you know the address, and can go there looking for someone seriously elderly. BUT THEY WILL NEVER DO THAT, AND I KNOW WHY.
1. Because that's too much money being handed to the likes of George Soros and Hillary Clinton, who pocket the money and then:
2. Use it to put falsely identified people on buses, to rig the vote 6.5 million times over! Or simply collect the cash and do mail in votes. SO THEY COLLECT THE CASH, AND FRAUD THE VOTE. BUSTED BUSTED BUSTED, and at least the amount of fraud is documented, see this FOX NEWS REPORT. which is actually a total white wash, they blow right past the obvious like a party balloon caught in Irma.
Do you think Trump can drain that swamp? NOT HARDLY, that swamp needs to be drained with the second amendment.
A lot of people are posting advice for the hurricane
Many people are trapped where they are, and can't evacuate even if they want to. Here's my advice with that, which is basically tornado advice.
Obviously with a hurricane there is more warning. Tape your windows off at a minimum. It won't stop them from breaking, but it will help control flying glass (for whatever that's worth, which will amount to what a piece of tape can do against a hurricane.) If you can't get wood to board up your windows, thick cardboard over them will be a lot better than nothing, and it will have to be nailed like wood. Find small pieces of wood at least, and nail through the small pieces into the cardboard so the wood will hold the cardboard.
Some people won't be able to do even that. If you can't get to a shelter and are stuck in your home, stay away from ALL WINDOWS. When a storm breaks a window, it is not like Hollywood. Your window won't start cracking to give you a warning, it will instead suddenly explode into thousands of tiny shards (unless it is broken by flying debris, which is actually better than having it explode.) The shards will fly faster than wind speed and stick in everything. The bottom line is that you can't be near windows at all.
If you are alone and can't get below ground, one of the safest places is to lay down in a first floor bathtub (if the house is coming apart). Obviously it can't have glass shower doors if you do this. It would be best to find a way to cover it in case there is falling debris, but it is still fairly well protected. The bathroom is a small room that is stronger than the larger rooms. If you have a bathroom with a door to the hallway and no windows because there is a bedroom between it and the outside, the bathtub in that bathroom is the safest place in the house. Being in it won't do any good if you have to share it and can't lay flat, on the bottom of it. If two people can lay sideways together and stay below the top, that's OK too. But you can't just sit in it with your head exposed.
The next safest place would be a hall closet. Then the hall. Then the bathtub in a bathroom that is not in the center of the house if the house has no hall. This might be somewhat equal to a bedroom closet which is not a very good choice because it is not much stronger than the rest of the house.
Zero trailers will survive Irma anywhere near landfall. All houses will be destroyed or damaged also. So your survival plan will be one which takes into consideration that the house will come apart. The last thing to go is always the bathtub.
Cut your own power
Don't wait for the power to go out by itself. When the storm is obviously getting nasty, go to the breaker panel and cut the power yourself. That will prevent a catastrophic death of the grid from sending surges to everything in the house and destroying everything that way.
Make plans in case you get lucky and have a few walls or more standing. If that happens, the fridge might still be there. So right now, turn your fridge and freezer to the coldest setting to give it a head start and help it through an extended power outage. Freeze as much water as possible. Load the shelves in the fridge as much as possible also, to weight it down (for whatever good that does, but it might help)
If it is there after the storm, when you get something plan ahead and be ready to grab whatever you want quickly so the door is not open any longer than it has to be.
Fill all empty containers right now. If you don't usually drink city water, it will still be better than puddles.
Turn all propane tanks off, at the tank. It would be good to put anything that can cook with propane, (plus the tank) in an area you think will stay safe.
There are little butane stoves that fit in a small back pack. They are the best for survival. They look like a small single burner stove. If you come across one, get it and a couple extra cans of butane. The butane cans don't look like Coleman canisters, they look like big cans of hair spray. The stoves are the ultimate in portable, and work great.
---
MASSIVE social security and obvious vote fraud!
Fewer than 35 people in the world are age 112 and over. Yet the social security office is paying out benefits to 6.5 million over the age of 112!!!
This obviously means there are that many more below the age of 112 used as fraud accounts!
The claim is that it will be too much work to find the fraudsters. That's a lie. If you can pay a claim, you know the address, and can go there looking for someone seriously elderly. BUT THEY WILL NEVER DO THAT, AND I KNOW WHY.
1. Because that's too much money being handed to the likes of George Soros and Hillary Clinton, who pocket the money and then:
2. Use it to put falsely identified people on buses, to rig the vote 6.5 million times over! Or simply collect the cash and do mail in votes. SO THEY COLLECT THE CASH, AND FRAUD THE VOTE. BUSTED BUSTED BUSTED, and at least the amount of fraud is documented, see this FOX NEWS REPORT. which is actually a total white wash, they blow right past the obvious like a party balloon caught in Irma.
Do you think Trump can drain that swamp? NOT HARDLY, that swamp needs to be drained with the second amendment.
8 Ways to Improve Your Business Disaster PlanThis entry was posted on August 17, 2015 by Emergency Essentials.
Many businesses in Beuamont, TX were badly hit by Hurricane RitaWhen Hurricane Rita hit Beaumont Texas on Sept. 18, 2005, Bill Munro, owner of a dry cleaning, uniform rental, and safety apparel business, had an emergency plan, according to ready.gov. It wasn’t enough. It didn’t account for power loss or supply shortages, and it took him a week to reopen. He’s since revised it. He was lucky. He reopened.
Up to 40 percent of businesses do not reopen after a disaster, according to the Insurance Information Institute. Another 25 percent fail within one year, according to the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
A business disaster plan could prevent failure. Numerous organizations have ideas, checklists, software and apps to help small businesses prepare. The steps below come from a pamphlet by the Insurance Institute for Business and Home Safety (IIBS).
Know your risks
First, know what types of disasters your business is most likely to encounter. The Federal Alliance for Safe Homes has a site detailing the most common natural disasters in each state.
Only about 20 percent of business disasters are natural, according to the Agents Council for Technology (ACT), an organization for insurance agents. Others include fire, IT failure, espionage, terrorism and theft.
You’ll need to determine which disasters will cause your company the most damage. Prioritize those in planning
Know your operations
Once he reopened after Hurricane Rita, Munro realized that while no one needed dry cleaning, many contractors needed clean clothes. So he started a wash, dry and fold service. Later, he bought a generator and supplies for vital employees for three days.
Determine which parts of your business are most important and how long you can go without being able to perform them. Install fire and security alarms and keep the work space in good shape, says the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC)
Know your employees
Munro created a communication plan that required employees to contact their supervisors within two days of an emergency and give their current address and phone number. He also designated 15 employees who would be necessary to restart the business.
You need employee contact information to make sure your employees are safe, let them know what’s going on and tell them how and when they can return to work. ACT suggests using text messaging, which is often more reliable in a disaster.
Also help employees plan for emergencies on site, like earthquakes, fires, shelter in place events and evacuations, suggests the NAIC.
Know your key customers, contacts, suppliers and vendors
When Hurricane Katrina was headed for New Orleans in 2005, Sandy Whann, president of the local Leidenheimer Baking Company, set up a satellite office in Baton Rouge. While evacuating, he contacted his customers and told them his company’s plans, according to ready.gov. He kept current customer information in a business evacuation kit along with all the information he needed to run the business. When he arrived in Baton Rouge, he arranged for his calls and mail to be forwarded.
Know your IT
Web sites and email are important ways to stay in contact. ACT recommended you keep your web site host offsite and have daily backups stored offsite in a cloud service or secure drive. Whann kept financial and payroll records, utility contact information, updated phone lists, backup files and software and computer hard drives in a fireproof, waterproof case he could grab immediately. If you do that, make sure the case is in a secure place.
Know your finances
An important part of knowing your company’s finances is to know its insurance coverage and make sure you have enough. Another is to know what you have. Make an inventory of business equipment, supplies and merchandise, suggests the Insurance Information Institute.
Know when to update and test your plan
Ninety percent of companies with fewer than 100 employees spend less than one day a month on their community plans, according to a 2009 disaster recovery survey from Agility Recovery, a disaster preparedness company. Twenty-two percent spent no time doing so.
Practice your plan once you’ve made it.
“While owners of small businesses probably feel as though they don’t have the time to prepare for an emergency or disaster,” said Gail Moraton, business resiliency manager at IIBS, in a release, “it can mean the difference between permanently going out of business and reopening quickly.”
Know where to go for help
Work with local emergency management officials and utilities before a disaster. Munro, the dry cleaning company owner, gave emergency officials names of his key employees so they will be allowed to enter a closed disaster area. He also contacted his local utility to arrange for power to be turned back on within 48 hours of a disaster.
"If businesses are up and running, individuals can receive a paycheck and the community can stabilize," Munro said.
Many businesses in Beuamont, TX were badly hit by Hurricane RitaWhen Hurricane Rita hit Beaumont Texas on Sept. 18, 2005, Bill Munro, owner of a dry cleaning, uniform rental, and safety apparel business, had an emergency plan, according to ready.gov. It wasn’t enough. It didn’t account for power loss or supply shortages, and it took him a week to reopen. He’s since revised it. He was lucky. He reopened.
Up to 40 percent of businesses do not reopen after a disaster, according to the Insurance Information Institute. Another 25 percent fail within one year, according to the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
A business disaster plan could prevent failure. Numerous organizations have ideas, checklists, software and apps to help small businesses prepare. The steps below come from a pamphlet by the Insurance Institute for Business and Home Safety (IIBS).
Know your risks
First, know what types of disasters your business is most likely to encounter. The Federal Alliance for Safe Homes has a site detailing the most common natural disasters in each state.
Only about 20 percent of business disasters are natural, according to the Agents Council for Technology (ACT), an organization for insurance agents. Others include fire, IT failure, espionage, terrorism and theft.
You’ll need to determine which disasters will cause your company the most damage. Prioritize those in planning
Know your operations
Once he reopened after Hurricane Rita, Munro realized that while no one needed dry cleaning, many contractors needed clean clothes. So he started a wash, dry and fold service. Later, he bought a generator and supplies for vital employees for three days.
Determine which parts of your business are most important and how long you can go without being able to perform them. Install fire and security alarms and keep the work space in good shape, says the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC)
Know your employees
Munro created a communication plan that required employees to contact their supervisors within two days of an emergency and give their current address and phone number. He also designated 15 employees who would be necessary to restart the business.
You need employee contact information to make sure your employees are safe, let them know what’s going on and tell them how and when they can return to work. ACT suggests using text messaging, which is often more reliable in a disaster.
Also help employees plan for emergencies on site, like earthquakes, fires, shelter in place events and evacuations, suggests the NAIC.
Know your key customers, contacts, suppliers and vendors
When Hurricane Katrina was headed for New Orleans in 2005, Sandy Whann, president of the local Leidenheimer Baking Company, set up a satellite office in Baton Rouge. While evacuating, he contacted his customers and told them his company’s plans, according to ready.gov. He kept current customer information in a business evacuation kit along with all the information he needed to run the business. When he arrived in Baton Rouge, he arranged for his calls and mail to be forwarded.
Know your IT
Web sites and email are important ways to stay in contact. ACT recommended you keep your web site host offsite and have daily backups stored offsite in a cloud service or secure drive. Whann kept financial and payroll records, utility contact information, updated phone lists, backup files and software and computer hard drives in a fireproof, waterproof case he could grab immediately. If you do that, make sure the case is in a secure place.
Know your finances
An important part of knowing your company’s finances is to know its insurance coverage and make sure you have enough. Another is to know what you have. Make an inventory of business equipment, supplies and merchandise, suggests the Insurance Information Institute.
Know when to update and test your plan
Ninety percent of companies with fewer than 100 employees spend less than one day a month on their community plans, according to a 2009 disaster recovery survey from Agility Recovery, a disaster preparedness company. Twenty-two percent spent no time doing so.
Practice your plan once you’ve made it.
“While owners of small businesses probably feel as though they don’t have the time to prepare for an emergency or disaster,” said Gail Moraton, business resiliency manager at IIBS, in a release, “it can mean the difference between permanently going out of business and reopening quickly.”
Know where to go for help
Work with local emergency management officials and utilities before a disaster. Munro, the dry cleaning company owner, gave emergency officials names of his key employees so they will be allowed to enter a closed disaster area. He also contacted his local utility to arrange for power to be turned back on within 48 hours of a disaster.
"If businesses are up and running, individuals can receive a paycheck and the community can stabilize," Munro said.