LA Fires what's hap...
 
Notifications
Clear all

LA Fires what's happening, impact on US

(@dannyboy)
Illustrious Member
Joined: 9 years ago
Posts: 960
 

Cross posting in the Good News Network thread as well.

‘The Love in the Air Is Thicker Than the Smoke’

On the streets of L.A., Michelin-starred chefs are cooking for firefighters, boutiques are giving away clothes and a sprawling city is coming together.

https://reasonstobecheerful.world/los-angeles-fires-volunteers-community/?utm_source=Reasons+to+be+Cheerful&utm_campaign=fff2f4fc1a-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2024_09_01_COPY_01&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_89fb038efe-fff2f4fc1a-518352375

 



   
Vesta, Jeanne Mayell, deetoo and 4 people reacted
ReplyQuote
(@jeanne-mayell)
Illustrious Member
Joined: 9 years ago
Posts: 7257
Topic starter  

Regarding the array of explanations for the true underlying cause of these fires, including the high winds (caused by climate change), I hope everyone here knows the true cause of the LA fires is climate change from fossil fuel burning. 

We have now fully entered the Orwellian age of massive propaganda and disinformation. These fires are an opportunity for the public to wake up about climate change.  There will be more and stronger climate events sweeping our world, and the longer each of us keep burning fossil fuels, the worse and more intractable the consequences.  

The frequency and uncontrollable nature of these fires, the high winds, the parched landscape, are all caused by climate change which in turn is caused by fossil fuel burning. I pray that people who read this site will understand that fact because knowing the true cause gives us a chance to change it. I, for one, vow to lower my carbon footprint even more now. 

 

 

 

 



   
Vesta, lowtide, deetoo and 4 people reacted
ReplyQuote
(@lovendures)
Illustrious Member
Joined: 8 years ago
Posts: 4120
 

@lyndsayt 

SO very grateful and happy that your and your Kitty are safe and home again.

Yes, we can truly discover the important things. Important for how we MUST live our daily lives ( documents etc) and valued things to our spirit and family (photos, items connected to family history and special memories). Loved ones of course ( human and fur babies) being number one.

Even my mid 20 year old daughter has been walking around our home in AZ with a new perspective.  She has thought deeply about GO Bags and what she would grab.  After her dog of course, the most treasured item is the old 1950 era Martin guitar which my father was the original owner of and loved and taught me to play on.  She taught herself how to play on it and composes her own music with it. 

It is good to take mental inventory on what is most important and what isn't.  Maybe it is time for all of us to do this and to let go of the extra baggage and focus on the important things. And when we lose some of the important things how to work through that lose to create new important memories and family times.  To create a meaningful life.

May we all discover was to  create meaningful lives, even when given ashes to work with.  After all, even ashes have value. You can polish silver, make soap and compost with them.  

 



   
Jeanne Mayell, Lauren, Freya and 6 people reacted
ReplyQuote
(@lyndsayt)
Reputable Member
Joined: 4 years ago
Posts: 32
 

@jeanne-mayell climate change 100 percent contributed to 100mph winds and dry weather during our “rainy season” in Los Angeles. We haven’t had rain since may here. None of this is typical.



   
Jeanne Mayell, Lauren, Freya and 5 people reacted
ReplyQuote
(@lovendures)
Illustrious Member
Joined: 8 years ago
Posts: 4120
 

Octavia Butler.

You are going to hear a lot about Octavia Butler in the coming days and weeks.

Widely cited as the first major black woman author of science fiction, and one of the earliest writers of climate fiction, Octavia Butler is have a  moment.

In 1993, the award winning author wrote the book Parable of a Sower which was  set in a post-apocalyptic Los Angeles ravaged by fires, the first which begins on February 1, 2025. Parable of a Sower is often credited as being the first Climate Fiction book written. 

Set 32 years into the future from 1993, I am astounded she chose that particular natural disaster and that beginning fire date. Amazing.  She also had an authoritarian candidate, running for president on the slogan " Make America Great Again".  (In real life this candidate was inspired by Regan who used it, not Trump who wasn't relevant politically in 1993.)

Mind Blown right??

I had not heard about Octavia Butler until today, but boy does she appear to have been a Psychic Intuitive Sci Fi author.  A climate one at that.  

Once when  speaking about "learning from the past", Butler wrote that history:  “is filled with repeating cycles of strength and weakness, wisdom and stupidity, empire and ashes. To study history is to study humanity.” For “Parable of the Talents,” she thought about how countries could fall into autocracy and read books about Nazi Germany. 

She once explained her method for seemingly predicting the future: “Look around at the problems we’re neglecting now and give them about 30 years to grow into full-fledged disasters.”

Bingo!

She once discussed her own rules for predicting the future and while logical, they also feel intuitive.  Surely she was guided by intuition to observe and write about what a near future of climate change might bring when it was of little concern to much of the world. 

Butler died in 2006 at the age of 58 and was buried in an Altadena cemetery which received some damage in the Altadena Eaton Fire.  Her grave however remains untouched by flame.

I learned of Octavia Butler today from a local news report about a Pasadena independent bookstore named after her. ( Pasadena and Altadena share borders and schools).  The bookstore houses her historical papers and was unscathed by the fire.  It's currently serving as a mutual aid center  for those who have lost homes or evacuated from the fires.  

Earlier this past summer the bookstore owner was on the verge of closing due to financial pressure when the community rallied around her and helped her remain open.  Now she is giving back. 

There is something fitting about that isn't there? 

Everything is connected.

https://apnews.com/article/octavia-butler-los-angeles-wildfires-cemetery-eaf2ee7921561355d632d0e381099ed6  

https://www.rollingstone.com/culture/culture-features/la-fires-octavia-butler-parable-of-sower-prediction-1235236717/

https://www.altaonline.com/california-book-club/a63395182/octavias-bookshelf-mutual-aid-center-la-fires/

https://commongood.cc/reader/a-few-rules-for-predicting-the-future-by-octavia-e-butler/



   
Jeanne Mayell, Iridium, Lauren and 7 people reacted
ReplyQuote
 CC21
(@cc21)
Illustrious Member
Joined: 8 years ago
Posts: 687
 

@lovendures I heard about Octavia Butler and her prophetic books this week, too. Incredible. She most definitely had her own intuition about this.



   
Jeanne Mayell, Lauren, Lovendures and 3 people reacted
ReplyQuote
(@lovendures)
Illustrious Member
Joined: 8 years ago
Posts: 4120
 

In reflecting upon the far reaching impact the LA fires have had on our nation, I’ve noticed something interesting happening.
Humanity is taking stock of what is truly important in their lives.

It’s a dig deep, soul-searching type collective shift. we are asking what is most meaningful in our lives.

We are pondering “go bags” and what we’d  place inside them. We are  walking through our houses taking stock of the most treasured things in our lives.  After human and pet lives, we’re contemplating what we  truly need and what we truly hold dear to our hearts.  We’re also contemplating what impacts we’ve made while living our lives.

I’m curious what you guys have observed over the past week and a half? Are you feeling the same way? Do you notice a collective shift?

Will you put together a “go bags” in your own home now? Have you noticed a shift in how you perceive your life, your world? Do you know where your most highly cherished items are located in your home? How about survival items? Are you thinking of letting go “stuff”? 

I realize I finally need to tackle the family photo /historical document/ heirloom side of life as my next project.  Not only do these items need to be sorted out and organized, but I don’t want everything only residing  in one place. I want things spread out amongst my own adult children so that not all our family historical items would be lost if a tragedy occurs in my home.  

I needed to attend to this for years as things seem to continuously be sent my way from elder family members. I’ve actually tackled some small related projects but I need to move on a bigger ones. Finally.

I’m also reevaluating my life, home and family priorities . There is a shift on how I am viewing certain aspects and I find that interesting. It began after the election and the fires made these feelings  more pronounced. 

Interesting times… Interesting times.



   
deetoo, Jeanne Mayell, Lauren and 6 people reacted
ReplyQuote
(@jeanne-mayell)
Illustrious Member
Joined: 9 years ago
Posts: 7257
Topic starter  

@lovendures Thank you for this beautiful post about what matters most if we had to save things in our homes. A cousin who lives in L.A. sent me our parents, grandparents, and their parents'  photos this week for safe-keeping. He wanted to be sure that they'd never be lost if his property burned down.  I was so touched by this action, and it brought which we had, in a way, lost, until we realized how precious they were at the thought they could be lost. 

I heard an L.A. native interviewed tonight on NPR.  She said she is so proud of her beautiful incomparable city, the birth of all that Hollywood has brought to the world, a place of beautiful and light. I felt the city's light would shine brighter than ever now. I agree with you, that something beautiful and bright is emerging from these fires.  Something lost gives way to something gained. 

 



   
deetoo, Gettysburglady, Vesta and 1 people reacted
ReplyQuote
(@lovendures)
Illustrious Member
Joined: 8 years ago
Posts: 4120
 

And here we go!

Remember Live AID?

We know it would happen and boy is it going to be big!

FireAid.

January 30th. Los Angeles. 2 side by side venues.  Superstar music artists.  All coming together to pull something HUGE off 3.5 weeks after the first fire broke out.

Stunning really if you think about it.   

Yes it will also be live-streamed on many platforms.  AMC Theaters too. 

This will be one fantastic event and so appreciated for a devastated community. I think this NEEDED to happen.

I attended some historic benefit concerts in L.A. while I was growing up including a famous Peace Sunday concert at the Rose Bowl and 2 No Nukes Concerts at the Hollywood Bowl.  Some of the same legendary performers who performed back then are set to perform now.  Many of the artists have are also songwriters. Who's playing?

Billie Eilish, Stevie Nicks, Joni Mitchel, John Mayer , Dave Mathews, Pink, Steven Stills, Graham Nash, Green Day, Lady Gaga, Katy Perry, Sting, Stevie Wonder, Alanis Morissette, Lil Baby, The Black Crows and Rod Stewart to name well, many but not all. HAHA.  I have a feeling more will be added because that tends to happen.

It will be soooo good to have something to look forward to later in January!!!

If you live in or will be visiting L.A. tickets are available soon.

My intuitive self says there may be  some unexpected duets.  (It has been announced that Mathews and Mayer will perform together for the first time,  so that doesn't count as a surprise). Stills and Nash should play together but did you know Our House was written by Nash about Joni and she wrote songs about him?  This could be VERY interesting.

https://fireaidla.org/

 

 



   
deetoo, Gettysburglady, lowtide and 2 people reacted
ReplyQuote
(@lovendures)
Illustrious Member
Joined: 8 years ago
Posts: 4120
 

Posted by: @jeanne-mayell

@lovendures Thank you for this beautiful post about what matters most if we had to save things in our homes. A cousin who lives in L.A. sent me our parents, grandparents, and their parents'  photos this week for safe-keeping. He wanted to be sure that they'd never be lost if his property burned down.  I was so touched by this action, and it brought which we had, in a way, lost, until we realized how precious they were at the thought they could be lost. 

I heard an L.A. native interviewed tonight on NPR.  She said she is so proud of her beautiful incomparable city, the birth of all that Hollywood has brought to the world, a place of beautiful and light. I felt the city's light would shine brighter than ever now. I agree with you, that something beautiful and bright is emerging from these fires.  Something lost gives way to something gained. 

 

I love this Jeanne.  Love you were sent the photos from L.A. for safe keeping and all the light which is shining there.  

 



   
ReplyQuote
Page 6 / 7