News The Morning News
posted by November 28 at 6:05 AM
onIran is training Iraq’s fearsome Shiite militia-men, but Bush won’t talk to Iran.
In Anbar province, the Marines have reported “pogroms” and add that U.S. forces “are no longer capable of militarily defeating the insurgency” in the area.
NBC says Iraq is now in a civil war, and the LA Times has been saying the same since October.
Annan says Iraq is near a civil war, and officials say Cheney’s recent trip to Saudi Arabia wasn’t a friendly visit. Rather, he was “basically summoned” by a kingdom “concerned about the damage that the conflict in Iraq is doing across the region.”
In Lebanon, advertising against a civil war.
In London, more traces of radioactive poison and the spy-death plot thickens.
In New York, Bloomberg is calling 50 shots to kill a man “unacceptable.”
In St. Petersburg, Gazprom is baiting Charles.
In D.C., another nod in favor of light rail going to the UW.
And in Seattle, much ado about snow.
Comments
Jesus, what a Christ-punching clusterfuck. All of it.
The worst thing about being a cyclist in seattle: when its snowy, I'm the only person that makes it to my office. I feel like I'm in a cubical graveyard. Damn high pressure zones.
got a call this morning at 8 - office closed. got three emails - my three meetings cancelled. THE ROADS ARE FINE, SEATTLE! oh my god!
major roads are fine but i just ice skated the last three blocks to work. and i second the cubical graveyard -- out of fifteen total desks in my immediate area i'm one of TWO people
take care... an inch of snow in Seattle is worth a foot in the midwest (3-6 in New England if it is sleeting), and the northwest black ice is a bitch when it simply looks like a shadow or water on pavement, add some powder snow on top... wham and goodnight
on the other hand, not many things beat a crisp northwest morning like today when the snow is on the ground, the sky is clear, and you can see across the water (take your pick, I like Puget Sound) and the mountains (again, the Olympics are what I like seeing) are right out there. Front and center.
I love it when things are this quiet. It feels like when I come into work on Christmas Day.
jk> what are you bitching about? Your office gave you the day off! How I wish that would happen to me...
i'm getting the day off because the office is CLOSED. i've got shit to do! and how can my office justify closing when the roads are FINE?!
i love seattle, but our city's snow-phobia drives me insane!
yeah i'd kind of prefer to be at home with a warm bowl of chili. maybe play some video juegos and sleep on the couch. that's what a snow day is supposed to be. oh well.
Thanks for the reminders phenics. At this moment the sun is shining! and I bet the stores are vacant for some Christmas shopping at lunch (not too much, i promise)
i live in the canadian praries and let me tell you this - we have *never* had a closure of any kind related to winter weather.
I walk to and from work so I don't get snow days, no matter how bad it is. I'm what the French call "SUCKER!"
JK,
SOME roads are fine, mainly (as Charles posted @4) the major arterials, but residential and streets on hills are another matter entirely. I spent 20 minutes watching in amusement as cars skidded and spun out on a solidly frozen E Union this morning trying to get through the intersection and up the hill, while the drivers on 23rd sashayed through the same interesection on mostly dry pavement.
In hilly Seattle, your ability to get around depends a great deal on your surrounding geography, which means a lot of folks simply won't (and IMO shouldn't) bother trying to navigate several blocks of frozen streets just to get to the clear ones.
@11 -- you also have plows and barns full of salt and sand ;)
I grew up in harsh midwestern winters and I didn't have a single snow day during all four years of high school, and when I came out to seattle and it snowed for the first time I thought everyone was being stupid. Then i watched an articulated bus slide down cherry at a forty-five degree angle narrowly missing the line of cars parked on the side of the road and it opened my eyes. Ice + hills + no meaningful snow removal equipment = people sleeping in their cars on the interstate. not to mention people here also don't seem to understand that when it is snowing you shouldn't be driving forty five mph on surface streets (ballard bridge anyone?). scary.
so i should just shut up and enjoy my day off? okay. done.
JK - you can use my cube today. rent free :)
My offices were deserted too.
It took me five minutes to drive in - I usually walk to work ...
All the whining about the icy conditions makes me LOL.
I got caught in the thick of it on my way back to the U District last night. Traffic on Eastlake came to a standstill as cars got caught in ice and couldn't gain traction. I got off at Eastlake/Edgar and walked all the way to UW. Conditions were icy as ever but I walked carefully and didn't slip.
My class at UW last night went on as scheduled. Work was open as scheduled in SODO. My class tonight is on as scheduled (the professor e-mailed us to confirm).
And though I walked half a mile on ice to get to the bus stop, the Ave was mostly free of ice as of 7 am this morning. Downtown was ice free. SODO was ice free. And the ice will dissipate as it should be sunny today and the temp should get warm enough to melt some of it away, plus the DOT and neighborhood maintenance will continue to de-ice the roads and sidewalks.
Life goes on, people. Many of you Seattlites were praying for a snow day. Unless you are surrounded by an impassable sheet of ice, I suggest you suck it up and get back to work.
A helpful hint from a one-time Michigander: When your tires loose traction, flooring makes it worse. Let off the gas and as the tires slow down you'll suddenly regain traction thanks to the wonders of static vs kinetic friction.
My dorky high-school-physics-based PSA for the day. ;p
Oooh! I am so filled with nostalgia recalling snow days in Seattle. How much has it snowed?
I haven't had a single snow-day since I moved away. Even when it snowed here in NoCal last winter, we still had work, if only because businesses and government didn't seem to know that closing might be the safer option.
Gomez,
It's not whining (well, okay maybe some of it is), so much as a simple acknowledgement that in Seattle, extreme weather conditions that would be common in other parts of the country do have significant impacts.
We simply don't get enough of this kind of weather on a consistent basis to justify the purchase and maintenance of large numbers of snow removal and sanding equipment, most of which would sit unused for 360+ days out of the year. And so, the small inventory we do have naturally gets prioritized: airport runways, freeways, & major arterials get cleared or sanded first, while the majority of hilly and residential streets get nothing; there's just not enough equipment available to do that thorough a job.
So, for many people simply getting out of their driveways can be not only difficult, but downright dangerous on icy streets, especially in neighborhoods where the roads are fairly narrow to begin with, and lined with parked cars on either side. I admit, there's nothing more amusing than watching some smartass in an SUV caroming like a pin ball from one side of the street to the other trying to slip-slide their way to a clear arterial - unless of course your car happens to be one of those that gets hit in the process.
Also, many of the midwesterners here who laugh at our driving habits seem to overlook some key mitigating factors: 1.) you simply can't gain experience driving in these conditions when it only occurs for a couple of days once a year; 2.) there's a huge difference between driving on ice when the terrain is generally flat (as it is in most of the midwestern states), than there is trying to go up or down hills; 3.) because of the relative infrequency of this type of weather, many people, especially in-town, don't see much point in investing in things like chains and snow tires that they'll only need one or two days a year; and 4.) people who live in outlying areas (typically where the snowfall tends to be highest) don't have as easy access to public transit as us in-city folk, so their transportation options are more limited.
Under these conditions, it's common sense to discourage people from getting on the roads, even covered with only a paltry inch or less of frozen water, in order to decrease the number of accidents and resulting injuries. Sure, it inconveniences businesses, and places an unfair burdon on those who CAN get to work safely, but if it saves lives, and reduces property damage, it seems like a reasonable trade-off.
I agree, I love watching SUVs spin out and crash into trees too.
Comte, you're whining. Cut it out.
A lot of the ice problems would have been averted or at least lessened if the DOT had begun salting the main roads BEFORE the snow came. They knew when it was coming and where it was headed. It's silly.
TV and radio reporters urging people to stay home over two inches of snow. Silly.
I have to say though, I do enjoy watching drivers floor the gas in an effort to gain traction, have it fail, and then continue trying the same failed tactic. I could watch them all day.
Gomez, you're being a bitch. Cut it out.
gomez, he's not wining. THIS is whining, lol
what a fucking gem, eh? :DThat's real clever, wilder.
Also, while the suburbanites indeed have had a ton of strife (legitimate issues all)... Comte IIRC lives in the city proper and it's not nearly as bad along the major corridors. Hell, I made it to work in reasonable time.
He's whining when he has no rela place doing so. Vegas would get snow and ice every ten years or so, and it wasn't nearly as bad. And no, they didn't salt those roads either.
This city's full of drama queens.
LOL, charles, for reposting that. Crying, CRYING, cry the beloathed commute! I hope "michelle" freaks out and moves away. It'd do her fellow citizens some good.
CRYING!!!! I've had to walk home 6 miles in 35 degree weather because an arranged ride blew me off, among other horror experiences, and never was I close to CRYING. CRYING!!! LOL.
in my mind's eye michelle is a filipino young female upwardly mobile professional driving a Porsche a la the protagonist in half asleep in frog pajamas. the pisser is larry diamond to michelle's gwen matti. she probably didn't mention the monkey in the trunk to 911 OR her boyfriend. The following quote from said book seems appropriate
cherry.FWIW, Gomez I did go to work today (I did, however, leave the car at home - I prefer not to have my vehicle used as a moving Jersey Barrier by people who don't know how to drive on icy roads), so my intent wasn't to complain about not being able to get around, I was simply trying to point out there are very legitimate (not to mention obvious) reasons why we don't have 500 snowplows and sand trucks (with drivers and support personnel) perpetually standing by to hit the road at a second's notice on the one or two occasions per year when an Artic cold front happens to dump a few inches of snow on the region.
And last time I was there, Vegas was flat as a pancake, with only a handful of major arterials almost all of which, IIRC lead more-or-less directly to the Strip. Plus, the city is just chock-full of extremely wealthy casino operations that would lose literally truckloads of money a day if their employees couldn't get to work on time to lay out the "all you can eat seafood buffet", or cover the three deck blackjack tables. So, it makes sense they'd have a substantial inventory of heavy clearing equipment on-hand, especially since they get - what - about 10 times the amount of annual snowfall that we do here?
And, six miles takes the average person less than two hours to walk; are you seriously comparing that to being trapped on a freeway for 11 hours? Talk about whining...
PA Native: We don't salt in these parts; bad for cars, ultimately bad for roads themselves due to the corrosive effects of the salt. And sanding isn't effective if done before the snow accumulates, otherwise all the tractiony goodness just gets buried beneath the ice.
It's best not to cry while walking home in the cold - the tears will just make your face that much colder.
Comte has a point. Unless you have the equipment to deal with snow and ice, and the cost/benefit ratio of buying said equipment isn't justified in Seattle, it's best to try and stay off the roads. *Usually* it melts in a day or two anyway. In the meantime, all-wheel drive and slow speeds are your friends, use them.
COMTE is right on about why this region lacks substantial snow removal equipment and does not use salt. We also have a much wetter snow here than in the colder midwest (including our Canadian neighbor) which gives less traction and tends to freeze as black ice. One science factoid: since the temp didn't get above freezing, the snow didn't melt today so much as sublimate (the term for frozen water changing directly to vapor without the liquid stage; One of my favorite words for some odd reason).
jonny167
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