Yeah. Remove vegetation and this happens. Get a lot of rain and this happens. Remove vegetation and add a bunch of rain and this happens a lot. How convenient that the climate is changing to make it more likely to see long dry periods for more fire, which also wipes out vegetation, and then bursts of a ton of rain all at once for more landslides. Teamwork!
Fire insurance will say "sorry it was caused by flooding" while flood insurance will say "flood was caused by fire" 99% chance they get denied either way.
Technically... It's land movement and won't be covered by either policy. I hope the owner had the specialty policy for land movement or he won't see a dime.
Or emphasis to the point the insurance companies made by trying to increase premiums. With the dry weather that is getting worse and generally worse weather these places are awful places to build a home
When the Thomas fire ripped through Montecito and Santa Barbara in 2017, it wasn't the fires that killed many but rather the mudslides that wiped the homes off their foundation. I'm scared to see what will happen to the ones that are standing once the heavy rains come.
@@SantiMoreno-qk3gkit didn’t devastate the whole town, just the part of the side of the mountain that burned. Nothing in downtown Ventura, the mission, college or schools, churches didn’t get burned.
We have seen this for decades and decades- That area is prone to mud slides after 2 weeks of rain- Even with no fire. But after a fire - lol It’s becomes deadly landslides- All the toxic mud right into the ocean-
they'd still deny it because it was not a natural occurring mudslide. they'd try to pin the blame on the city for the water usage above that caused it.
All places where we build have their upsides and downsides. If you don't have fires, you might have earthquakes or hurricanes, or draught. The problem is not where we build it is the fact we get used to and demand and seek comfort and stability that is just temporary and mostly an illusion. We should focus on adaptability and skills that matter, a complete overhaul of how society currently works
@@yummm8775 anywhere we build is risky, nothing is supposed to last forever, the reason why everything in this universe works in cycles. If you observe the world long enough you will notice that
@TechnoMageCreator Stop dismissing and willfully ignoring reality. Some places ABSOLUTELY ARE higher risk than others. It doesn’t take a brain surgeon to understand that. Some parts of the country have legitimate natural disaster threats: Hurricanes on the gulf and east coasts, tornados in tornado alley, bitter cold and tremendous snow to the north, wildfires and earthquakes out west. Some places experience none of those things ever. Some places are also HORRIBLY mismanaged and are totally ill equipped to handle the disasters they KNOW will be coming sooner or later. Thus, the level of risk varies GREATLY from one locale to the next. Yes, there are tradeoffs, but the facts simply don’t lie. You don’t see insurance companies leaving Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Nebraska, etc etc.. You see them leaving California and Florida in particular, because the frequent devastation results in them having to make massive payouts that simply don’t happen with anything like the same regularity elsewhere.
All the brush burned... then rain will cause mudslides since no plant roots to hold back tons of mud. If the fire didn't get your home, the mudslides surely will. 🤦♀️
@@Rikkisio roots absolutely hold soil in place and mudslides ONLY happen when it "rains" or large amounts of water is introduced at a rate higher than the soil and sun can handle! Google can be your friend!
So roots dont prevent mudslides, by what your stating... If roots prevented mudslides, those mudslides wouldnt happen even if there was large amounts of rain...
@@DaveEPieyou don’t know what the homeowners voted for. Both sides get no votes… one is victorious but it doesn’t mean there aren’t families who wanted it the other way.
@ yes of course But the left has won every major election since 1990 or before. And I do know that those people- in that particular area- are 80% leftist crazies- Same as that greater LA area. If you are conservative and still live there- you are now a victim of your own decisions.
And after the mudslides there will be a mass epidemic of lung problems from breathing all the toxic fumes and smoke and about that time earthquakes will hit then more fires and mudslides
Think of the ones who’s homes were left unscathed. They are still in the danger zone. This hasn’t ended nor will they rebuild. I’m not wishing bad things on ppl but this is just the reality for all of America.
@ It is cheaper for them to do nothing and let the insurance cover it all and they make the rest of the country pay the bill watch everybody's insurance is going to go up 15%
That is so sad to escape the fire only to have your home decimated by the very thing that was being used to save your home!! Water mixing with the hillside dirt causing a devastating mudslide!! Sad!
Wait how did a mudslide occur? Was is because the fire and the burning vegetation and the heavy debris of another home? I’m not that educated on landslides lol
@@platinumanalogylack of water overtime and a certain amount of water in that area triggers mudslides. It has to do with the soil softening within the mountain.
The palisades slid in 06' due to the heavy rains of 05' the engineers said it was not properly graded and compacted etc. for residential homes there is a History channel documentary on it titled "engineering disasters" on YT.
The home that was destroyed by a mudslide is going to be a headache for the homeowner. "Land movement" is typically excluded from coverage in a Homeowners Ins. Policy. (H.O. policies don't cover every peril.) The homeowner will undoubtedly sue the property owner above him/her, since it was their 'dirt/debris' that trespassed into his yard and caused the damage. Who's the owner of the 'broken' water pipe?
The fires not only burn the trees but also cooked the soil, creating a separte layer that can easily dettached from the rock beneath. Farmers also use fire that way to make the soil a bit more loose to crop can go faster.
The fire burned away all the rooted vegetation that was holding all the soil in place and burned the soil so that it's almost like the consistency of baking soda. When it rains the a huge chunk of the Palisades could come sliding down in a massive mudslide. That's why people whose homes survived the fires aren't being allowed back there since it's not safe.... and there's no power or water.
They can't rebuild up there, ever again. To cut along story short, after the insurance companies have paid out, property developers will be warned NOT to lay another brick up in those hills. Unless L.A. county has the (1) know-how & (2) FUNDS to install new water infrastructure for BOTH urban use (i.e run a bath, glass of water, hose pipes to water garden etc) & CRUCIALLY AFTER this event, water infrastructure able to pump & an unimaginable amount of water & up into those hills to fight MULTIPLE wild fires, if needs be. If new water infrastructure can NOT be installed and up in those hills & to cover BOTH of the above, then common sense MUST scream & dictate that (& from there) all homes are (quite literally) un-insurable. Please note that's ALL already existing & future homes to be built = un-insurable WITHOUT new water infrastructure to cover BOTH needs.
The area has a certain cachet. It has snob appeal. They'll be back. On the downside it has high winds, massive fires, mudslides, earthquakes. In addition they don't want the riffraff living near them. I call it as I see it.
@@LeL-q9eat least you’re being honest. You sound like the guy on the weekend before the fires prophesying against the rich at Venice/santa Monica boardwalk. He was non stop about how the rich are gonna get it for their sins & all of L.A. how God’s judgement is coming upon them. And then this happens. Could’ve been an angel sent by God perhaps one in charge of one of the elements.
@@xuxitoit really doesn’t take a genius to understand what can and will happen. Malibu and that area will burn, then the landslides- Decade after decade- Wait until the next Pineapple Express comes- 2 weeks of non stop rain- All the toxic ash flows right into our beautiful ocean-
@@DaveEPieyea but think of how many times there’s fires in and around that area and all of a sudden a rare wind event,no water in the reservoirs or fire hydrants. Im going to stick with God’s judgment while others down play it as mere climate change,arson,electric cables. What about the violent earthquake that are coming? Are we going to blame climate change etc on it or just things that happen? Concurrent event after another plus other celestial signs coming. You’ll see.
Nah. No land grab more like land judgement. The entire country is under God’s judgement. No one is safe and no one should get comfy. More to come for everyone else. ASHville NC was the beginning of God’s judgement. Now we are seeing why he picked ashville first. The U.S is going to be an ashville. Especially with NK testing nukes. Yea.. we are in for it bc of our sins.
Those homes, I don't know about this one, are on very small plots of hillside land. It's a terraced development. Heaven knows what will happen this winter.
La Niña is coming, which means less winter storms but the possibility of early to late spring rains that can be heavy at times. The city of Los Angeles needs to prepare to clean up the debris and make adjustments for what may come in the coming months before summer.
No kidding, what is being done about the mud slides that are coming soon, it is going to wipe out all the houses that did not burn . Someone better be figuring this out NOW not when it starts raining.
If those people aren't getting out now that were sparred they are not too smart. Celebs egos will make them stay and they may not live to regret it. The mudslides will be nasty
Authorities there are too focused on narratives and other things. Homeowners should cut their losses now. Government does not have their back. Many thought the wealth of the neighborhood would bring a 1st class fire response, but nope.
Unfortunately this will come in an onslaught when it rains. it's just like 1993 after the fires then. The mudslides destroyed so much of Malibu and it will happen again.
Basically... Fire moves through, killing ad removing vegetation. Cleanup crews come through dozering foundations and recutting any slope for a new slab. Rains hit, saturating the now-unsecured soil. Erosion begins, gravity gives all that saturated soil a poke, abnd It All Slides Down Hill.....
No water for hydrants, mudslide due to water leak .... reservoir needs repair during wildfire season, nothing makes any sense and it's gonna get worse ... so sorry for everyone out there.
Same thing happens with hurricanes. I live near the coast. When hurricanes destroy everything, communities usually rebuild and add MORE houses to the same place. Then we all scratch our heads and blame climate change when it happens again and more houses are destroyed.
From outside of USA it seems like nothing is covered by any insurance. Whether you have one or not. Cancer? No, that’s not covered by insurance! Mud slides? Nope. Fire? Only if you have a policy for your cigars and smoke them… There’s no point for having any kind of insurance in America.
don't worry guys.... this was just a rental... someone's 2nd property they were renting out at an overpriced rent so someone else could buy them another home - or a foreign investor that jacked up the rent and inflated the housing market. i DO feel sorry for the renter..... but not the home owner in this case.
@DonGivani that isn't the point. He shouldn't be talking to the media. His job is to provide security to the homes not go on TV and blab. If I was a homeowner paying for his services, he'd be fired
This reminds me of the house on the cliff in Santa Monica/ Malibu overlooking the Pacific Coast Highway I saw back in 1994. The earthquake caused half the house to slide down the mountain. You could see inside the house, and some of the furnishings were still in the house - looking at it from the ground, it looked like dollhouse furniture. Eventually the rest of the house was demolished, and I’ve never seen another house built there.
With all the water they dumped on that fire this is something I expected would happen. And there will be more landslides and homes lost the next time it rains hard. If my home survived the fire I would try to get rid of it fast.
Correction, it was the water from massive water leaks after the fires burned down other structures, not the firefighters putting out the flames. Shut off main water lines and gas lines before evacuating would have prevented this.
Slope/earth movement is never covered by homeowner's insurance--always a stated exclusion (reason why the Palos Verdes homeowners in the slowly creeping slide area are demanding buyouts). The owner's only recourse would be to sue the property owner above for inadequate slope engineering/stabilization and prove that it was a pre-existing hazard/ticking timebomb prior to the recent fire and water application, which hastened the slope failure--this would likely be very tough to prove absent prior events indicating the slope was in danger of collapsing.
That is the answer to anybody asking why don't they just clear away all the brush to minimize the chance of fires. Brush is needed to hold together the soil when heavy rains fall.
A big takeaway from all this is how poorly these houses have been built. You'd think in the middle of potential fires and mud slides they'd have been made out of bricks with re-enforcement. Instead it's timber and plastic. Developers have built them on the cheap in prime locations to make more money. Half theses houses would've survived with proper building regulations and skilled people building them.
Brick houses don’t survive either when the ground below them gives way or tons upon tons of muddy hillside crashes into them. They aren’t magical fortresses. There’s a reason you typically primarily see brick housing in the flatlands in the middle of the country where earthquakes aren’t a thing, and you don’t see brick houses near faultlines on the west coast. They tend to collapse rapidly when the ground starts rocking, as it does often in California.
0:57 there's your clue as to why the area is so prone to fire. Everyone has huge vegitation growing all over and touching the house. Now I get it, the vegitation is nice, provides shade, wind break, atnosphere and privacy. But they have to get real considering the area. Less vegitation, and fire resistant roofs
This foreshadows the difficulties of reconstruction that will follow in the aftermath of the disaster, and for the work ahead, I think it is essential to prepare solar backup resources, such as Jackery generators.
This isn’t nothing. It hasn’t even rained yet. Wait until it starts to rain.
Yep, the tip of the iceberg.. wait for the spring rain storms
Hasn't rained in a year.
That was part of the wildfire problem.
Yeah. Remove vegetation and this happens. Get a lot of rain and this happens. Remove vegetation and add a bunch of rain and this happens a lot. How convenient that the climate is changing to make it more likely to see long dry periods for more fire, which also wipes out vegetation, and then bursts of a ton of rain all at once for more landslides. Teamwork!
@@foxhole99 I grew up in So Cal. It's a desert. A couple cloud bursts a year. And this slide was from broken water pipe.
I thought the same first day everything burned, just wait till there's alot of rain and all those bare hillsides.
Fire insurance will say "sorry it was caused by flooding" while flood insurance will say "flood was caused by fire" 99% chance they get denied either way.
Respectfully, you are very misinformed, but nevertheless quite opinionated.
Technically...
It's land movement and won't be covered by either policy.
I hope the owner had the specialty policy for land movement or he won't see a dime.
Insurance companies pulled "fire protection" from several home owners because the government failed to deal with the brush/ fire prevention.
Statefarm dropped 70% Palisade policy holders. Chances are they have no insurance
@@blaydCAthis. It’s not earthquake movement but land movement.
The only possible claim is the mud from fire fighting efforts.
Adding insult to injury
Or emphasis to the point the insurance companies made by trying to increase premiums. With the dry weather that is getting worse and generally worse weather these places are awful places to build a home
What water
Adding salt to a burnt wound.
Ugh! This is so hard to watch. I can’t even imagine what it’s like to live through it.
Chickens coming home to roost
Look at New Orleans and Hurricane Katrina.
It’s simple don’t put a house where it doesn’t belong
@user-rh9mh5kh3p Yep. Such an amazingly simple concept, yet so few people understand it.
Good thing your government paid all that aid to Israel right?
Dude I hate to say it, but I just don't think anyone is supposed to live there.
BINGO Smart City plans.
Finally someone says it. The weather/climate is not getting better.
Say it.
...don't spray it!
@jaad9848 The climate isn’t getting any worse either. Stop that nonsense already.
When the Thomas fire ripped through Montecito and Santa Barbara in 2017, it wasn't the fires that killed many but rather the mudslides that wiped the homes off their foundation. I'm scared to see what will happen to the ones that are standing once the heavy rains come.
I remember that
I remember the Thomas fire it completely devastated my hometown of ventura
@@SantiMoreno-qk3gkit didn’t devastate the whole town, just the part of the side of the mountain that burned. Nothing in downtown Ventura, the mission, college or schools, churches didn’t get burned.
@ yea but my friends house burned down in the fire
That wasn't the Thomas fire, but you are correct otherwise..
Someone on another comment section talked about landslide that would follow the devastating fires and suddenly this has happened.
They can blame it on an arson for fires but what is the name given for this act?
We have seen this for decades and decades-
That area is prone to mud slides after 2 weeks of rain-
Even with no fire.
But after a fire - lol
It’s becomes deadly landslides-
All the toxic mud right into the ocean-
The trees hold the mud together.. With the trees burnt, I guess landslide is inevitable 😔😔😔… very scary and painful to see..
@@xuxito God's judgement🤣🤣🤣
Because it has happened before.
Insurance company: Sorry, you only have fire insurance, not mudslide insurance.
🤣 ☠️
they'd still deny it because it was not a natural occurring mudslide. they'd try to pin the blame on the city for the water usage above that caused it.
sue whoever owns the pipe, for their liabilty insurance
Many insurance companies canceled fire insurance several months before these man made fires. All done by design.
Actually they have neither now. Times changed.
Building homes on hills and in a fire zone is probably not the best idea.
All places where we build have their upsides and downsides. If you don't have fires, you might have earthquakes or hurricanes, or draught. The problem is not where we build it is the fact we get used to and demand and seek comfort and stability that is just temporary and mostly an illusion. We should focus on adaptability and skills that matter, a complete overhaul of how society currently works
@@TechnoMageCreator Building a house on a mountain has a higher risk factor and that's why insurance companies refuse to cover them.
@@yummm8775 anywhere we build is risky, nothing is supposed to last forever, the reason why everything in this universe works in cycles. If you observe the world long enough you will notice that
@TechnoMageCreator Stop dismissing and willfully ignoring reality. Some places ABSOLUTELY ARE higher risk than others. It doesn’t take a brain surgeon to understand that. Some parts of the country have legitimate natural disaster threats: Hurricanes on the gulf and east coasts, tornados in tornado alley, bitter cold and tremendous snow to the north, wildfires and earthquakes out west. Some places experience none of those things ever. Some places are also HORRIBLY mismanaged and are totally ill equipped to handle the disasters they KNOW will be coming sooner or later. Thus, the level of risk varies GREATLY from one locale to the next. Yes, there are tradeoffs, but the facts simply don’t lie. You don’t see insurance companies leaving Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Nebraska, etc etc.. You see them leaving California and Florida in particular, because the frequent devastation results in them having to make massive payouts that simply don’t happen with anything like the same regularity elsewhere.
I feel safer and safer in Florida. 😂😂😂😂😂😂 And I don't have to watch out for needles in the streets or doo-doo. 😂😂😂😂😂
All the brush burned... then rain will cause mudslides since no plant roots to hold back tons of mud. If the fire didn't get your home, the mudslides surely will. 🤦♀️
Roots dont prevent mudslides. If that were the case there would be no mudslides. Mudslides ALSO happen when its raining alot.
@@Rikkisio roots absolutely hold soil in place and mudslides ONLY happen when it "rains" or large amounts of water is introduced at a rate higher than the soil and sun can handle! Google can be your friend!
So roots dont prevent mudslides, by what your stating... If roots prevented mudslides, those mudslides wouldnt happen even if there was large amounts of rain...
It's gonna be an unbelievable mess in a couple months.
Yep. All of the rooted vegetation that was holding the soil in place has burned, nothing to stop landslides if it rains.
Might be time to flee for this that can, for those that get a claim paid from insurance it's probably a better idea to just leave
Most don't have insurance and the ones that do are under insured! @@jherrera3058
wym, it's an unbelievable mess right now.
Look t the date, and look at is in 10 years.
That's going to be so heartbreaking knowing your house survive the fire only for this to happen
This is just UNBELIEVABLE.
A mudslide after severe fires and missing water, that's really unfortunate.
They voted for it-
Right. A mudslide seems like the exact opposite of a fire, but with similar devastating results.
@@Cookieboy70 no comparison, the mudslide home still has most of it's furnishings somewhat intact!
@@DaveEPieyou don’t know what the homeowners voted for. Both sides get no votes… one is victorious but it doesn’t mean there aren’t families who wanted it the other way.
@ yes of course
But the left has won every major election since 1990 or before.
And I do know that those people- in that particular area- are 80% leftist crazies-
Same as that greater LA area.
If you are conservative and still live there- you are now a victim of your own decisions.
This will be the next disaster news from LA after the first rains.
Yes it will and these same idiots will not do any prevention for it either
And after the mudslides there will be a mass epidemic of lung problems from breathing all the toxic fumes and smoke and about that time earthquakes will hit then more fires and mudslides
Think of the ones who’s homes were left unscathed.
They are still in the danger zone.
This hasn’t ended nor will they rebuild.
I’m not wishing bad things on ppl but this is just the reality for all of America.
@ It is cheaper for them to do nothing and let the insurance cover it all and they make the rest of the country pay the bill watch everybody's insurance is going to go up 15%
I knew it was just a matter of time. The earth is scorched, cannot absorb the water 💔 I’m so sorry Cali.
So sad what is happening... Prayers for all you folks in that area... Be safe
🙏 prayers to California
That is so sad to escape the fire only to have your home decimated by the very thing that was being used to save your home!! Water mixing with the hillside dirt causing a devastating mudslide!! Sad!
Well that went downhill fast. I mean i didn't expect mudslides so soon.
hah pun
And they did not expect fires either, even though it is on fire all year every year
@@bigmike2680it was as if they were being warned.
Wait till the earthquakes come next.
@ and still are, life loss will get worse as people move back in and the rain starts. Very sad
A house divided against itself cannot stand🐌
😂
🤣🤣🤣🤣
Facts! And it’s showing.
Lmfaooo what the heck
It was a rental...the owner won't be price gouging this one
@@Slugger99 But now it's a duplex, AND it's closer to the beach.
@@merriemisfit8406 🤣
I don’t know about rebuilding if mudslides are going to happen. What next a major Earthquake?
Let's rebuild! Lol.
Sadly this is what's next for many remaining homes in that area. Once the fires doneness erains come again.
Wait how did a mudslide occur? Was is because the fire and the burning vegetation and the heavy debris of another home? I’m not that educated on landslides lol
@@platinumanalogylack of water overtime and a certain amount of water in that area triggers mudslides.
It has to do with the soil softening within the mountain.
The palisades slid in 06' due to the heavy rains of 05' the engineers said it was not properly graded and compacted etc. for residential homes there is a History channel documentary on it titled "engineering disasters" on YT.
Well that explains it. Probably none of those houses in the hillside are safe then.
The home that was destroyed by a mudslide is going to be a headache for the homeowner.
"Land movement" is typically excluded from coverage in a Homeowners Ins. Policy.
(H.O. policies don't cover every peril.)
The homeowner will undoubtedly sue the property owner above him/her, since it was their 'dirt/debris' that trespassed into his yard and caused the damage.
Who's the owner of the 'broken' water pipe?
Or the fire department, city, Trump , take your pick
It was from the ocean water that was used to put out the flames above.
The ‘land’ would still be there, just not the house, its someone else’s now 😂
That house has been sitting there for how long going through rain and NOW it gets hit by a mudslide? Wow!
The fires caused the mudslide, or at least the extreme risk for it to happen.
The fires not only burn the trees but also cooked the soil, creating a separte layer that can easily dettached from the rock beneath. Farmers also use fire that way to make the soil a bit more loose to crop can go faster.
The fire burned away all the rooted vegetation that was holding all the soil in place and burned the soil so that it's almost like the consistency of baking soda. When it rains the a huge chunk of the Palisades could come sliding down in a massive mudslide.
That's why people whose homes survived the fires aren't being allowed back there since it's not safe.... and there's no power or water.
Water was dumped on it from a plane and everything around it was burned down. It’s an unusual situation.
I wouldn't rebuild
Well you are smarter then these people
They can't rebuild up there, ever again. To cut along story short, after the insurance companies have paid out, property developers will be warned NOT to lay another brick up in those hills. Unless L.A. county has the (1) know-how & (2) FUNDS to install new water infrastructure for BOTH urban use (i.e run a bath, glass of water, hose pipes to water garden etc) & CRUCIALLY AFTER this event, water infrastructure able to pump & an unimaginable amount of water & up into those hills to fight MULTIPLE wild fires, if needs be.
If new water infrastructure can NOT be installed and up in those hills & to cover BOTH of the above, then common sense MUST scream & dictate that (& from there) all homes are (quite literally) un-insurable.
Please note that's ALL already existing & future homes to be built = un-insurable WITHOUT new water infrastructure to cover BOTH needs.
They arrogantly said we will rebuild fulfilling Isaiah 9:11 onwards.
LA is such a hellscape - just get out
Hollywood stars knew this was coming. They wrote the script.
You'd have to be crazy to live around there.
The area has a certain cachet. It has snob appeal. They'll be back. On the downside it has high winds, massive fires, mudslides, earthquakes. In addition they don't want the riffraff living near them. I call it as I see it.
@@LeL-q9eat least you’re being honest.
You sound like the guy on the weekend before the fires prophesying against the rich at Venice/santa Monica boardwalk. He was non stop about how the rich are gonna get it for their sins & all of L.A. how God’s judgement is coming upon them. And then this happens.
Could’ve been an angel sent by God perhaps one in charge of one of the elements.
@@xuxitoit really doesn’t take a genius to understand what can and will happen.
Malibu and that area will burn, then the landslides-
Decade after decade-
Wait until the next Pineapple Express comes- 2 weeks of non stop rain-
All the toxic ash flows right into our beautiful ocean-
@@DaveEPieyea but think of how many times there’s fires in and around that area and all of a sudden a rare wind event,no water in the reservoirs or fire hydrants. Im going to stick with God’s judgment while others down play it as mere climate change,arson,electric cables.
What about the violent earthquake that are coming?
Are we going to blame climate change etc on it or just things that happen?
Concurrent event after another plus other celestial signs coming.
You’ll see.
This is gonna be an awful rainy season and all the burn areas
Who says we're getting rain 🌧.....we might just transition into summer ☀️
Oh No! They just cant get a break!!! Prayers to all in Cali.
Those mentally ill people who said LA has no water are now saying firefighters used too much water.
Earthquakes next for them probably. Poor guys. We got hit here in NC too and still haven't received help. All land grabs
Nah. No land grab more like land judgement. The entire country is under God’s judgement.
No one is safe and no one should get comfy.
More to come for everyone else.
ASHville NC was the beginning of God’s judgement.
Now we are seeing why he picked ashville first.
The U.S is going to be an ashville. Especially with NK testing nukes. Yea.. we are in for it bc of our sins.
Those homes, I don't know about this one, are on very small plots of hillside land. It's a terraced development. Heaven knows what will happen this winter.
Uh... it is winter.
La Niña is coming, which means less winter storms but the possibility of early to late spring rains that can be heavy at times.
The city of Los Angeles needs to prepare to clean up the debris and make adjustments for what may come in the coming months before summer.
Can't catch a break.
These disasters identify as miracles. How dare you.
@@thatman4752 can you explain??
@sunnykobe3210 “It’s all part of god’s plan” - fairy tale enthusiasts
No kidding, what is being done about the mud slides that are coming soon, it is going to wipe out all the houses that did not burn . Someone better be figuring this out NOW not when it starts raining.
Yea.. so much for the rebuilding they were talking about.
The crazy part is the homes left untouched by the fires are t out of the woods yet.
If those people aren't getting out now that were sparred they are not too smart. Celebs egos will make them stay and they may not live to regret it. The mudslides will be nasty
Authorities there are too focused on narratives and other things. Homeowners should cut their losses now. Government does not have their back. Many thought the wealth of the neighborhood would bring a 1st class fire response, but nope.
California has 4 seasons: Drought, Fire, Flooding, and Landslides. I'll take Sub-Zero in Chicago any day.
I live in Chicago and I would rather take the risk and live in Cali warm beautiful blue skies weather any day 🌞🌴
Plus earthquakes
Chicago has 4 seasons, too. Knocked on the head, shanked with a knife, Held up at gun point, home invasion.
5. Earthquakes
Vegas seems to be pretty good. Just 3 months of high heat but just stay indoors with AC for those 5 or 6 hours mid day
Unfortunately this will come in an onslaught when it rains. it's just like 1993 after the fires then. The mudslides destroyed so much of Malibu and it will happen again.
This is incorrect. Please don't spread mis information
What happened there? Do the after effects of wildfire damage, burnt vegetation, and propriety debris lead to it? I’m not that educated on this subject
Basically...
Fire moves through, killing ad removing vegetation.
Cleanup crews come through dozering foundations and recutting any slope for a new slab.
Rains hit, saturating the now-unsecured soil.
Erosion begins, gravity gives all that saturated soil a poke, abnd
It
All
Slides
Down
Hill.....
Wait until the earthquakes come.
Why are all these livestreams reruns? false advertising, and lying. where are the updates? where is the reporting?
Just when they thought they were safe. Mother Nature still fuming.
No water for hydrants, mudslide due to water leak .... reservoir needs repair during wildfire season, nothing makes any sense and it's gonna get worse ... so sorry for everyone out there.
Resiv
Resev
Reservoirs were fixed they just did not put water in them
Palisades has had land slip problems for a decade.
@@bigmike2680Only ONE reservoir…
In other words, this land should not be built on. Government needs to help people build elsewhere.
I've seen comments about a mudslides right after the fires broke out.
Now that those have happened it will probably be earthquakes next.
Yeh don’t build on the side of a hill, most smooth brain move from those homeowners.
Same thing happens with hurricanes. I live near the coast. When hurricanes destroy everything, communities usually rebuild and add MORE houses to the same place. Then we all scratch our heads and blame climate change when it happens again and more houses are destroyed.
Landslides may not be covered by insurance.
From outside of USA it seems like nothing is covered by any insurance. Whether you have one or not. Cancer? No, that’s not covered by insurance! Mud slides? Nope. Fire? Only if you have a policy for your cigars and smoke them…
There’s no point for having any kind of insurance in America.
Why even have insurance at this point 😂
God help us all when it rains...
don't worry guys.... this was just a rental... someone's 2nd property they were renting out at an overpriced rent so someone else could buy them another home - or a foreign investor that jacked up the rent and inflated the housing market. i DO feel sorry for the renter..... but not the home owner in this case.
LA County is in for a big surprise!
Yea.. the big one coming. The earth could open up and plunging homes deep into an abyss. Now that’s a freighting sight.
Its no surprise. Theyre assessing and planning even now, hoping to avoid further losses.
This is a glimpse at what is to come once the rains come next.
Omg it’s going to be bad if it has a heavy rain. The soils become very hydrophobic from the ash and dust 😢 I hope everyone stays safe
You think everything's terrible now.Wait until the next major rain
Was this all intensional?
This is way to much mismanagement. Most of the damage should have been stopped... in the city.
I live here😢
This is going to be a big problem once it starts raining
These disasters identify as miracles.
How dare you.
People should be stopped from building in these places
Or just let them do it at their own risk without insurance lol
The entire LA basin? Dream on.
Security Guard talking to the media and walking them around? FIRED
BS , you don't know what happened before. They probably have a press card authorization
@DonGivani that isn't the point. He shouldn't be talking to the media. His job is to provide security to the homes not go on TV and blab. If I was a homeowner paying for his services, he'd be fired
This reminds me of the house on the cliff in Santa Monica/ Malibu overlooking the Pacific Coast Highway I saw back in 1994. The earthquake caused half the house to slide down the mountain. You could see inside the house, and some of the furnishings were still in the house - looking at it from the ground, it looked like dollhouse furniture. Eventually the rest of the house was demolished, and I’ve never seen another house built there.
With all the water they dumped on that fire this is something I expected would happen. And there will be more landslides and homes lost the next time it rains hard. If my home survived the fire I would try to get rid of it fast.
That's a house? More like a shack we often see in CA.
Landslides with no rain?
the video clearly says its from all the water they used to put out the fires. They soaked those hills
@belleh.2955 yeah
Still pretty weird. What sprang the leak? A fire?
@@alwaysyouramanda explosion bursting underground pipe maybe
Mudslides!!!
It i had a house there i would put it up for sale immediately
No ceasefire huh?
These homes must have the best views of LA.
It survived the fire, but turns out not by a landslide ! 🥁
Wait what.......
They shouldn't build in these high-risk areas.
Correction, it was the water from massive water leaks after the fires burned down other structures, not the firefighters putting out the flames. Shut off main water lines and gas lines before evacuating would have prevented this.
Out of curiosity, how do you have mud to slide when you haven’t had rain in years?
Have you tried watching the video?
why would anyone live there
Are all US houses made of paper....?
Practically and overpriced too.
Yeah.. how was that house built?
Yes, but that has nothing to do with this specific occasion. If half your foundation breaks away any house will collapse.
Imagine being lucky enough to avoid fire while 1000s of homes burned down just to lose it to a mudslide. :/
Slope/earth movement is never covered by homeowner's insurance--always a stated exclusion (reason why the Palos Verdes homeowners in the slowly creeping slide area are demanding buyouts). The owner's only recourse would be to sue the property owner above for inadequate slope engineering/stabilization and prove that it was a pre-existing hazard/ticking timebomb prior to the recent fire and water application, which hastened the slope failure--this would likely be very tough to prove absent prior events indicating the slope was in danger of collapsing.
Ther remaining homes may be destroyed when the rains come...
That is the answer to anybody asking why don't they just clear away all the brush to minimize the chance of fires. Brush is needed to hold together the soil when heavy rains fall.
Los Angeles is done for 😢 i hope everyone can get the closure they need after this is done.
A big takeaway from all this is how poorly these houses have been built. You'd think in the middle of potential fires and mud slides they'd have been made out of bricks with re-enforcement. Instead it's timber and plastic. Developers have built them on the cheap in prime locations to make more money. Half theses houses would've survived with proper building regulations and skilled people building them.
Brick houses don’t survive either when the ground below them gives way or tons upon tons of muddy hillside crashes into them. They aren’t magical fortresses. There’s a reason you typically primarily see brick housing in the flatlands in the middle of the country where earthquakes aren’t a thing, and you don’t see brick houses near faultlines on the west coast. They tend to collapse rapidly when the ground starts rocking, as it does often in California.
Toothpicks and chewing gum.
I agree 👍 with the reporter that Karen bass and Gavin newsom have ruined los angeles
0:57 there's your clue as to why the area is so prone to fire. Everyone has huge vegitation growing all over and touching the house. Now I get it, the vegitation is nice, provides shade, wind break, atnosphere and privacy. But they have to get real considering the area. Less vegitation, and fire resistant roofs
I wanna know more about the children found inside the tunnels. How come nobody mentioned it on the news?
🎯😌
Child trafficking?
Maybe it is complete BS....? LOTS of that going around.
If that's true, we all know WHY it isn't being talked about.
Who dat Goonies
don’t live on or in hills !
Thank You Byron Kirkwood for keeping what remains safe. 🙏❤, be safe out there. God Bless You.
Not the best place to build a house
Blue house always survive thr fire
especially on our flat earth
What about all the water from all the fire fighting uphill from there?
This foreshadows the difficulties of reconstruction that will follow in the aftermath of the disaster, and for the work ahead, I think it is essential to prepare solar backup resources, such as Jackery generators.
Crazy they'll just rebuild in the same areas as if they didn't learn anything.
So do hurricane victims, so do people in flood prone areas, so do residents in earthquake regions: SO WHAT IS YOUR POINT?
That’s what you get for deforestation
Homeowner is now suing the fire department for the loss.
Imagine what will happen when it rains
Pray for Gaza . Palestine
Oh lord. Who they gonna blame now? So sorry.
Sad though this is, residents will be able to save most of their possessions, unlike those of the burnt houses.
these houses literally built on sand😂
The lady in pink looks like she time traveled from 1992.
الله اكبر، هذا عقابكم على تدمير و الاعتداء على غزة
Those mudslide have an annual relationship with the hills…BUT, I know: THEY WILL REBUILD. 😢😳
For profit Builders. Building homes in beautiful areas that are not safe to build.
We have 3 seasons. Fire season, rainy season, and mudslide season! We'll just wait till spring and see what's left.