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a reply to: RussianTroll
is ATS really so crushed and degraded that you do not remember
The explosions on March 26, 2017, knocked dam workers to the ground and everything went dark. A fire spread, and crucial equipment failed. The mighty flow of the Euphrates River suddenly had no way through. .
I'm giving you a link to a Google saved copy of this message.
webcache.googleusercontent.com...:sN9L-RH5tp0J:www.yahuwahsoasis.com... e__pt_3.pdf+&cd=1&hl= en&ct=clnk&gl=en
Someone wants us to know nothing and have a short memory. But go further.
originally posted by: RussianTroll
a reply to: putnam6
I'm writing through Google translator. Names may be garbled.
The article also cited a call with Gov. Jerry Brown’s office, in which an unidentified official said, “Tell everyone to come back,” according to the notes obtained by the AP. The sheriff said he didn’t know who that person was and he never heard anyone voice disapproval of his decision to make the evacuation order, downgrade it or rescind when he did.
“That was the first I ever heard of that. Everybody I talked to was fully on board with the evacuation and keeping it in effect until we had clarity.
“It’s kind of interesting from my standpoint because you live through an event like this and you have your own view of it — I’m still getting my arms wrapped around all the aspects — and I’m constantly hearing new stories and new perceptions.
“The credit goes to so many people: my staff, first responders, our community. I’ve heard hundreds of stories of acts of compassion, heroism on part of everyday people. I want them to be prepared, pay attention to what’s going on. (After the Oroville Dam) evacuations, the Wall Fire then the Ponderosa Fire, I feel like they’ve really gotten an understanding that we’re trying to keep people safe. When it’s time to evacuate, do it.
“Watching news coverage on (Hurricane) Harvey and seeing devastation, I couldn’t help to be thankful we were spared that. It could have looked like that, perhaps on a smaller scale. When I saw that, it brought me back to thankfulness this community did not have to endure that. The silver lining out of all of this is it gave our community an opportunity to come together and see that in a crisis we can rise to the occasion.”
The Bureau of Reclamation, the federal agency under the U.S. Department of Interior, which runs the Hoover Dam, said a transformer caught fire and was extinguished by the Reclamation/Hoover fire brigade around 30 minutes later.
originally posted by: elevatedone
No one "blew up" or attempted to "blow up" Hoover Dam.
The Bureau of Reclamation, the federal agency under the U.S. Department of Interior, which runs the Hoover Dam, said a transformer caught fire and was extinguished by the Reclamation/Hoover fire brigade around 30 minutes later.
Source
originally posted by: elevatedone
No one "blew up" or attempted to "blow up" Hoover Dam.
The Bureau of Reclamation, the federal agency under the U.S. Department of Interior, which runs the Hoover Dam, said a transformer caught fire and was extinguished by the Reclamation/Hoover fire brigade around 30 minutes later.
Source
originally posted by: RussianTroll
Of course, I am not an expert in hydro-technical power structures, but it seems to me that transformers cannot be located in such places where we saw an explosion.