http://www.fema.gov/about/what.shtm
Starts with disaster, ends with disaster.

You can't make this stuff up.

The problem is that it's designed as somewhat of a flow diagram. The format for all of the entities on the diagram is 'what we do', with the single exception of 'Disaster'.Dave wrote:Actually, if you really consider it, it's an ouline for learning from mistakes. It's not all that outrageous
There is not a single thing in that diagram about evaluating response, or about applying any evaluation to any other response.Dave wrote:It clearly means that a disaster strikes, we handle it, evaluate the response and apply that evaluation to the inevitable future disaster
Mitigation, Risk Reduction, Prevention, and Preparedness. All 4 of these steps are processes of evaluation that arise out of what people fucked up during the Response and Recovery phasesR00k wrote:There is not a single thing in that diagram about evaluating response, or about applying any evaluation to any other response.Dave wrote:It clearly means that a disaster strikes, we handle it, evaluate the response and apply that evaluation to the inevitable future disaster
And you're claiming it's obvious? What in hell are you on, Dave?
edit: And mitigation, risk reduction and preparedness are not related to evaluating response either. I could see if you had cited those as obvious parts of the flow chart, but response evaluation? That's just not in there anywhere.
It can be seen as ending in disaster, or it can be seen that disaster is inevitable and this "cycle" leads to "preparedness" (the last arrow in line) before the next disaster. Still, it's pretty funny that after all the effort put into the "cycle", one can interpret that as it all just ends in disaster again.R00k wrote:There is not a single thing in that diagram about evaluating response, or about applying any evaluation to any other response.Dave wrote:It clearly means that a disaster strikes, we handle it, evaluate the response and apply that evaluation to the inevitable future disaster
And you're claiming it's obvious? What in hell are you on, Dave?
edit: And mitigation, risk reduction and preparedness are not related to evaluating response either. I could see if you had cited those as obvious parts of the flow chart, but response evaluation? That's just not in there anywhere.
What sort of cacti are those?....and if you say something on the order of "dick-cacti" or "cockti" i'll reach through the internet and smack you.Foo wrote:Surely as these are just regular cacti.Dave wrote:It clearly means that a disaster strikes, we handle it, evaluate the response and apply that evaluation to the inevitable future disaster
That's not represented in the graphic at all, certainly not clearly.Dave wrote:Mitigation, Risk Reduction, Prevention, and Preparedness. All 4 of these steps are processes of evaluation that arise out of what people fucked up during the Response and Recovery phasesR00k wrote:There is not a single thing in that diagram about evaluating response, or about applying any evaluation to any other response.Dave wrote:It clearly means that a disaster strikes, we handle it, evaluate the response and apply that evaluation to the inevitable future disaster
And you're claiming it's obvious? What in hell are you on, Dave?
edit: And mitigation, risk reduction and preparedness are not related to evaluating response either. I could see if you had cited those as obvious parts of the flow chart, but response evaluation? That's just not in there anywhere.