The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Tuesday, August 6, 2024

Hiroshima in Gaza by Emad Hajjaj, Alaraby Aljadeed newspaper , London
Hiroshima in Gaza by Emad Hajjaj, Alaraby Aljadeed newspaper , London

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Weather: A chance of showers and thunderstorms before 8am, then showers and possibly a thunderstorm between 8am and 2pm, then showers and thunderstorms after 2pm. High near 84. Very windy, with a southwest wind 20 to 25 mph, with gusts as high as 36 mph. Chance of precipitation is 90%. New rainfall amounts between a quarter and half of an inch possible. Tuesday Night Showers and thunderstorms, mainly before 2am. Low around 77. Windy, with a southwest wind around 22 mph, with gusts as high as 31 mph. Chance of precipitation is 80%.

Today at a Glance:

In Court: The resumption of a sentencing hearing is scheduled for 8:30 a.m. before Circuit Judge Terence Perkins in Courtroom 401 at the Flagler County Courthouse in the case of Brendan Depa, the former Matanzas High School special needs student accused of assaulting a paraprofessional, in an incident recorded on video. The first part of the sentencing hearing took place on May 1. Depa tendered an open plea in late October, leaving the judge wide discretion to sentence him either as an adult or as a youthful offender. See: “Despite Severe Autism, Judge Finds Depa, Ex-Matanzas High Student, Competent to Be Tried for Assault on Aide,” “Brendan Depa’s Mother Tells Her Son’s Story,” and “The Brendan Depa I Have Come To Know.” See also:

Flagler Beach’s Planning and Architectural Review Board meets at 5:30 p.m. at City Hall, 105 S 2nd Street. For agendas and minutes, go here. The board today will review a revised height ordinance.

The Palm Coast City Council meets at 6 p.m. at City Hall. For agendas, minutes, and audio access to the meetings, go here. For meeting agendas, audio and video, go here.

The Bunnell Planning, Zoning and Appeals Board meets at 6 p.m. at the Government Services Building, 1769 East Moody Boulevard, Bunnell. The board consists of Carl Lilavois, Chair; Manuel Madaleno, Nealon Joseph, Gary Masten and Lyn Lafferty.

The Flagler Beach Library Writers’ Club meets at 5 p.m. at the library, 315 South Seventh Street, Flagler Beach.

Random Acts of Insanity Standup Comedy, 8 p.m. at Cinematique Theater, 242 South Beach Street, Daytona Beach. General admission is $8.50. Every Tuesday and on the first Saturday of every month the Random Acts of Insanity Comedy Improv Troupe specializes in performing fast-paced improvised comedy.

In Coming Days:

Aug. 3: The annual Back to School Jam is scheduled for 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Flagler Palm Coast High School gym, 5500 State Rte 100 E, Palm Coast. Administrators from all of our schools will be on-site to answer questions. There will also be school shirts available for purchase at each school’s booth. District personnel will be on-hand to provide information on various programs and services, including after-school programs. Our Transportation department will be rolling up its booth to address bus schedules and our Food Services team will be available to answer questions about what you need to know about the free breakfast and lunch programs that are available to all students this coming school year. Additionally, dozens of local vendors will be on-hand with information about their youth-focused activities and programs. Be sure to get photos with various mascots and the always popular “Costumers With a Cause” roaming the gym. Food trucks and a bike rodeo will set up behind the gym.

Aug. 5: Nexus Center/South Library Groundbreaking is scheduled for 1 p.m. on the acreage opposite the Sheriff’s Operations Center on Commerce Parkway in Bunnell. The “Nexus Center” will be a multi-purpose facility to house a new library and the county’s Health and Human Services Department. See: “Flagler County Library’s $14 Million South Branch ‘Nexus Center’ Breaks Ground in August, Ending 10-Year Wait.”

Aug. 6: In Court: The resumption of a sentencing hearing is scheduled for 8:30 a.m. before Circuit Judge Terence Perkins in Courtroom 401 at the Flagler County Courthouse in the case of Brendan Depa, the former Matanzas High School special needs student accused of assaulting a paraprofessional, in an incident recorded on video. The first part of the sentencing hearing took place on May 1. Depa tendered an open plea in late October, leaving the judge wide discretion to sentence him either as an adult or as a youthful offender. See: “Despite Severe Autism, Judge Finds Depa, Ex-Matanzas High Student, Competent to Be Tried for Assault on Aide,” “Brendan Depa’s Mother Tells Her Son’s Story,” and “The Brendan Depa I Have Come To Know.”

Aug. 7: Candidate Night at Flagler Woman’s Club: The Flagler Woman’s Club invites you to Candidates’ Night at 7 p.m. at the clubhouse at 1524 South Central Ave, Flagler Beach. Meet the Candidates for the following local races: Flagler County Commission Districts 1,3 & 5; Flagler County School Board Districts 3 & 5; Palm Coast Mayor and Palm Coast City Council Districts 1 & 3. Each candidate will be given time for an initial presentation, followed by a question-and-answer period, and then closing statements. Afterwards there will be an opportunity to talk one on one with the candidates. Please be aware of and respect the club’s no campaign paraphernalia in the clubhouse rule. For more information call Joann Soman at 305-778-2885. There will be overflow parking at the Flagler Beach United Methodist Church at 1520 S Daytona Avenue.

For the full calendar, go here.

Notably: The site is called Nukemap. You can access it here. When I do, it brings up Orlando. I don;t know if it’s because the website is reading my IP address or if Nukemap is set to Orlando getting blown off the map by default. Nukemap is a nuclear bomb simulator. You choose any city you like, including Palm Coast. Then you select the kind of warhead you want to drop on the city–the yield, in kilotons or megatons.  Let’s take the 15-kiloton Little Boy type of bomb that was dropped on Hiroshima as an example. You can then choose whether you want an airburst, which causes more damage but limits radioactive waste in the air, or a surface burst, which limits damage but throws up a bigger radioactive cloud. You can click the box to give you an idea of casualties. You can click the box about radioactive fallout. Then you detonate. The result is a basic map of concentric circles of damage. The bomb would have been dropped on the C Section, as this simulation has it (not my choice, but whatever.) The result is surprisingly slight: 3,570 fatalities, 7,560 injuries, with the fireball extending to a radius of just 198 meters and the heavy blast damage to less than a quarter of a mile. The radiation radius takes in the whole C Section, and the moderate blast damage goes out almost 9 kilometers, or about 5 miles, past Palm Coast Parkway but not to State Road 100, and to U.S. 1, but not past it. The Hammock Beach Resort would also be toast. The thermal radiation radius, where everyone would get third degree bruins and die, but in a longer time stretch, would go out to the F Section and part of the barrier island. A Nagasaki-size bombs would up the casualties to 3,890. A 9 megaton warhead, the kind currently arming American ICBMs, would wipe out half of Palm Coast’s population and reach to St. Augustine and Ormond Beach. I imagine the simulator is designed to scare the hell out of us, and to some extent it does. But I find it not effective enough, and oddly understated. Those casualty figures seem low, and the blast zones smaller than I’d have imagined unless the megatonnage is in play. Oddly, when I dropped another Little Boy on Hiroshima, the simulator showed zero casualties. It had to be refreshed. Then came the casualties: similar to the numbers from the original bombing: close to 100,000 from the blast, 147,000 more injuries. A Hiroshima-sized bomb On Manhattan? 305,000 and 578,000. A thermonuclear warhead? 3.6 million dead, 3.2 million injuries. That’s more along the lines of the likely scenarios, though even those figures seem low–nothing like those in, say, The Fate of the Earth’s scenario of a bomb on Manhattan. Here. Try for yourself

P.T.

 

Now this:

The Live Calendar is a compendium of local and regional political, civic and cultural events. You can input your own calendar events directly onto the site as you wish them to appear (pending approval of course). To include your event in the Live Calendar, please fill out this form.

August 2024

Saturday – Wednesday, Aug 03 – 07

Kiersten Hawkins Pop-Up

Ormond Memorial Art Museum & Gardens

fairness diversity florida justice

Tuesday, Aug 06

Brendan Depa Sentencing

Flagler County courthouse

flagler beach city commission logo

Tuesday, Aug 06

Flagler Beach Library Writers’ Club

315 South 7th Street, Flagler Beach

flagler beach city commission logo

Tuesday, Aug 06

Flagler Beach Planning and Architectural Review Board

palm coast logo

Tuesday, Aug 06

Palm Coast City Council Meeting

bunnell logo

Tuesday, Aug 06

Bunnell Planning, Zoning and Appeals Board

Government Services Building

Tuesday, Aug 06

Random Acts of Insanity Standup Comedy

Cinematique of Daytona Beach

palm coast logo

Wednesday, Aug 07

Palm Coast Code Enforcement Board Meeting

americans united for separation of church and state logo

Wednesday, Aug 07

Separation Chat: Open Discussion

flagler beach city commission logo

Wednesday, Aug 07

Flagler Beach Library Book Club

315 South 7th Street, Flagler Beach

course in miracles

Wednesday, Aug 07

The Circle of Light A Course in Miracles Study Group

chess club flagler county public library

Wednesday, Aug 07

Weekly Chess Club for Teens, Ages 9-18, at the Flagler County Public Library

Flagler County Public Library

gop logo

Wednesday, Aug 07

Flagler County Republican Club Meeting

flagler beach city commission logo

Wednesday, Aug 07

Flagler Beach Parks Ad Hoc Committee

Wednesday, Aug 07

Candidate Night at Flagler Woman’s Club

Flagler Woman’s Club House

No event found!

For the full calendar, go here.

FlaglerLive

And to think, just a few months prior, Manhattan Project chief General Leslie Groves had assured the public and Congress that death by radiation poisoning was “a very pleasant way to die.”

–From Annie Jacobsen’s Nuclear War: A Scenario (2024).
.

 

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