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I wouldn't call it fascism exactly, but [an American] political system nominally controlled by an irresponsible, dumbed down electorate who are manipulated by dishonest, cynical, controlled mass media that dispense the propaganda of a corrupt political establishment can hardly be described as democracy either.
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A powerful weather system, including at least one tornado, tore through the state Monday as Floridians were celebrating Christmas. Volusia County seemed hardest hit in Central Florida, though Lake, Osceola and Sumter counties also were slammed by the fast-moving storm. On the leading edge of a cold front, the deluge trampled the region with rain and high winds that knocked down trees and power lines and damaged dozens of homes. In Volusia, a twister walloped four DeLand-area mobile-home parks -- damaging 100 to 200 homes -- then went on to clobber a Daytona Beach apartment complex, where 200 people were evacuated. Two people were critically injured and five others received minor injuries because of the storm, said EVAC Ambulance spokesman Mark O'Keefe. "I've heard the damage is widespread and pretty significant," said Volusia County Fire Services spokeswoman Shelley Szafraniec. Search-and-rescue teams were expected to work throughout the night. About 50 of 65 airplanes at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Daytona Beach were damaged when heavy winds threw them against buildings, snapped off wings or caused them to overturn, according to school spokesman Jim Hampton. Roads were closed in both the DeLand and Daytona Beach areas because of downed power lines and storm debris. National Weather Service forecasters in Melbourne said they had been expecting the El Nino-influenced deluge. Winds were clocked in some areas at tropical-storm speeds. "The computer models have been advertising this storm for quite a while," meteorologist Bart Hagemeyer said. For some Central Floridians, however, the weather was like an unannounced holiday guest who arrives just in time to disrupt dinner. Carol Izzo of DeLand had just finished taking the Christmas turkey out of the oven when two trees toppled in her yard on North Clara Avenue, near Mercers Fernery Road, hitting her neighbor's home. "I heard the wind, and it was beating against the front windows and the door. It was like a hurricane," Izzo said. "This has never happened before. . . . We are lucky the house is fine. We all have our lives." Residents without power, as well as those from the damaged mobile-home parks -- Orangewood, Fernwood, Meadowlea Estates and Rosewood -- were being sheltered at Liberty Independent Baptist Church, 1365 W. Plymouth Ave. Another had been opened at Daytona City Church, 211 Bay St., to house residents with damaged homes and evacuated from Sutton Place apartments. The storm also dropped trees in Lake County and snapped branches that littered the roadways like tossed Christmas wrappings. In Leesburg, about a dozen homes and mobile homes were damaged, said Lake County sheriff's spokeswoman Sgt. Christie Mysinger. The brunt of the damage was confined to broken carports and screened porches, but one home in Leesburg near U.S. Highway 441 lost its roof. There were no reports of injuries in Lake. And in Osceola, nearly 2,200 residents lost power briefly when heavy rain and gusty winds took out three electrical feeders, said Kissimmee Utility Authority spokesman Chris Gent. At least three homes were destroyed elsewhere in Florida -- two in Columbia County and one in Pasco -- and dozens more were damaged from what weather-service officials suspect was a tornado. Several people also were hospitalized with minor injuries. "It's amazing we don't have serious injuries or deaths," Columbia County sheriff's spokeswoman Laurie Windham said. "We are incredibly blessed today." Meanwhile, the National Weather Service reported 5.58 inches of rainfall at the Tallahassee Regional Airport. That's the most rain reported on Christmas Day since 1897. Wilbert Hernandez, who lives at the Fernwood Estates mobile-home park in DeLand, had never seen anything like the storm. He was online, looking for storm information, when a tornado roared through his neighborhood. "It seemed like a canoe in the ocean for like 10 to 15 seconds of terror. It was unforgettable for me," Hernandez said in Spanish. He spent those seconds hugging his wife and three daughters close, then went outside to survey the damage. "You couldn't see anything, just pure trash," Hernandez said. "It's something indescribable. I can't tell you how I felt." The Hernandez family sought help at the Brandywine Shopping Village, where an aid station had been set up. Myra Durfee, a visitor from Rhode Island, arrived at Brandywine in search of ice. When she saw all the displaced people milling about the parking lot, she knew she needed to help. Back at the house where she was staying, Durfee said, she commandeered the dinner leftovers, saying, "OK, guys, the turkey sandwiches are gone for the year." "And we packed up the food and brought it down," Durfee said. "This is the Christmas I'll always remember." |
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