Check this out from the New York Daily News...
Only one thing left to do. Clean my AR-15's, scrub my AK-47's and buy more ammo.
I refuse to be like those poor souls in the New York area, afraid, alone and unarmed...hiding in a corner waiting for help that might come too late if at all. The Utopian paradisethat is a was the promise of a large US city has been forever shattered. I wonder if anyone noticed.
When night falls in the Rockaways, the hoods come out.I almost feel vindicated. Authorities are not able to protect anyone when it really comes down to it. They never have. Its all been an illusion but this storm has shattered that. I wonder how anti-gun New York is gonna be now?
Ever since Sandy strafed the Queens peninsula and tore up the boardwalk, it’s become an often lawless place where cops are even scarcer than electrical power and food. Locals say they are arming themselves with guns, baseball bats, booby traps — even a bow and arrow — to defend against looters.
Thugs have been masquerading as Long Island Power Authority (LIPA) workers, knocking on doors in the dead of night. But locals say the real workers have been nowhere in sight, causing at least one elected official — who fears a descent into anarchy if help doesn’t arrive soon — to call for the city to investigate the utility.
Further exacerbating desperate conditions, it could take at least a month to repair the the bridge that connects the Rockaways to the city subway system, officials said.
“We booby-trapped our door and keep a baseball bat beside our bed,” said Danielle Harris, 34, rummaging through donated supplies as children rode scooters along half-block chunk of the boardwalk that had marooned into the middle of Beach 91st St.
“We heard gunshots for three nights in a row,” said Harris, who believed they came from the nearby housing projects.
Carly Ruggieri, 27, who lives in water-damaged house on the block, said she barricades her door with a bed frame. “There have been people in power department uniforms knocking on doors and asking if they’re okay, but at midnight.”
And another local surfer said he has knives, a machete and a bow and arrow on the ready. Gunshots and slow-rolling cars have become a common fixture of the night since Hurricane Sandy.
“I would take a looter with a boa. If I felt threatened I would definitely use it,” said Keone Singlehurst, 42. “Its like the Wild West. A borderline lawless situation.”
City Councilman James Sanders (D-Far Rockaway) said he fears the situation will devolve into anarchy.
“We have an explosive mix here,” said Sanders. “People will take matters into their own hands.”
Only one thing left to do. Clean my AR-15's, scrub my AK-47's and buy more ammo.
I refuse to be like those poor souls in the New York area, afraid, alone and unarmed...hiding in a corner waiting for help that might come too late if at all. The Utopian paradise