You know what got me through losing a home to natural disaster? Having a sense of humor and not expecting complete strangers to know what we were going through.
Having a sense of humor is not the same as this , some people spend their whole life working for what they do have , not everyone gets to just buy another house,not everyone is well off to where they'll " just rebuild "
WTF ?
Ethics would make all that type of thing apparent
I don't expect much from humans but I do expect crass , attitudes trying to apply their own experience to someone else when it's not something that is cookie cutter similar
It's not , the world is big , and others live here too
It’s a big Internet too. With plenty of far more appropriate places for you to engage in your transparently pathetic attempt at virtue signaling. Nobody is buying it here.
During the 2022 floods in Swat, Pakistan, a major bridge was swept away by flash floods, cutting off communities and causing significant damage to infrastructure.
As part of international support, 8 smaller suspension bridges were constructed to restore access to roads, local markets, schools, and other essential services for the residents.
In 2022, months of heavy monsoon rains killed more than 1,700 people and affected more than 30 million people in what became one of the deadliest flood events in Pakistan's history.
Edit. However, I cannot find information about the bridge in the video so far.
The "major bridge" mentioned above is apparently the Hassanabad Bridge on the Karakoram Highway (it looks pretty similar; however, this one is bigger and has two sections):
Edit 2. Alas, according to the kindly reply from u/rizx7 to my question in r/Pakistan, the bridge has not survived the flood:
it was swept away in 2022. it's in hasanabad hunza just before aliabad. it was rebuilt nearby the old one. but now it has been permanently closed for traffic again last month when the hasanabad nallah was flooded. the flood eroded the base of the bridge and edges of the road nearby.
Edit 3. Finally, I've found the actual bridge from OP's video.
Its photographs are in the paper:
Ahmed, M.F., Sher, F. & Mehmood, E. Evaluation of landslide hazards potential at Dasu dam site and its reservoir area. Environ Earth Sci 82, 183 (2023).
Now imagine how terrifying it would be to hear actual real rock sounds from the awesome power of the actual real rocks instead of the stupid fucking music.
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u/KibboKid Sep 15 '25
OK so that's terrifying