broken things, the houses, the buildings, the bridges, the boats, destroyed. but these images don t show you the lives that are broken. people on the margins whose homes, whose jobs, even their own bodies and their health are now precarious. people who don t have the insurance or the resources to rebuild. my team down here and i went for a drive here not far from where we discovered dozens of people at a shrimping dock for whom that is the situation tonight. no one has reached them and it is not clear if anyone has tried, but i saw them. and you can see them too. take a look. [inaudible] we swung around, we were right up. and they started pushing us, and shoved us, long story short, shop this all the way in, leaned over the taken out of us serious water. they got me off with the airboat. i didn t know that building was going to hold up or not. this was my seventh one. this is your seven? hurricane yes, andrew, charlie, harvey, and now in. yes, by far the worst! wh
you literally go up to people s houses, where do you get the information as to where you go, and then what happens? yeah we are getting on our website project dynamo. org, where you can go to register your families. that s where you can go to donate. we are donor funded entirely. we do need help. everything is we need gas more than anything else. we need boats more than anything else. people register their family members on the website and give us their addresses, and we have to take our boat out, and then go in by foot. today we probably walked about 20 or 30 miles inland from on and off santa belle and some other places. so very difficult, very hard, very dangerous, very muddy and nasty. the destruction is catastrophic! this is, you know, map changing destruction. it s kind of like the skyline of new york after 9/11, it s different after 9/11.