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Is Florida Becoming a Failed State?

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Is Florida Becoming a Failed State?

Florida will attempt to kill you. That is the Florida Rule, and it governs one of the crucial capricious landscapes on earth. Misunderstand the atmosphere at your peril, as we have been reminded by Hurricane Ian this previous month. Elements of our distinctive paradise lie in destroy, and we’ll spend months, if not years, making an attempt to course of the expertise. Whereas Hurricane Ian has left Florida, it stays behind within the flooding and in our governor’s political maneuverings. It persists within the minds of survivors and within the materials results on their lives. Left behind, too, as porous because the sand the storm surge deposited miles inland, are questions on coverage, storytelling, and the way forward for the state.

The storm got here ashore on the barrier island of Cayo Costa, instantly west of Fort Myers. The attention of the hurricane, seen in Landsat pictures, seemed perversely wealthy, just like the azure jewel of a hidden tropical kingdom, protected by encircling silver clouds. Within the aftermath, the plumes of runoff discharged into the ocean had a disquieting resemblance to an oil slick. The shoreline that had entertained such a crushing blow now bled toxins and sediment into the churned-up ocean. A 3rd wave, of useless marine life, will probably wash up on seashores within the weeks to come back.

Ian devolved right into a tropical storm because it traipsed throughout the peninsula, then gathered energy once more whereas out at sea alongside the Atlantic Coast, solely to curve again and strike South Carolina as a Class 1 hurricane. All through the Florida counties the place floodwaters consumed complete cities, emergency crews broke into submerged automobiles to succeed in individuals inside, whereas the Coast Guard rescued others from rooftops. Individuals kayaked down their major streets and swam in floodwaters by way of the downstairs of their homes. Nearly all of these houses weren’t lined by flood insurance coverage, and in a number of locations the flooding has not but subsided.

Within the space round Fort Myers, breaking the Florida Rule got here with a heavy price. Individuals residing on distant barrier islands—ribbons of ever-changing sand that lie parallel to the coast—have been reminded of their tenuous connection to the mainland with the collapse of the Sanibel Causeway. Simply eight months in the past, residents have been involved about new pavilions, picnic areas, and parking on the causeway which may intrude with windsurfing actions. A yr earlier, commissioners accepted a 50-condo growth subsequent to the causeway. Now, the causeway lies damaged in 5 locations, chopping off entry to emergency companies and important provides.

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Giant components of this state ought to at all times be mangrove thickets, prickly swampland, and unforgiving marshy wilderness. For our personal survival.

Terms like “carnage” and “whole destruction,” widespread in information protection, are usually used to explain property within the aftermath of storms, ignoring each human lives and, in Florida, the delicate panorama on which these buildings stood. The barrier island of Fort Myers Seaside seemed like “someone took an atom bomb and dropped it,” a resident advised the Tampa Bay Instances. Boats had been run aground far inland from their marinas and homes have been blown to shreds, with complete neighborhoods decreased to their foundations. A Naples resident recognized as a Mrs. Fuller advised the Miami Herald, “It was almost like a dream,” referring to the flooding of her home and the ravaging of her neighborhood. A nightmare of Class 4 proportions.

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A Who’s Who at Peter Thiel’s Trump Party: Zuckerberg, Adelson and More

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A Who’s Who at Peter Thiel’s Trump Party: Zuckerberg, Adelson and More

Mr. Thiel prides himself on his elaborate parties, and his inauguration event, held in his seven-bedroom home, included a hired juggler who rather than juggling, instead posed trivia questions to guests about U.S. presidents. Snack cakes and other appetizers were passed around, and larger bites were served at stations. (The Mar-a-Lago station had shrimp, steak and salad with Thousand Island dressing; there was also a food delivery from McDonald’s.) Gift bags were filed with small bottles of Moët champagne. There were, of course, red MAGA hats.

Prominent tech industry guests, among a heavily male list, included Sam Altman, the chief executive of OpenAI, the crypto investors Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss, and after a brief period of haggling with security over the guest list, Alexandr Wang. Mr. Wang, who runs one of the most celebrated artificial-intelligence startups in the world, ScaleAI, was able to talk his way into the mansion, which Mr. Thiel purchased several years ago from Wilbur Ross, Mr. Trump’s former commerce secretary. Joe Osborne, a company spokesman, said Mr. Wang had been temporarily unable to get in because the event was at capacity.

Silicon Valley’s politics have trended to the right since Mr. Trump’s election, and many of the main personalities of that movement were seen at the Thiel party. Guests included the tech podcasters Chamath Palihapitiya, Jason Calacanis and David Friedberg, hosts of the “All-In” show with Mr. Sacks; former Uber chief executive Travis Kalanick; incoming administration officials such as Jacob Helberg, Ken Howery and Sriram Krishnan, all from Silicon Valley; and Senators Bill Hagerty, Ted Cruz and Dave McCormick.

House Speaker Mike Johnson described the party as “a lot of fun,” with the best part being “the company.” Senator Ted Cruz, who has worked to cultivate a relationship with Mr. Thiel over the years, said this was not, in fact, the best part of the weekend. That, he said, “is gonna be noon on Monday.”

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The Self-Realization Fellowship Lake Shrine was surrounded by flames. Then a family came to its rescue

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The Self-Realization Fellowship Lake Shrine was surrounded by flames. Then a family came to its rescue

Tales of the miraculous have always encircled the Self-Realization Fellowship Lake Shrine.

The story of its 1950 founding goes that the spiritual guru Paramahansa Yogananda purchased the 10-acre Pacific Palisades property from an oil company president, after the oilman had a vivid dream in which his land became a “church of all religions.” Yogananda then established the grounds as a place of peace, solace and sanctuary for people of all faiths.

Swans on the lake at the Self-Realization Fellowship site.

(Self-Realization Fellowship)

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The spring-fed lake in the center of the compound is its defining feature. Swans glide across its surface, new mothers push strollers around its perimeter, and people of many faiths and backgrounds meditate quietly along its shores.

The lake also played a key role in the shrine’s unlikely escape from the Palisades fire, as a family of three devotees used its waters to extinguish threatening flames.

Self-Realization Fellowship president and spiritual leader Brother Chidananda, in a livestream address to the group’s international membership, recounted the efforts of Billy Asad and his two adult children, Gabriella and Nicky, who came to the property’s rescue.

The Asads, he said, were “the divine instruments of God and guru who literally saved the Lake Shrine.”

It was the soot-covered swans, so dark they almost looked black, that first struck Gabriella Asad when she arrived at the Lake Shrine on the second day of the fire. Then, the lack of other animal life. No koi fish rose to the surface to greet her. The turtles that usually sun themselves on the scattered rocks were gone.

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The Self Realization Fellowship lush Pacific Palisades grounds.

The Self-Realization Fellowship’s lush Pacific Palisades grounds include a historic houseboat, where guru Paramahansa Yogananda lived and wrote while directing the work around the Lake Shrine.

(Self-Realization Fellowship )

Looking around the smoldering grounds where she was baptized as a baby and now volunteers in the gardening department, Gabriella, 20, resisted the urge to fall to her knees in despair. Instead, she grabbed four fire extinguishers and, through her tears, set to work alongside her father, Billy, 54, and brother Nicky, 19.

As embers the size of golf balls pelted the property, she put out spot fires and hosed down the wood-shingled roofs of the Lake Shrine’s historic buildings.

“Just the way the sky was, all the smoke, the way the swans were covered,” she said with emotion in her voice. “It took everything in me to do the best I could.”

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Her father, a former yoga teacher who lives on a houseboat in Marina Del Rey, had been tracking the explosive Palisades fire since soon after it broke out the morning of Jan. 7, when a monk spotted flames in the nearby mountains. As a longtime member of the Self-Realization Fellowship, Billy knew what was at stake: the lush meditation gardens open to all, the historic houseboat where his guru lived and wrote while directing the work around the Lake Shrine, the thousand-year-old Chinese sarcophagus containing some of Mahatma Gandhi’s ashes.

“It’s not just this beautiful garden with a lake,” Billy said. “It’s a vortex of light and love and peace and harmony and healing.”

Billy is not a certified firefighter, but as the founder and owner of WDA Fire Protection, he helps get businesses and homes fire-ready. He’s also a certified Regulation 4 tester under the Los Angeles Fire Department, which allows him to inspect and assess fire doors in L.A., and he’s licensed under the Office of the State Fire Marshal to service and test portable fire extinguishers. His father was a firefighter for 30 years and taught him about fire behavior. Over the years, Billy passed his knowledge on to his kids.

He began visiting the Lake Shrine’s paradisiacal grounds 25 years ago after a friend gave him a copy of Yogananda’s seminal book, “Autobiography of a Yogi.” He still remembers walking onto the property for the first time.

Billy Asad, daughter Gabriella and son Nicky in yellow coats beside a lake

Billy Asad, left, with daughter Gabriella and son Nicky.

(Billy Asad)

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“It was that ah-ha moment,” he said. “I knew it was my path.”

His kids were baptized in the Windmill Chapel, which abuts the lake and looks as if it had been magically transported from the Netherlands.

Gabriella and Nicky attended Sunday school at the temple and went on teen retreats with other Self-Realization Fellowship members. As they got older, they became regulars at the hourlong services held on the property each week. Nicky used to work as a chef at the Lake Shrine, cooking for the monks and lay people at the retreat center. Gabriella volunteers with the gardening department.

A man hose down a smoldering hillside

Billy Asad hoses down the hillside at the Self-Realization Fellowship Lake Shrine, where morning services are held every Sunday.

(Billy Asad)

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“Ever since I can remember we’ve been going to Lake Shrine,” Nicky said. “It’s our home. It’s everything to us.”

By 10 a.m. on Jan. 8, Billy had tracked the fires long enough to know the Lake Shrine was in danger. Along with Gabriella and Nicky, he loaded his Toyota Tacoma TRD Pro with helmets, gloves, fire coats, eye protection, steel-toed boots, respirators, radios, axes, shovels and about 30 fire extinguishers. Then they headed north to the property.

Flames raged around them as they climbed into Pacific Palisades. Telephone poles crashed to the ground near the truck. There were checkpoints along the way, but Billy showed his fire credentials and was allowed to pass through.

When they arrived, the Lake Shrine had been abandoned, the 14 monks who live on the grounds safely evacuated. There was a firetruck in the parking lot, but the two firefighters there were focused on a three-story apartment building adjacent to the Lake Shrine that was consumed by flames.

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Moving quickly and coordinating through their radios, the Asads rushed to extinguish spot fires crackling at the base of trees, in a patch of bamboo and on the many railroad ties that serve as stairs throughout the property.

“That’s exactly how everything starts,” Billy said. “A tree falls and catches another structure on fire.”

To prevent future ignitions, they also set to work wetting the roofs of all the buildings. Because of her volunteer job, Gabriella knew where the garden hoses were located, although a few had already melted. She took care of the visitor center. Nicky was charged with soaking the place of his baptism, the Windmill Chapel.

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Meanwhile, Billy spotted an unexpected tool: a gas-powered water pump on the lake’s small maintenance barge. It was new to him, but that didn’t matter.

“I know fire pumps,” he said. “I know hoses. I know attachments. So within five minutes after seeing it, I had the engine started and we were spraying bamboo on fire from 100 feet away.”

As it happens, a few months earlier, a resident monk of the property, Brother Bodhananda, had purchased the pump in case of future fires. Before being evacuated, he brought the pump out of storage and moved it onto the barge.

“It’s a credit to him and the maintenance manager, Bill Lackner, who works there that they had the temporary fire pump set up,” Billy said. “We jumped on the barge and immediately started using it. I have boating experience and my son does too. It was all part of this amazing divine plan.”

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The Asad family worked for seven hours before pausing, including taking a moment to gently rinse some of the soot clinging to the swans’ feathers.

That evening, Nicky and Billy came back and stayed until 4 a.m. the next day, hosing down the property and continuing to extinguish spot fires that were igniting all over, sometimes repeatedly in the same place. It was blindingly exhausting work, and they believe it was the prayers and wishes of devotees across the globe who empowered them to do it.

The Lake Shrine towers are illuminated at night surrounded by fire

The Lake Shrine towers were at risk as the Palisades fire raged on the hillside last week.

(Nicky Asad)

For the next three days they kept returning until the fire danger had passed. Even now, as the initial fire threat has ended, they continue to patrol the grounds daily.

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On Sunday in his livestream, Chidananda shared the results of the Asads’ work. The Gandhi World Peace Memorial is unharmed even as the vegetation on the hillside behind it is gone. The houseboat is safe, as is the Windmill Chapel, where weddings, christenings and memorials are held.

The Court of Religions, where small monuments to each of the world’s major faiths welcomes visitors to the grounds, is intact. The towering pillars and crossbars of the Golden Lotus Temple were hosed down by the Asads and are once again gleaming white.

There were, however, some structural losses. The visitors’ restroom near the property’s entrance, for one. Even as, just 20 feet away, the Lake Shrine museum and bookshop with artifacts from Yogananda’s life still stands.

The living quarters of the 14 monks who reside on the property also took a hit. An ashram where half of them lived sustained slight damage to one window. The Old Santa Ynez Inn, which housed the other seven monks, burned down, taking with it the office and apartment of the Lake Shrine’s spiritual director, Satyananda.

“I’m an unhoused evacuee, but I’m doing quite well,” Satyananda said. “We adapt and move forward.”

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The damaged visitors' bathroom.

One of the few structures lost on the property was the visitors’ bathroom.

(Self-Realization Fellowship)

Witnessing what took place at the Lake Shrine was a spiritual experience, Chidananda told fellowship members in his address, but he added that he doesn’t plan to talk about it much more.

“You know why,” he said, smiling gently. “Because it’s too easy to become proud or smug, or feel that we are better than others who didn’t fare as well. Our guru would have abhorred any sense of superiority complex based on the fact that we were spared while others suffered. That’s completely opposite to the spirit of his life.”

Instead, he said, the spiritual community’s consciousness should revolve around one question: What can we do to help?

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He’s already asked fellowship communities in Southern California to organize food and clothing drives, while monks and nuns at the group’s center in Mount Washington are offering spiritual counseling over the phone.

Thanks to the Asads, the Lake Shrine community will also continue to offer an open, inclusive and beautiful space for anyone seeking a quiet sanctuary for spiritual reflection, renewal or meditation — just as soon as it’s able.

“To me, the survival of this beloved shrine means so much because of what it represents,” Chidananda said. “It represents our faith that spiritual life, a higher consciousness of love and unity and harmony, will be able to endure in this world, despite all contrary forces of maya [illusion], delusion and destruction.”

The property remains closed to the public for now, but Billy said he’s already welcomed a few firefighters and police officers to take their breaks on the Lake Shrine grounds.

“They walk around the lake and take a break from the chaos,” he said. “And you’d just see it in their eyes: ‘What is this place?’ ‘We had no clue this was here.’ ‘We’re coming back.’”

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The Self-Realization Fellowship Lake Shrine property remains closed to the public for now.

The Self-Realization Fellowship Lake Shrine property remains closed to the public for now.

(Self-Realization Fellowship )

Meanwhile, Gabriella is relieved to see that the swans are back to their snow white color. The turtles have started sunning themselves again.

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What’s With All the Dancing at the Fashion Show?

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What’s With All the Dancing at the Fashion Show?

The models were dancing. Again.

Here, during the first full weekend of the men’s fall shows, a noticeable number of fashion houses had decided that merely showing off their new clothes wasn’t enough. No, no, the audience should be given a performance right out of Alvin Ailey. Runway shows are out. Free Jazz dance recitals are in.

At Brioni on Saturday, the designer Norbert Stumpfl paused a walk-through of his collection of one-percenter signifiers (croc-skin coats, vicuña jackets, cashmere sweaters looped devil-may-care style over jackets) to allow me to take in the gyrational stylings of a dancer. For a few minutes, a man wiggled and pliéd across a red carpet. He swished his coat about like a matador with a cape, as if to say: “Look ma! No lining!”

Hours later, at a presentation at Corneliani, more dancers skittered along a rotating platform, doing some pseudo-break dancing in marbled gray sweaters and slate suits. They paused between slides to hug it out.

“I think male dancers are very emotional,” said Stefano Gaudioso Tramonte, the label’s style director.

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Beyond providing some Instagrammable drama, the performance, which was choreographed by Kate Coyne, the artistic director of the Central School of Ballet in London, expressed that the label’s pressed trousers and flat suits weren’t as restrictive as they seemed.

“All the fabrics are very rigorous,” Mr. Guadioso Tramonte said, “but we wanted to show that they’re quite fluid also.”

The fledgling label Mordecai didn’t need a dance routine to demonstrate that its clothes were fluid — that was pretty evident from the slouchy way its Abominable Snowman parkas and slack, striped trousers hung on the models at its presentation on Saturday afternoon. Still, Ludovico Bruno, the label’s founder and designer, had the static models come to life, bending and stomping like monks listening to Kraftwerk.

“It’s not a dancing class, it’s more like a wave,” Mr. Bruno said.

Movement has long been a part of fashion presentations. In the 1990s, models would sashay down the catwalk, surviving with verve. (Watch “Unzipped,” the mighty fashion documentary about Isaac Mizrahi, for some footage of that.) To this day, brands like Issey Miyake employ dance troops to jitter down the runway, highlighting the pliability of their clothes.

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That dancing has become such a common motif in Milan speaks to the nature of the brands that operate here. Many are traditionalists whose collections barely budge from season to season. To unkind eyes, dance routines distract the audience from this fact. A kinder take, of course, would be that the routines show the elegance and grace of the clothes.

There is also, of course, the social media of it all: Every performance I witnessed this weekend was captured by the iPhone-holding throngs in the audience. I could watch them all later on Instagram. How’s that for savvy free marketing?

Labels like Mordecai represent the other, though comparatively tiny, faction in Milan: younger companies that are, perhaps, not yet confident enough for the runway but not resigned to the static “oh, whatever” feel of a showroom, which, to the uninitiated, looks like a well-stocked retail store.

They should take that leap to the runway, instead of half-measuring with some choreography. Their audiences at fashion week, after all, are better suited to judge a topcoat than a two-step.

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