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Devastating West Virginia Floods Taking two lives on February 15th and causing more than $40 million in damage, a Trump administration's early test of disaster response, and so far it has been a smooth success despite complaints that Trump is “scattering the government.”
In part, this success is focused on the administration's laser providing assistance without the sentiment of moral and social justice that has hurt recent disaster relief efforts under Joe Biden's surveillance.
Trump's FEMA faces calculations as more staff are fired in the “political bias” scandal
Last week, RW.VA. Sen. Jim Justice and representative administrators of Fema Cameron Hamilton visited the town of Welch near the Kentucky-Tennessee border, taking over the devastation directly and showing victims how the federal government is taking action.
“To get the next step and promote federal support to get people back to a better place is something I've sent to Washington,” Justice told Fox News Digital. “At the end of the day, returning to our hometown state and helping people deal with the real issues affecting them is why we were able to win with such a big margin as a party.”
West Virginia Governor Jim Justice toured Welch, who was hit by the WV floods, along with Top FEMA officials.
And what was some of this federal aid that justice and Hamilton advertise, as well as making it aware of flood victims? In just a month, several federal agencies have their own floods, one of the aids to the community.
FEMA is particularly using temporary housing support, which the Biden administration often struggled with. Small business managers have declared disasters in several counties and made loans available. The Housing and Urban Development Authority has made repair funding available, and the USDA provides grocery assistance.
The real story here is that there is no story. Everything works as is. This is something we weren't used to under Joe Biden.
That leaves many residents grateful for such appreciation for justice visits to her school, including Sarah Diaz, the principal of a local elementary school.
“It's great to see how much he supports our family with this huge loss we've experienced and how much he supports us as we bounce back and be full of resilience,” Diaz told WVVA News. “We're excited.”
The children seem most excited to see the Senator's famous dog, Baby Dog, his constant and stubborn partner.
We all know that the lack of evidence is not the same as evidence of absence, but six weeks after this disaster, we haven't seen anything like the anger and frustration we saw in the wake of the floods in North Carolina and Florida last fall.
This time, no federal officials were telling responders to avoid homes with signs of Trump. There were no photo shoots offering hundreds of dollars, as if they had won a prize for the publisher's Clearinghouse.

Students were most interested in Jim Justice's best friend, Baby Dog. (Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)
The real story here is that there is no story. Everything works as is. This is something we weren't used to under Joe Biden.
It should question us whether FEMA, and other agencies, are focusing on their core missions, or rather pursuing fantasies of utopian fairness and intersectionality.
After all, if FEMA had warned time and energy about imaginary violent Trump supporters, their eyes were not entirely on the mission in front of them.
The administration's response to West Virginia's flooding is evidence that the government can cut unnecessary fat from the program, not only maintaining strong levels of service, but also improving them. Of course, this doesn't stop Democrats from saying the sky is falling.
As Justice put it, “To see Democrats run around the country with their hair burning, defending damn levels of wasteful spending and calling President Trump to any kind of disappointing political terminology is a totally paranoid hill and frankly a waste of time.
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For decades, when Democrats were in charge of the Department of Defense, or the FBI, or FEMA, we've heard agency leaders say it over and over again.
The top priority of defense is to win conflict, not diversity, the number one priority of law enforcement is to fight crime, not fair, and the top priority of disaster relief is to help people, not scapegoat Trump voters as violent.
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If the current state of West Virginia ground situation is an indication of how the Trump administration will handle disasters in the future, the country is in good hands.
Four years after Biden's incompetent and incompetent regime, this new approach is extremely welcome news.
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