Flooding in Fraser Valley peaks as BC prepares for 2nd system: officials
Flooded Again. Lied to Again. Welcome to Canada’s New Normal.
Let’s drop the theatre.
This wasn’t a surprise.
This wasn’t a freak event.
This wasn’t “once in a lifetime.”
And it sure as hell wasn’t unavoidable.
This was political negligence, reheated and served again to the same people who drowned four years ago—only this time with better forecasts, louder warnings, and even fewer excuses.
“Once in a Hundred Years” — The Most Successful Political Lie of the Century
Remember the script?
Once in a lifetime.
Once in a hundred years.
An act of God.
Unprecedented.
Blah. Blah. Blah.
Four years later, the same land is underwater. The same farms. The same barns. The same evacuation orders. The same hollow press conferences. The same shrugging hands.
Once in a hundred years doesn’t happen twice in four.
That phrase isn’t science — it’s damage control.
It’s the lie politicians tell when they want absolution without responsibility.
Promises Made During a Pandemic Apparently Expire Faster
Ah yes — the convenient excuse nobody wants to say out loud:
“Well, it was COVID. Everyone was overwhelmed.”
Fine. Let’s accept that for exactly one moment.
But here’s the uncomfortable question nobody in power wants to answer:
If leaders couldn’t keep promises during overlapping crises, why did their words mean anything at all?
If emergency commitments collapse the moment reality gets complicated, then those commitments were never real. They were PR placeholders, spoken for cameras, not for communities.
Pandemic or not, the floods didn’t pause.
The water didn’t “understand the context.”
And nature doesn’t care how busy your briefing schedule is.
Lip Service Is Not Infrastructure
After the first catastrophe, the playbook was clear:
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Study after study
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Task force after task force
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“Long-term strategies”
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“Frameworks”
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“Commitments”
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“Collaborative discussions”
And then?
Nothing that actually holds back water.
No major protective works.
No cross-border enforcement.
No structural prevention equal to the risk.
Just talk, stacked on top of talk, reinforced with more talk.
You cannot sandbag your way out of climate reality forever.
Living Downstream from Climate Denial
And then comes the cruelest joke of all:
Canada doesn’t even fully control the flood.
Water pours north from across the border — from a political culture where climate change is still treated like a debate club topic, not a physical force.
So let’s be honest about the insult layered on top of the injury:
Canada is expected to absorb climate consequences exported by denial.
You share a border with people who call this a hoax —
and then you’re told to act surprised when mitigation never happens upstream.
This isn’t diplomacy.
This is climate appeasement.
Farmers Are Not Disposable Shock Absorbers
Let’s kill another lie while we’re here:
“This is about property damage.”
No.
This is about food systems, rural survival, and human exhaustion.
Every flooded barn is not just an insurance claim — it’s:
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destroyed livelihoods
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dead animals
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broken supply chains
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families pushed one disaster closer to quitting altogether
And somehow, the people who feed the country are expected to just… endure.
Again.
And again.
And again.
Insurance Promises That Evaporate Faster Than Floodwaters
Remember the grand announcement?
A national flood insurance program.
Protection for people in high-risk zones.
A safety net for the inevitable.
That was years ago.
The water showed up on time.
The policy never did.
Because in this system, disaster response is faster than disaster prevention, and prevention doesn’t generate ribbon-cutting photos.
Austerity for Safety, Unlimited Funds for Recovery Theater
Here’s the quiet truth nobody wants to say out loud:
Governments will always find billions after disaster strikes —
but suddenly discover “fiscal restraint” when asked to prevent it.
Prevention isn’t sexy.
Mitigation isn’t dramatic.
Infrastructure doesn’t trend on social media.
Dead animals do.
Evacuations do.
Helicopter rescues do.
So the cycle continues — because politically, catastrophe pays better than competence.
This Is Not Failure. This Is a Choice.
Let’s be crystal clear:
This isn’t incompetence.
This isn’t ignorance.
This isn’t bad luck.
This is a decision to accept recurring harm instead of confronting reality.
A decision to underfund prevention.
A decision to defer responsibility.
A decision to let communities drown while leaders issue statements.
And worst of all?
A decision to keep telling people this won’t happen again, while quietly knowing it will.
Final Truth: The Water Is More Honest Than Politics
The flood doesn’t lie.
It doesn’t spin.
It doesn’t blame pandemics.
It doesn’t care about election cycles.
It just arrives — exactly as predicted.
And every time it does, it exposes the same uncomfortable fact:
The real disaster isn’t the water.
It’s the refusal to learn.
Canada doesn’t have a flood problem.
It has a memory problem.
And a courage problem.
And a leadership culture addicted to excuses.
Until that changes, don’t call the next flood “unprecedented.”
Call it what it is:
Scheduled.
yours truly,
Adaptation-Guide
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