Wow, that roof just peels right off. El Paso is out in west texas where I grew up, all our water windmills survived tear after year in the heavy texas wind storms.
Just to let everyone know that the station that shot this video is actually KINT, the Univision affiliate in El Paso. The photographer is Danny Gallarzo. The station being courtesied KVIA took the video from CNN feed and sent it the AP. The Associated Press should be a little more careful about what they air and who they credit.
All I really needed to say was: The more damaged property an insurance company claims, the more businesses and homeowners pay. It's stupid. And a waste.
With the technology available Americans choose to build disposable buildings. We should be buildings to stand up to storms, some earthquakes, and out of the way of potential flood areas. I don't just like to complain. The problem is that when a company or a homeowner has an inferior building damaged, it's the insurance company that pays for it. We, the public, are the ones who pay the insurance companies. And they don't just take it like a man; they pass the cost on to us. TH[]INK
@videoaccess001 San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Seattle have advanced in technology in earthquake proof buildings. And tall skyscrapers in cities like Miami, New Orleans, Houston, and Mobile are built to withstand collapsing or being completely destroyed by hurricanes.
They skipped the 45 minutes of Mexicans running out of there..
paintball46 9 months ago
The AssociatedPress Is ASSHOLES.
dane774 10 months ago
Wow!! why not do one shot of this instead of three and make it 10 seconds??
snuffy525 11 months ago
So this video isn't cooked yet?
skatershick101 1 year ago
Raw Video: Wind Blows Tin Foil Off Building
smallvllleowns 1 year ago
Wow, that roof just peels right off. El Paso is out in west texas where I grew up, all our water windmills survived tear after year in the heavy texas wind storms.
RoofMountWindTurbine 1 year ago
This is why you take shelter during storms.
hebneh 1 year ago
The foie can is open!
Mateyhv1 2 years ago
wich beggar owns that building?lololol
sagrocket 2 years ago
I say that gust was around 80 mph.. 160 mph would have done far more damage than that.
longbeach225 2 years ago 6
Could there be a design fault with this... roof covering turns into sail when wind blows - more fixings should do it.
dafordvidred 3 years ago
how high was wind gust? had to be at least 160 mph.
supercell1995 3 years ago
Just to let everyone know that the station that shot this video is actually KINT, the Univision affiliate in El Paso. The photographer is Danny Gallarzo. The station being courtesied KVIA took the video from CNN feed and sent it the AP. The Associated Press should be a little more careful about what they air and who they credit.
tvwatchdogEP 3 years ago
All I really needed to say was: The more damaged property an insurance company claims, the more businesses and homeowners pay. It's stupid. And a waste.
videoaccess001 4 years ago
With the technology available Americans choose to build disposable buildings. We should be buildings to stand up to storms, some earthquakes, and out of the way of potential flood areas. I don't just like to complain. The problem is that when a company or a homeowner has an inferior building damaged, it's the insurance company that pays for it. We, the public, are the ones who pay the insurance companies. And they don't just take it like a man; they pass the cost on to us. TH[]INK
videoaccess001 4 years ago 3
Comment removed
Indestructible229 1 year ago
This has been flagged as spam show
@videoaccess001 San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Seattle have advanced in technology in earthquake proof buildings. And tall skyscrapers in cities like Miami, New Orleans, Houston, and Mobile are built to withstand collapsing or being completely destroyed by hurricanes.
Indestructible229 1 year ago