@jk when I was visiting Hong Kong I was puzzled to see "slope registration" plaques absolutely everywhere
I wrote it off as a bizarre bureaucratic quirk, but after I left I went to look up what it was for
apparently the city was ravaged by deadly landsides until at one point in the 1970s they just decided they had enough and that landslide deaths were preventable, so they established a well-funded geoengineering office that catalogued and reinforced every slope on the entire island
they just straight up said "no one has to die from this" and made it happen, and it works; the last landslide death was in 2008
it seems like such a simple thing but I admit I was awestruck by what they did
@technomancy @jk That is so cool.
My rescue cat became a rescue due to a deadly landslide that killed 41 people, her former humans among them, (Which, I love her and that she's my cat; but I would also have loved her being happily unbeknownst to me while still living with her former living people who, in this scenario, would still be livingly alive.)
The slide was human-caused: no one should ever have logged that slope, and no one should ever have built a town at the foot of it. 41 people would be alive today if Washington state had as much sense* as Hong Kong.
*and as few politically-entrenched logging interests