5,000 people dead? How the hell do you cover that up? 350 mph winds from a hurricane? I have never read such malarky in my life. Why would a person write something like this?
http://www.nexusmagazine.com/hurricane.html
The article was written by “a distinguished writer” named k.t. Frankovich. I checked the IMDB and found only one entry. A 1975 movie named “Cries”. There is NO info about the movie though. So much for being “distinguished”. Sounds like somebody needs a career boost.
Just another loony conspiracy nut.
But, but, but – she has an Offical Website. How could you possible doubt a “former screenwriter, author, poet, psychic, advocate of the homeless and spokeswoman for the suffering and disaster victims”? She also lectured at “the largest UFO Convention in the world” last year in Turkey. (Turkey?)
From her poem “Sestina Chime”:
Yes, indeed, k.t., you have left behind the wisdom.
Oh, geez. What magnificent malarkey.
She evidently thinks she needs to get the word out to the rest of the world.
Word to all our Doper friends Down Under and across the Pond: this woman is several sandwiches short of a picnic, okay? Actually, I think she’s left the entire picnic basket at home.
Um–what?
http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/1992andrew.html
They had been watching this thing since August 16. It was officially a hurricane on August 22, two and a half days before it “unexpectedly slammed” into the Florida coast. It took it four hours to travel across the extreme southern tip of Florida, a distance that is measured on my Florida map as about 50 miles.
Um–what?
http://www.att.com/press/0892/920823.cha.html
She didn’t notice that a million people had been evacuated?
No idea where she would have gotten this from. Just not paying attention, I suppose.
First of all, I seriously doubt that any local news outlet would have made this type of panicky broadcast. Actually, people who were there had nothing but praise for the local media’s coolness during the emergency. What she probably heard was a simple announcement that “the hurricane that has been moving towards the Florida coast for several days has now officially reached it”.
And since she somehow missed the fact that a million people had been evacuated to flee the coming storm, naturally this would have come as a shock to her.
I don’t see anything in NOAA’s official storm track record that mentions a sudden shift to the south. And she sounds like she thinks that “five degrees” would have made a difference, anyway. Not with a hurricane that size, it wouldn’t. It wouldn’t have been, “Oh, we’ll be okay in Homestead, the hurricane’s going to hit Fort Lauderdale.”
And this part of her supposed news broadcast–“Andrew is expected to strike South Dade within minutes” just could not be true. She couldn’t possibly have heard this. Hurricanes don’t move that fast, and they have big leading edges that take hours to move into an area. She’s talking about a tornado warning, not a hurricane warning.
And what’s the source of her information on the supposed horrendous death toll? She says, it was some guy who stood up at one of her lectures and said he was a Chief Petty Officer and who said he “knew for a fact” that the death toll was “5,280-something”. Come on, people, either it’s “5,000-something” or it’s “five thousand two hundred eighty” exactly.
This part, however, is true:
Oops, now we’re veering back to fantasy. 
And more fantastic fiction:
Sheesh. :rolleyes:
A neighbor warns her that there’s a hurricane coming…
Yeah, right. ATT’s keeping quiet because they don’t want panic-stricken evacuees tying up their phone lines.
So she does what any normal person would do–instead of just turning on the TV or radio, she starts pestering the CBS affiliate’s meteorologist for the skinny, whose secretary, naturally, makes reassuring noises, as she’s been doing for days now, to idiots just like K.T.
Aw, geez, I’m getting sick of this.
Final Straight Dope:
This–
–is just not true.
DDG, you have far more patience then me. Just one point:
She actually goes by k.t. Frankovich – lower case initials but capitalized last name. I’m sure this is of vital importance to her since, after all, she is “one of the Hollywood Frankovich family.”
DDG, all I can say is thank goodness you’re still here with us. You ROCK 
Can I be your Special Undersecretary of Research? 
Cartooniverse
If there was a real cover-up with regard to Hurricane Andrew especially, and several others before and since, it is the shameless gouging of the American consumer by lumber companies like Georgia Pacific and Weyerhauser in the aftermath of such disasters. Citing the temporarily increased demand for lumber in stricken regions, these companies have managed to gain cartel-like control over the commodity price of lumber, with the effect that board-foot prices have quadrupled in recent years. Aided by an increasingly-tight labor market and attendant wage increases, the price of the average new home in the U.S. is fast approaching $200,000, a great portion of which winds up in the lumber companies’ coffers. Seems odd to me that the effects of those ‘temporarily increased demands’ never fade, and the jacked-up prices never go down, disaster or no disaster.