What A Day - A Tragic Building Collapse In Miami

Episode Date: June 28, 2021

A 12-story residential building collapsed in Miami last week, resulting in the deaths of at least 9 people, with more than 150 people still missing. An engineering report from 2018 found major structu...ral damage to the building, and it was supposed to undergo repairs this year. There’s a climate change connection, too, with some suggesting that rising temperatures and sea levels might have accelerated the building’s erosion. Republicans in several states have been trying to audit the results of the November election to prove there was some kind of fraud that led to Trump’s defeat. We talk through some recent L’s state-level Republicans have taken, and the tactics they’re still trying to deploy. Plus, Liz Plank fills in for Gideon. And in headlines: a historic heat-wave in the Pacific Northwest, Turkish police crack down on a pride march, and a woman with a sign causes a pileup at the Tour de France.For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 It's Monday, June 28th. I'm Akilah Hughes. And I'm Liz Plank in for Gideon Resnick. And this is What A Day, the podcast that is 10% hard work, 10% talent, and 80% air conditioner. Yes. Popsicles are also an integral part of the entire process. That's right. And we are currently looking for an ICE sponsor, so hit us up. We are ready to talk about it. On today's show, Republicans stumble in their effort to find voter fraud in last November's presidential election, plus some headlines.
Starting point is 00:00:41 But before we get started, Liz Plank joins us today. Liz is an award-winning journalist who's been featured on NBC News and Vox. election, plus some headlines. But before we get started, Liz Plank joins us today. Liz is an award-winning journalist who's been featured on NBC News and Vox. She's also a filmmaker, author of the book For the Love of Men, A Vision for Mindful Masculinity. A friend of mine, we love you here, Liz. Welcome to WOD. I cannot believe I'm on my favorite podcast. It's blowing my mind. Thank you for having me. We are so happy to have you. And now to the latest. Everybody that is needed is on the site and doing the work,
Starting point is 00:01:11 and we're continuing our efforts to find people alive. So that's the mayor of Miami-Dade County, Daniela Levine Cava, speaking to CBS yesterday about the continued efforts to rescue the victims of a residential building that collapsed, the Champlain Towers, south early Thursday morning. It happened while many of the people inside were asleep. So Liz, where does this stand right now? Yeah, it's absolutely heart-wrenching to think it only took a few seconds for a 12-story building with 55 units to completely plummet to the ground in the middle of the night. So as we are recording this on Sunday night,
Starting point is 00:01:45 nine people are confirmed dead with more than 150 people who are still missing. And many worried families are expressing frustration that the recovery effort isn't going fast enough. So those friends and those relatives of the missing are panicked as the hours are going by without any news of their loved ones. And some have actually even started begging to help with the search. So that request has been unfortunately denied because the site is still deemed way too treacherous and dangerous given the mountains of debris. And to make matters worse, fire and smoke from deep within the rubble also hampered rescue efforts over the weekend. But search rescue teams have started discovering unspecified human remains, so families of those who are still missing have started the
Starting point is 00:02:31 process of providing DNA samples to help identify them. At the moment, rescue teams are still working overnight through fire and through rain, trying to dig out any remaining survivors, as families hold out hope that their missing relatives are still alive. Yeah, that's really just devastating. And, you know, what do we know so far about what might have caused this collapse? Well, it's still too early to tell, but a 2018 engineering report from the building is starting to offer some pretty devastating clues. The report found, quote, major structural damage to a concrete slab
Starting point is 00:03:08 below its pool deck that needed extensive repairs. And then there was also the parking garage that had, quote, abundant cracking of columns, beams, and walls. In fact, quite tragically, the building was supposed to go through a repair this year. And there were actually reports that a building inspector may have come on site at the Champlain Towers as recently as the day before the collapse to begin the process of those repairs. That's not the whole story.
Starting point is 00:03:38 There's also climate change that could have played a really big role in the crumbling of the tower. So the property rests on a barrier island that faces the ocean. And with rising sea levels, this could have caused enough damage to create the sudden collapse. And then there's rising temperatures that are also known to increase sinkholes. And that could have also damaged the land that the building was resting onto. So given that Miami has seen its sea level rise by one foot in the past hundred years, with an exponential rise since the 1990s,
Starting point is 00:04:11 it's especially at risk. But like all things related to climate change, we'll probably only find out just exactly how horrendous the consequences of it once it's too late. That's right. And this tragedy has prompted a major review of other similar buildings close by as well. So can you tell us a little bit more about that? Yeah. So a few hours after that very troubling architecture report was made public, for example, Miami-Dade Mayor Daniela Levine Cava announced an audit of residential buildings that are more than 40 years old that haven't been recertified. So here's the kicker. While Florida has some of the strongest building codes in the country because
Starting point is 00:04:51 of hurricanes, residential towers like the one that collapsed were built before those codes were strengthened after Hurricane Andrew decimated the area in 1992. So experts are calling on the recertification process to be accelerated for buildings in the area, particularly because climate change has in many cases intensified the damage and the corrosion of these structures. But the age old question is who pays for it? What's devastating is that most of the older buildings that need the most repairs tend to be occupied by older residents with lower or fixed incomes who may not be able to foot the bill for these long overdue renovations. But hopefully the Champlain Towers tragedy can help put the right amount of pressure on local officials to foot the bill to ensure the safety of all residents. So let's now turn to another story, the latest on the big lie that the election was
Starting point is 00:05:45 somehow stolen from Donald Trump. We're going to put it out and you're going to want some parole. You're going to go, wow, here it is. Now we're going to bring it as a co-warrant to the Supreme Court. It's going to be 9-0. They're going to take this election down. And yes, Donald Trump will be your president. He is your president. All right. So that was delusional pillow lunatic Mike Lindell last week, claiming the Supreme Court in a nine to nothing decision will instate Trump as president more than half a year after Trump lost the election. It's part of the big lie from the right, which is still being spread on weekend shows and cable news. And in several states, Republicans have been trying to audit the election results
Starting point is 00:06:22 to prove that there was some fraud that led to Trump's defeat. But regardless of their feelings, officials and courts have handed the GOP and former President Trump L's in the past few days. We love to see it. So, Akilah, are you saying that facts and courts don't care about your feelings? That's shocking. That's really, really shocking. So where have the L's come from lately, Akilah? All right. So let's see. In Georgia last week, a judge dismissed a lawsuit to inspect the ballots in Fulton County, probably because they've been inspected and counted and recounted and it's a waste of everyone's time.
Starting point is 00:06:55 Last Wednesday in Michigan, a GOP report actually refuted claims that there was any fraud in the state's election. And Trump, like clockwork, whined in a statement to the press about it. And sidebar, it is so good having him off of Twitter. Like, I cannot overstate. I can't. I can finally hear myself think. I can hear silence again, you know? Exactly. I almost forgot what that was. But finally, in Arizona, GOP-hired consultants finished counting
Starting point is 00:07:18 2.1 million ballots for Maricopa County last weekend. But that audit won't change the results, so more money and time wasted from a waste of time party. You know, I, for one, I find it extremely satisfying to see the GOP continuously learning that they extra lost the election. It feels almost like it should be therapy, like a form of reverse gaslighting, a very expensive form of reverse gaslighting. But it feels kind of nice. But Akilah, it's not just official courts, right? And state level Republicans that are telling Trump to get a grip.
Starting point is 00:07:52 There are others as well. They're all out there. So former animatronic dinosaur baby and Attorney General Bill Barr told ABC News journalist Jonathan Carl in an excerpt from his book that I'm not going to buy, that he knew the whole voter fraud thing was a lie, saying, quote, we realized from the beginning it was just bullshit. Just to be clear, that is an attorney general speaking of a former president. God, another sidebar. It would have been great for Jonathan Karl to put America before his book and put this out back then. But, you know, I've always had high standards for decency. That's on me and
Starting point is 00:08:25 how I was raised. And I just got to get over that. I mean, like some days I wonder, I'm like, how is it possible with the level of such high integrity journalism that we have that Trump got elected? But today is not is not one of those days. Thanks for nothing, Jonathan Karl, if that's even your name. So with all this nonsense, what are the implications for future elections and elections that the GOP loses? Okay, so it does seem like we can count on the Republican Party to continue peddling misinformation and conspiracy theories, and mostly because it works on people who are too emotionally immature to handle a loss. And they're already using the playbook from those states I just mentioned to lay the groundwork
Starting point is 00:09:07 elsewhere. In Wisconsin, the Republican state House Speaker recently hired a bunch of retired cops and an attorney to probe the 2020 election results. In Alabama, a new law gives the Secretary of State and three judges the authority to conduct a one-time post-election audit after next fall's midterms. And in Pennsylvania, State House Speaker Brian Cutler, a Republican, introduced legislation to establish a, quote, Bureau of Election Audits under the purview of the State Auditor General's office. So it does seem like the strategy for Republicans now is just this, lose elections, challenge the results, then keep losing publicly and expensively.
Starting point is 00:09:44 Then seek any validation at all in the conspiracies that you've desperately mainlined for years. And it's possible, you know, that one day someone may just have enough power to grant them their wish and help them steal an election. It is a pretty pathetic moment, though, when you only accept democracy when it is in your favor. But that's the latest for now. It's Monday, WOD Squad, and for today's Temp Check, we're discussing the mysteries of talking. In Australia, a woman named Angie Yin woke up the morning after having her tonsils removed and noticed her Australian accent had been replaced with an Irish accent. She's been documenting her experience on TikTok. Here's a clip. Hi, I'm making this video to document the second day of something that's happened to me
Starting point is 00:10:39 yesterday. That was very weird. I woke up with an Irish accent and I've never been to Ireland before. I'm trying not to laugh. Okay. More than two months later, Yin still talks like an Irish native. She underwent a brain scan that didn't detect anything wrong, so it's okay for us to laugh. And doctors have now diagnosed her with foreign accent syndrome, a rare speech disorder, which was first documented in 1907. Yin's team doesn't know if she'll ever be able to get her Aussie accent back. So Liz, truly shocking that this is a thing that can just happen to you in life.
Starting point is 00:11:13 But if it were to happen to you, which accent would you most like to wake up with? I would love to wake up with like the 2016 Lindsay Lohan accent, you know, when she just popped out of nowhere and she, she like had a mix of a French, a British and like kind of like a Greek accent because she'd spent time in Pico Knows and no one could figure out what it was. It was just very unique and amazing. And I feel like I could, if I were to get my tonsils taken out and like the whole experience, like at least I would have the cool Lindsay Lohan accent, you know, I'd get something good out of it. What about you? For me,
Starting point is 00:11:49 I'm hoping for something like a deep new Orleans sort of Creole Bayou accent. I think it just sounds so soulful and interesting. And also like, you never hear anybody like that doing the news. So I just feel like that's so true. That's so true. You know where you do hear that though, doing the news. So I just feel like that one works. That's so true. You know where you do hear that though is in Montreal. Like because I'm, you know, I'm French Canadian. The one thing I would hate is to wake up with my old French Canadian accent because it was so hard to get rid of it.
Starting point is 00:12:16 Like I kind of talked like I was like Celine Dion and it was a lot. And now I, so that would be very devastating. But any other accent would just kind of add some spice to my life. Like it's just like a new adventure. Yeah. I just can't wait to see the subtweets that are written about me trying to be interesting. They're like, oh, here goes Akilah again. Just try to get attention.
Starting point is 00:12:34 Well, anyway, just like that, we've checked our tips. Stay safe and we'll be back after some ads. Let's wrap up with some headlines. Headlines. The Pacific Northwest is experiencing a historic, record-breaking heat wave that's expected to last several days. Portland hit 110 degrees over the weekend, making it the highest temperature the city has recorded in 80 years. Seattle reached 102 degrees, which is the highest temperature it's ever observed in the month of June. In the coming days, the region is forecasted to break many more temperature records, with peak heat expected between Sunday and Tuesday.
Starting point is 00:13:33 Over 20 million people across the West Coast are under some kind of heat warning or advisory. Experts say that these heat levels are supposed to happen only once every several thousand years. But climate change is making them more frequent. That is unfortunate. I mean, you know, I do live on Earth, so I'm feeling it. Well, more bad news. Police in Turkey violently cracked down on an annual pride parade in Istanbul over the weekend, using tear gas and rubber bullets to disperse marchers. At least 20 people were arrested, and the city refused to grant a permit for the parade for the seventh year in a row, but hundreds of people still showed up to fight against LGBTQ discrimination.
Starting point is 00:14:12 The police response signals Turkey's growing hostility towards the queer community, and it follows the passage of increasingly discriminatory laws and bans on LGBTQ celebrations. In other protest news, people in Pakistan came out to demonstrate against Prime Minister Imran Khan after he ignorantly suggested that women who wore revealing clothes were provoking sexual violence. These comments sparked nationwide protests
Starting point is 00:14:34 with women bringing the clothes they wore when they were sexually assaulted. Calls also grew for Khan to make a public apology. He should apologize, and we might not even accept it. So far-right congressman and boyfriend, you can't wait to introduce your dad to if your dad is a flag that says don't tread on me. Madison Cawthorn is not really a facts kind of guy in the sense that many of the details of his biography are straight up not true. So it's ironic that in a speech from the House floor last week, he led with this quote.
Starting point is 00:15:07 It was Thomas Jefferson that said, facts are stubborn things, and whatever may be our wishes or the dictates of our passions, they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence. What makes this quote even more ironic coming from Cawthorn is that he considers himself a big history buff and he got the history very twisted. It wasn't Thomas Jefferson who said this, but his more grumpy, less pro-slavery counterpart, John Adams. A CNN article from last week rounded up a bunch of other Cawthorn history goofs. Yes, there are more things like this. Like a moment where he said with total confidence that his age of 25 wasn't too young to change the world, seeing as James Madison signed the declaration at 25.
Starting point is 00:15:52 Except really, Madison didn't sign the document at all. Anyways, everyone forgets history sometimes, but one historical fact that we should never forget is that 150 of Cawthorn's former college classmates signed onto a letter describing him as a sexual predator. Yep, I'm not going to forget that for a second. The return of sports crowds is working out the way we all knew it would, with one million bikes flipping over each other at the Tour de France. So on Saturday, a spectator caused a massive pileup at the first stage of the race by stepping into the road to display a sign that translates to go grandpa grandma. The fan was holding up the sign for TV cameras and didn't see dozens of the world's best cyclists coming up behind her.
Starting point is 00:16:36 German writer Tony Martin hit the sign, kicking off a very expensive domino effect that injured both spectators and cyclists. Officials at the Tour de France planned to sue the fan, but as of last night, she hadn't been identified, having run away soon after the accident. But she better run fast because the people who want to catch her have legs that are part horse and they don't get tired very easily. Today, riders compete in the Tour's third stage. My God. Wow. I don't even know what to say. I mean, people will do anything to be famous, but like it's like do it like the rest of us. Just spend six hours learning how to do the renegade. Exactly. And then fail miserably at it.
Starting point is 00:17:17 You're not wrong. I hope that grandma, grandpa wins. And those are the headlines. One more thing before we go. In case you missed our Pride live stream this week, don't worry. You can catch highlights from Out of the Closets Into the Streets in the latest episode of Love It or Leave It. During the stream, we raised over $50,000 for the Trans Justice Funding Project, a community-led funding initiative to support grassroots trans justice groups run by and for trans people across the U.S. It's not too late to still be a part of it. Watch on Crooked's YouTube channel or make a donation at crooked.com slash pride fund. That's all for today. If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review, be a respectful spectator of bike racing, and tell your friends to listen.
Starting point is 00:18:03 And if you're into reading and not just kind words about air conditioners like me, what a day is also a nightly newsletter. Check it out and subscribe at cookit.com slash subscribe. I'm Akilah Hughes. I'm Liz Plank. And study history. Study it. Madison, first learn to read, second, commit it to memory.
Starting point is 00:18:22 It's not that hard. What a Day is a production of Crooked Media. It's recorded and mixed by Charlotte Landis. Sonia Tun and Jazzy Marine are our associate producers. Our head writer is John Milstein, and our executive producers are Leo Duran, Akilah Hughes, and me. Our theme music is by Colin Gilliard and Kashaka.

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