David Díaz Santiago

21.6K posts

David Díaz Santiago banner
David Díaz Santiago

David Díaz Santiago

@daviddiazpr

🐢 🚶🏾‍♂️ 📷

Puerto Rico Katılım Ocak 2010
1.3K Takip Edilen708 Takipçiler
David Díaz Santiago
David Díaz Santiago@daviddiazpr·
Opinión que nadie me pidió… Cabo Rojo lleva décadas con un desarrollo no planificado, descontrolado, que inundó sus costas de casa y negocios, literalmente dentro del mal… la no planificación llevó a la falta de agua y contaminación.. ese es el verdadero problema
Español
0
0
0
47
JosecirPR 𝕏
JosecirPR 𝕏@JosecirPR·
Yo espero que todos esos en contra de esencia (con sus razones y méritos) no sean los mismos que van a otros países de vacaciones a disfrutar de las playas privadas de los resorts.
Español
31
6
58
4.1K
David Díaz Santiago
David Díaz Santiago@daviddiazpr·
@juandalmauPR Incluir en la propuesta expropiación de todas las casas en la zona marítimo terrestre desde Joyudas, Buye, Boquerón, Combate…. hasta Ponce!
Español
1
0
3
203
Juan Dalmau
Juan Dalmau@juandalmauPR·
Quieren destruir 1,549 cuerdas de bosque, equivalente a tres isletas de San Juan, y bloquear el acceso a la playa. 🇵🇷 Nuestra propuesta: moratoria de construcción en zonas costeras y un Corredor Ecológico del Suroeste (CEAS) que proteja exactamente esta zona, desde Ponce hasta Cabo Rojo. #EsenciaNoVa
Español
88
217
604
13.6K
David Díaz Santiago retweetledi
TheLiverDoc™
TheLiverDoc™@theliverdoc·
Billionaires are wasting money on anecdotally testing longevity hacks. Here are the best longevity hacks that you learned in high school but forgot as an adult and then some. Avoid tobacco. Avoid alcohol. 3 cups unsweetened black coffee a day. Adhere to vaccinations for age. Take your booster shots too. Predominantly plant based diet. Minimum 8000 steps a day. Min 154 min of aerobics/week. Find and do work that makes you happy. Keep and care for a pet. Play video games. Avoid bro science. Avoid alternative medicine. Follow real experts. Not role playing ones. Listen to your doctor. Not the internet.
English
184
517
3.4K
146.1K
David Díaz Santiago
David Díaz Santiago@daviddiazpr·
@PedSurgUpdate ICE no tiene el adiestramiento para trabajar con público… es cómo contratar a la fuerza de choque para seguridad en un día de juegos… hasta la maestra se lleva un palo
Español
1
0
2
33
Benjamín Torres Gotay 🇵🇷
Estas son las cosas en las que deberían estar pensando los que gobiernan. Pero ustedes han visto en estos días qué es lo que los ocupa: Puerto Rico podría perder casi una quinta parte de su población, según la Junta Fiscal elnuevodia.com/negocios/econo…
Español
30
41
121
10K
Tim
Tim@thetimtracker·
If you could only go to one theme park for the rest of your life, what would it be?
English
204
7
190
52.9K
David Díaz Santiago retweetledi
nikita 🇵🇷
nikita 🇵🇷@esnxkita_·
PÍLLENSE LA PUERTA DE MI BIBLIOTECA 🙂‍↔️🙂‍↔️🙂‍↔️🙂‍↔️🙂‍↔️
nikita 🇵🇷 tweet media
Español
20
914
13.4K
112K
Bebe Rexha
Bebe Rexha@BebeRexha·
I’m in miamiiiiiiiii. Where can I get some good Cuban food. Give me a spot.
English
665
134
3.1K
257.9K
David Díaz Santiago retweetledi
Polymarket
Polymarket@Polymarket·
JUST IN: Trump administration is considering suspending the 105 year old Jones Act to curb oil prices.
English
130
98
1.9K
331.7K
David Díaz Santiago retweetledi
Dr. M.F. Khan
Dr. M.F. Khan@Dr_TheHistories·
The 1928 Okeechobee hurricane formed off the west coast of Africa near Dakar, Senegal on September 6 as a tropical depression before quickly strengthening into a tropical storm. It intensified steadily as it moved westward across the Atlantic, reaching Category 4 strength before striking Guadeloupe on September 12, killing 1,200 people and destroying roughly three-quarters of the island's homes. The storm continued strengthening and reached Category 5 intensity around midday on September 13, with sustained winds of 160 mph. It struck Puerto Rico that same afternoon, making it the only tropical cyclone on record to hit the island at Category 5 strength. Puerto Rico suffered catastrophic damage, with 24,728 homes destroyed, 192,444 more damaged, and over 500,000 people left homeless. Effective advance warnings broadcast by naval radio, the first such hurricane warning broadcast by radio in history, helped limit the death toll on Puerto Rico to 312. The hurricane then passed through the Bahamas on September 16, killing 18 and causing widespread property and crop damage across multiple islands. It made landfall near West Palm Beach, Florida just after midnight on September 17 with winds of 145 mph, the lowest pressure ever recorded on the US mainland at that time. Coastal communities from Deerfield Beach to Jupiter suffered serious structural damage, though advance warnings had prompted enough preparation to limit coastal deaths to 26. The true catastrophe unfolded inland at Lake Okeechobee, where the storm surge overwhelmed a small earthen dike on the lake's southern edge. Floodwaters spread across hundreds of square miles, reaching depths of 20 feet in some areas, sweeping entire houses off their foundations. Many residents had initially evacuated but returned home when the storm appeared delayed, placing them directly in the path of the flood. Most survivors and bodies were carried out into the Everglades, where many of the dead were never recovered. At least 2,500 people drowned around Lake Okeechobee, making it the deadliest disaster in Florida history. Around 75 percent of the dead were migrant farm workers, most of them Black, which made identification and accurate counting of victims extremely difficult. Reflecting the racial inequalities of the era, white victims received formal burial services while Black victims were buried in unmarked mass graves or burned in funeral pyres. After crossing Florida, the storm weakened but made a second US landfall near Edisto Island, South Carolina before dissipating over Ontario on September 21. The total death toll from the entire storm reached at least 4,114 people across the Caribbean and the United States. Total damage across all affected regions exceeded 100 million dollars, equivalent to roughly 1.875 billion dollars today. African American author Zora Neale Hurston documented the hurricane's toll on Black migrant workers in her 1937 novel Their Eyes Were Watching God, which TIME magazine later named one of the 100 best English-language novels published since 1923. The 1928 Okeechobee hurricane fundamentally reshaped Florida's infrastructure, policy, and social landscape. The disaster exposed the catastrophic inadequacy of the lake's earthen dike, prompting the Florida State Legislature to create the Okeechobee Flood Control District and leading President Herbert Hoover to order the Army Corps of Engineers to design a comprehensive flood control system, eventually resulting in the construction of the Herbert Hoover Dike. Building codes across coastal Florida were strengthened after observers noted that well-constructed concrete and steel structures survived winds that demolished frame houses. Puerto Rico never recovered its position as a major coffee exporter, as the storm destroyed half the island's coffee plants and the shade trees they depended on, representing a permanent economic wound. #drthehistories
Dr. M.F. Khan tweet media
English
1
4
18
2.9K
David Díaz Santiago retweetledi
Mike Swanson
Mike Swanson@Swanee54·
Prepping the field for the final time in San Juan. It’s been a fantastic 10 days here and I’ll take back a ton of memories. The people of Puerto Rico are friendly, accommodating folks who love their baseball. Strongly recommend this as a vacation spot. Thanks for hosting!!!
Mike Swanson tweet media
English
12
41
379
9.6K
David Díaz Santiago retweetledi
Juana Peña
Juana Peña@Chris_Montz·
Se hizo una convocatoria pública para que todos los trombonistas de Nueva York llevaran su instrumento y despidieran a Willie Colón hoy, a la salida de su féretro de la Catedral de San Patricio, donde se celebró una misa en su honor. Mira el resultado:
Español
923
19.4K
92.8K
2.7M