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Description

The Caribbean is often defined by its beauty, but behind the postcard views lies a century-long record of systemic abandonment. In this episode of The History of the Caribbean, we examine "Hurricanes and Human Neglect," a deep dive into how a hundred years of environmental mismanagement turned natural seasonal cycles into a recurring tragedy of survival. We trace the timeline from the early nineteen hundreds, when colonial logging stripped the islands of their ancient mahogany and cedar shields, to the modern era of concrete tourism that dismantled our coastal defenses. This isn't just a story of weather; it is a clinical look at how the extraction of natural resources for short-term profit left our islands vulnerable to the catastrophic force of the Atlantic storm belt.

We explore the devastating loss of endemic wildlife, from the near-extinction of the Imperial Parrot in Dominica to the silent death of our coral reef nurseries. As we move through the nineteen eighties and into the present day, we witness the strategic error of replacing life-sustaining mangroves with rigid sea walls that crumble under pressure. This documentary narrative challenges the "Act of God" narrative, placing the responsibility back on human systems that prioritized development over ecology. We discuss the aftermath of Category Five giants like Hurricane Maria and the long silence that follows when conservation is abandoned in the name of recovery. Join us as we uncover the true cost of neglect and the fragile state of our island homes in an era of rising seas and intensifying storms.