If you move to New Orleans, and you are looking at houses, and if you see a ship driving by above you … you have to look up to see the ship … , then there is a clue that the property you are looking at is below sea level.
Look somewhere else.
Don’t buy that property.
OR, if you really like the location, build your house on stilts … piers and pilings to raise the building above the ocean level. AND, make sure that if your new building is a hospital … that the generator is not below sea level, so that when it floods, you lose your emergency power supply … to quote some cartoon character, “D’oh”.
In the recent floods in California and in Brisbane Australia, it turned out that a lot of people built or bought houses that were in dry river beds.
DO NOT BUILD OR BUY A HOUSE IN A DRY RIVER BED.
And, if you do, then don’t expect someone who built on high ground to buy you a new house when your house gets washed away, which it will inevitably do.
When you get a home inspection, ask for a flood susceptability determination. There even may be a flood plain map. Ask. Look.
Insurance is when people voluntarily pool their money so that they can share risks. It probably started with ship owners in the 1600’s [you can look up the precise date, I’m sure] and gradually spread to cover other risks such as house fires, car wrecks, and such. They even sell “life insurance”, so that if you die [and you will at some point], you will get paid for dying … well, not YOU, personally, but someone you designate as a beneficiary.
And there are escape clauses … there are age limits, sometimes. And war risk exceptions, sometimes. Etc. You can set the terms and conditions. And there are people who get paid to calculate the “odds” … the risks … and to set a premium. These people have the title of “actuary” … and they get paid very well … because they know how to do math. If you study math in school, then you might also understand the concept of risk analysis.
And if you hire your own agent, then maybe they can come up with some creative sets of terms and conditions to meet your own personal needs.
They have things like “umbrella” policies; and layered policies with high deductibles. The insurance companies WANT to please you so that you will buy insurance from them. And they have re-insurance to protect themselves.
They even have beneficial societies that will bury you … you just join in. Or you can take your chances, make no provisions, die totally broke … and the town will bury you for free in the “potter’s field.”.
Same thing applies to flood “insurance”. If you travel to some countries where people live on the coast, even in third and fourth world countries, people live in houses up on stilts.
They don’t have insurance. They plan ahead. And they don’t expect that if they make really bad decisions, that other people will bail them out.
If you move to Florida and live near the water, odds are that at some point, you will experience a hurricane. They invented hurricanes a few hundred years ago. Not some thing new. If you build a house on a beach on the ocean, then watch out.
Don’t expect me to pay for when your house on the ocean beach washes away.
Because I’m telling you right now, it WILL definitely happen. Not a maybe.
Same thing applies to medical insurance to pay for your health care.
You can use an HSA and catastrophic coverages. You can join a community that has its own hospitals that people voluntarily pay for.
What we have done in the United States is create bureaucratic obstacles that make it all but impossible for voluntary communities to run their own hospitals and then when the obstacles are utterly overwhelming, the government bureaucracy says, “SEE! We told you it wouldn’t work”.