The National Weather Services has signaled that the weather will not favor gaining control of the massive Los Angeles fire for the entire week.
The fire was spread to 4 different locations in California and the death toll has risen to 24 now and has burned over 12,000 structures and more than 40,000 acres of land on Palisades, Eaton, Hurst, and Kenneth, which has caused a 150 billion dollar loss.

Many of the big Hollywood stars who live in California have already evacuated their homes and one of the AI-generated images has gone viral in the past few days showing the Hollywood sign board burning but that is not true, the Hollywood sign board is still safe.
The loss is almost equal to the 4% of California’s economy and President-elect Donald Trump has called this one of the worst catastrophes in the history of the USA. Donald Trump has also blamed California’s Democratic Governor Gavin Newson for failing to stop the Los Angeles fire and didn’t take major actions. In response, Governor Newson invited Trump to survey the devastation with him.
Sources said when the firefighters reached locations they found empty fire hydrants in most of the locations and this is also the major cause that prevented them from handling fire in the initial stages.
The biggest question mark is not Why this fire is not yet controlled but how there is a fire at four different places in a single state California.
Investigation agencies have not given any signal as to whether it is a natural disaster or if there are enemies behind it. A major focus is right now on finding ways to control the Los Angeles fire.
But a similar kind of incident was seen in 2020 when Donald Trump was first time held the US President’s office. Generally, the dry nature of the state causes fire with thunderstorms but this time most people argue that this time it’s not a natural disaster because there is a fire at four different places in the same state at the same time.
It will be better to not conclude whether Los Angeles fire is a natural disaster or man-made right now.