Ah yes, earthquakes. That makes sense. We don't have major earthquakes over here in the Netherlands, except the recent ones caused by decades of draining gas fields below the north, which sometimes get to about 5 magnitude. Those will end though, as gas extraction has been mostly shut down after the earthquakes and subsequent property value loss sparked a political shitstorm. We're at a safe distance from tectonic faults, so our construction safety laws worry about fire a whole lot more than about earthquakes.
The only two earthquakes I've felt in the UK were in (I think) 1990, atop a prefabbily-constructed multistorey building that seemed to give us the sensation of movement that ground-dwellers in the area (well away frommthe epicentre) lacked, and one in 2008 that
was apparently felt in the Netherlands. (I was awake at the time, on the first floor of my house. It was sleepable-through, probably, but I was doing much as I am now, coincidentally.)
Both were (longterm inactive and ancient) fault-slips, and I've never felt any mining, well-drilling or fracking tremors of any kind, despite having spent time in susceptible areas of the UK.
This has little to do with US politics, but I thought I'd share, and also share that I've never lived in any building (in the UK) for more than a week at a time that
wasn't brick-built (or concrete-framed and brick-faced, I suppose, in one location). I've only seen one case of actual (otherwise fairly sound) building damage from UK storm-force winds. Not the famous 1987 Fish stkrm, but (probably) the 1990 Burns' Day one, which toppled a stone chimney stack (of a probably Victorian era building, so
may have really needed regrouting) as I was walking nearby. I don't think I'd trust the kind of building that seems to be built predominently in suburban Tornado Alley.
This is what a F4 sorry, maybe that should be T4 (to 5) tornado did here in the UK (one of the worst events, but with tornados
surprisingly likely), but note that it's mostly rooves and household debris. Even where the brickwork
was dangerously toppled, there was already plenty of more numerous 'lighter' debris likely to cause injury.
Ahem. Rambling on. Ignore me.