Sometimes people get what they deserve in this world. Sometimes, particularly as a result of natural disasters, they don’t. Anyone attempting to create a logically coherent religion/philosophy must be able to account for both situations.
On a somewhat similar note, the GOP battle cry of rugged individualism and limited government can work reasonably well under normal conditions, but it fails utterly in the face of economic or natural disasters. At that point, everyone looks to the state for solutions. And so, you have the spectacle of Governor Scott, a man who scoffs at climate change, views public employees as underworked moochers, and opposes virtually every effort to increase burdens on business, running around furiously imposing new and costly rules on nursing homes and using state power to provide gas for residents and evacuees. And, to be fair, he’s done a pretty good job of it.
Any successful system of government must be sufficiently flexible to operate under both normal and emergency conditions. Our system has met the test, so far.