To: laz
If anyone is annoyed because they evacuated for nothing, they just don't seem to get it. When a storm of this magnitude is headed your way, you've got to evacuate before it's certain whether or not it's going to hit you. If you wait until it's certain, it's too late to evacuate. So you leave, even if it ends up not hitting you. And instead of thinking you evacuated for nothing, you're thankful that your city didn't get hit after all. The way I describe it to people is: Here I've got a box of twenty rounds of ammo. Nineteen out of twenty are dummy, one is real. I'm going to take one round at random, insert it into my gun, point it at the chair you're sitting in, and pull the trigger. Are you going to get your butt out of that chair or not?
2,258 posted on
09/24/2005 5:11:40 AM PDT by
SauronOfMordor
(Never try to teach a pig to sing -- it wastes your time and it annoys the pig)
To: SauronOfMordor
That'll work. :)
It's a good analogy for the chances of getting hit increasing with each dummy. When several storms end up not hitting, people get complacent. However, the reverse should be true, because each miss increases the chances the next one will be a hit.
2,313 posted on
09/24/2005 5:39:16 AM PDT by
laz
(They can bus 'em to the polls, but they can't bus 'em out of the path of a Cat 5 hurricane.)
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