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To: cf_river_rat
I have plenty of emergency supplies in our home.

I've often pondered the practicality of evacuation in a "short notice" emergency.

A hurricane is one thing, evacuating in advance to escape an oncoming disaster. But in a terrorist attack, advising people to evacuate via car in a major metropolitan area, will just leave folks more vulnerable, IMHO.

Look at Manhattan during the blackout, you sit in your car for hours to inch along at a snails pace.

Can somebody explain to me the logic of evacuation via car in a metro area?

8 posted on 10/06/2003 4:39:20 AM PDT by dawn53
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To: dawn53
There is absolutely no practical sense to a car evacuation in a major metro area in an emergency. A whole lot of people will be going nowhere. V's wife.
13 posted on 10/06/2003 4:54:16 AM PDT by ventana
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To: dawn53
We were required to keep an evacuation bag packed when I was a kid growing up in Guantanamo. One day at school, shortly after the day got started, the teacher told us the buses were going to take us home. We were to go home and nowhere else. We were being evacuated, and if we didn't go home we could get left behind in the war.

MPs had personally told each dependent to go home and wait for the evac bus to pick them up. And bring your evacuation bag.

Within a few hours, the entire population was boarding ships to bug out.

The biggest problem we had was that we didn't have any cold-weather clothes for us kids. The Navy Exchange, of course, didn't sell jackets or coats. All we had were shorts and t-shirts. We had long outgrown our stateside clothing.

The last thing I recall seeing of Guantanamo was a ship unloading its cargo: thousands of coffins. My dad was staying in Guantanamo.

My mom, my brother & I were on a ship that was loaded down with aged ammo that was being hauled out to sea to be dumped when the ship had been diverted for the evacuation. Each bunk was shared by 4 people. We were to sleep in shifts. When you weren't sleeping you had to stand in the aisles.

The crew of the ship were incredible. They slept on deck, and did everything to accommodate the dependents on board. The mess hall served food 24 hours a day, because we had to eat in shifts as well. Our ship wasn't able to keep up with the other evac ships because it was so loaded down. A Soviet sub tracked us the entire trip.

When we docked at Norfolk it was cold as heck. They put us up in some barracks on base and told us to go to some warehouses the Salvation Army had set up. The Salvation Army told us to take everything we could use. They told us not to just take what we needed but everything we could use. We got clothes, kitchen utensils, toiletries, ... everything.

So keep that 3 day evac kit packed. You never know when you'll be depending on that for survival.


gitmo
21 posted on 10/06/2003 5:50:14 AM PDT by gitmo (Zero Tolerance = Intolerance)
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