Beekissed
Herd Master
Well....in light of that news flash, folks will be dumping their stash of TP any day now, so now's a good time to get in on the market while it's low.
So, so true! I worked in Katy during Rita: cars just sat on I-10 for hours... I remember how terrible it was after Katrina, too: so many people were nothing but appreciative, but there were also many people who just completely ceased to behave with any rationality.My sister is in Conroe and the stores are out of everything. The stores are a zoo of upset angry people. In 2005, when hurricane Rita was aimed at Houston and people evacuated, we lived in Livingston, 75-ish miles north of Houston. A normal 1-2 hour trip took 28 hours, people ran out of gas as they got to our and every other small town around Houston. We opened our schools and churches to shelter people. Things got out of control at the Junior High and people destroyed it, even smearing feces on the walls. It took 2 weeks to repair the damage and sanitize the school before it could open up to students. It was a real eye opener for me. I vowed to get out and away from fleeing people in a blind panic and we did. Most people were grateful to have shelter, but some were horrible examples of humanity.
Normal, rational people under normal circumstances can go to pieces when things are no longer their version of normal.
I saw on the CDC map the other day that the only two states that had no reported cases were WV and ID. (no longer the case)
My neighbor told me that a comment on the local FB group said of course there were no reported cases in ID. We don't go to the doctor!