PetrosA
Senior Member
- Location
- Lancaster, Pennsylvania
Largest city in the world? Do you mean Shanghai or Cairo? Perhaps Bombay or Mexico City? NYC is big, but it's not THAT big.
The dead? More than that die on a typical NYC weekend in car wrecks. I bet if you looked at 'total deaths' you'd find fewer folks died during the storm than average.
Stuck without, in the cold and dark? Would you like some cheese with that whine? Ordinary grocery shopping leaves most of us with mountains of food, even when we're "out." Storage? It's Autumn, for heavens' sake ... no reason everything won't keep for days without power to the fridge. Then you cook it and store it some more.
No electricity? Gee, what will those Pennsylvania farmers do? If a bunch of 16th-century re-enactors can live without electricity, so can I. No heat? We're not in deep winter yet - still well within blanket & sweater range. Maybe DC can distribute some politicians as 'hot air generators.'
Nor am I buying excuses. Every season there's one calamity or another ... if not to you, to the guy down the road.
I never thought I'd find myself quoting Lindsey Lohan ... but here goes: "Quit emitting negativity."
You can't live life in a bubble.
I've lived in both the city and the country. It's much easier dealing with extremes in the country - neighbors help out, you're more set up for hardships, and logistically it's easier than in a town or city. Towns and cities depend much more on infrastructure to conduct everyday life than rural areas, and it doesn't take a whole lot to disrupt that infrastructure.
Now, if you want to discuss the Amish, I can do that. They don't have electricity, but no, you couldn't live without power as easily as they do because you don't have a home with an infrastructure based on gas like they do. They have heating, refrigeration, water and lighting that all run on propane with no need for electricity to run them. Without electric, our gas water heaters and central heating systems are dead. I suspect many of the coastal towns will be without drinking water, electric, gas and sewer for some time and they'll probably get pretty stinky, so they'll basically be uninhabitable, even for a Grizzly Adams type