- Joined
- Jul 10, 2017
The other problem is if they do evacuate, they quickly get impatient if nothing quickly happens. That's what happened with Mt. St. Helen's. The mountain seemingly quieted down for a few weeks. By week 2 the evacuees were going all Karen on the Governor demanding to be let back in and return to normal. By week 6 Kaboom!"It won't happen to me." When it comes to potential massive disasters the tendency is to favor nothing happening, because generally that's a safe bet. Last time this volcano erupted was something like 50 years ago and besides property damage people survived and life continued on the island relatively unabated.
Fleeing is a hassle and no one wants to feel like they spent a fuckton of money or time running from what eventually amounted to a nothing burger.
If things don't go as bad as predicted or as fast as predicted people quickly start ignoring subsequent alerts. This becomes a huge problem for hurricane areas.
Edit; Bushcraft Bear with another nightime report from the gates of hell itself. (Great property value! Close to the bus routes.)
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