Much job~ma, Kat.
Flea, I hope you were able to get some sleep.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Much job~ma, Kat.
Flea, I hope you were able to get some sleep.
Good morning! Looks like Tuscaloosa had it worst. Oh my god, as this person keeps saying (the time to get out of the car and go somewhere safe was about 1 minute in, eh?) [link]
Man, that so's crazy. CNN says more than 150 people have been killed.
I'm glad you and your family are ok, flea. I think the death toll in AL will keep rising for a while as people get into the more rural areas around there. Apparently half of the town of Phil Campbell, AL has been completely razed. The photos from where the tornado was in the early part of that video show that the Forest Lake neighborhood, which was behind those stores, has nothing left standing, not even the trees.
oh dear.
Yeah, I saw someone asking "why so many deaths, were people (like the videographers) just ignoring alerts?" but when your NEIGHBORHOOD IS GONE there's not much you could have done to protect yourself. A lot of people in the south don't have basements; if you live in a trailer you're basically fucked.
Whoa. That's terrifying. I cannot believe so many deaths!
I think, with HoD, it's just the density of the language along with the meandering narrative that has slowed my students, and myself, down. It's like reading one long prose poem.
but when your NEIGHBORHOOD IS GONE there's not much you could have done to protect yourself.
that's right. And when tornado warnings come, sometimes there isn't enough time to go any kind of distance.
Yeah, that's really horrifying.
I've been told the best you can do if you're in a house without a basement is climb into the bathtub with something over you like a mattress.
(Except that in my house, the bathtub is on the 2nd floor corner. But we have a basement, and I'll be there crouched under the old cast-iron sink, clutching my favorite cat.)