I am not against being prepared, nor do I think I'm defending it. Far from it. I would love to have a well stocked emergency pantry with a few months of food, tents, batteries, generators, etc. but I simply do not have the room or spare funds to accomplish this. Yes, everybody should have a working flashlight with fresh batteries, a bag of trail mix, a few bottles of water, pet carriers and food (if applicable), and a blanket, all at the ready. And I agree, a lot don't. But even with these things, the people of NO were overwhelmed and it wouldn't have helped them one bit. The authorities HAVE to be ready to swoop in if need be. It shouldn't all be on the citizen's shoulders. It should be a joint effort, well prepared for and well rehearsed with ALL the rules spelled out and/or debated, ahead of time.
You seem like you are defending it to me. Including setting up straw man arguments that you'd love to have months of supplies, generators, etc. or that it should all be on the citizen's shoulders. No one is advocating that, least of all me.
Of the basic 3-5 days of supplies recommended by the government and the Red Cross, it's not a lot that don't, it's most. You make the statement that the people of NO were overwhelmed and it wouldn't have helped them one bit. That's nonsense, and more excuses that we're just helpless, that nothing we do as individuals will be effective, and that we should instead rely on the federal government to swoop in if need be.
I do wholeheartedly agree with your last sentence. We're debating it here. I'm in favor of insisting that individuals should have a much greater degree of preparedness than we have now.
And I'm in very much in favor of helping the most vulnerable in our communities - the elderly and the impoverished. Citizens Corp and your local CERT team are a good place to start, if you're so inclined.


Personally, I'd high tail it out of there, no Super dome, I mean QCS for me.
Lots of things would have lasted the short period of time in the heat.
