Today, in the news, they are asking:
Could better tornado warnings cause complacency? - msnbc.comHaving myself lived in an area where tornadoes are prevalent, and watching peoples' reactions to them, I have come to the conclusion that people are going to be what they are: that is: if they are already complacent, they will continue to be; if they are not, they will continue to be vigilent. All things considered. Still, I agree with Rick Smith quoted above, that preparedness is not wasted. People need to take that stuff seriously, without regard to how many times they have survived or their relatives have survived or whatever.
Meteorologist Rick Smith said he hopes that for residents who prepared and were spared, that their work doesn't lead to complacency.
"I don't want people to think preparedness efforts are ever wasted," Smith said. "The weather radios people bought, the plans people reviewed on Friday and Saturday, it's not like you're never going to use those again.
"If you didn't use them on Saturday, you should be thankful and glad."
Those people involved in developing these warning systems are doing all of this to save as many lives and as much property as they can. When people disregard their warnings (even if they turn out to be not as bad as they sound at the time of warning) they are, in a sense, slapping the developers, scientists, storm-chasers, and all the others involved in warning them, in the face.
I moved away from that part of the country, and one of the major decided factors in my doing that was the weather. I had grown up with that as a child, and don't remember being overly cautious or frightened. But, as an adult with a family, it was a completely different game. I know some people can't move, or refuse to for whatever reason: family, land, fear of the unknown, jobs. This list could go for days. But, if they stay, they should be vigilent and give heed to the warnings. The warning system does save lives.
There is probably a metaphor, or a symbol of some kind in this. At least a lesson that could be shown in a story without going all Aesop on the reader, right? Kind of like the movie The Day After Tomorrow is a lesson about screwing up the environment.... Hmmmm....
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