***Official 2024 Weather Thread***

I'm literally dumbfounded reading some of these responses so I'll jsut leave it at that.

It's literally a life or death situation, I dont get it.
Not really. The actual path of a tornado is small. You have to be really unlucky to take a direct hit. You could sit outside during tornado warnings and 99% of the time you'll get rained on and nothing more.
 
  • Dumb
Reactions: NoCreativity
Fine, fair enough, I just have low tolerance for Darwinism situations.

I'm literally dumbfounded reading some of these responses so I'll jsut leave it at that.

It's literally a life or death situation, I dont get it.

There comes a time when showing some fking decency should outweigh one's desire to look smart to strangers on the internet. This would be one of those times.
 
I'm literally dumbfounded reading some of these responses so I'll jsut leave it at that.

It's literally a life or death situation, I dont get it.

It's pretty simple actually. There's a time to be a know-it-all a-hole and then there are times to stop posting because not every thought that comes through your brain needs to be published. You clearly can't read the room.
 
I mean, the lady is dead, as are people that might have been hunkered down at home. Yes, everyone should take cover when told, but people have jobs and ****. I had requested comp time to leave by 3, and thankfully work announced we were closing at 2 PM to allow folks to get home, but other folks might not be in a position that they can just leave their jobs and their job might not actually give a **** about their safety. It really sucks.

At our job we have the ability to work remotely; if I still lived in IA I would’ve worked from home on Tuesday.

Not everyone has that option. It’s possible they are in office and couldn’t get off, had a meeting that couldn’t get rescheduled, etc. Jer either needs help or needs to be treated like the troll he is.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: ISULibrarian
At our job we have the ability to work remotely; if I still lived in IA I would’ve worked from home on Tuesday.

Not everyone has that option. It’s possible they are in office and couldn’t get off, had a meeting that couldn’t get rescheduled, etc. Jer either needs help or needs to be treated like the troll he is.
Jer? I thought ISULibrarian was replying to NoCreativity?
 
I'm literally dumbfounded reading some of these responses so I'll jsut leave it at that.

It's literally a life or death situation, I dont get it.
Here's an easy one to comprehend then for anyone with half of a brain:

I was out while the siren was going off in town to get my son from daycare and into mom and dad's care versus the daycare center that is questionably equipped to deal with a tornado. I have my doubts the building is more equipped than our house. I know for a fact two adults to a child versus the daycare center at 15:1 adults to children gives us a higher chance for a non-traumatizing experience. I will always do everything in my power, like any good parent, to care for my son. I wasn't the only one with that line of thinking either based on what I typically see at pickup time vs what I saw Tuesday.
 
Yeah, an F1 can completely level a town.

Once your house is leveled does it matter if it’s in 1,000 pieces or a 1,000,000? Of course not.

It matters in the realm of science. Warnings, how they warn, the advice the warnings provide. Back in 2013 Mike Morgan got a lot of **** for telling people in the path of the el Reno tornado to get in their car and drive out of the direct path if they could. Ive always thought it would be wise for NWS to add that kind of language to their warnings in certain situations. As we figure out what can survive and what can’t, we can move down that path and hopefully save lives in the future.
 
It matters in the realm of science. Warnings, how they warn, the advice the warnings provide. Back in 2013 Mike Morgan got a lot of **** for telling people in the path of the el Reno tornado to get in their car and drive out of the direct path if they could. Ive always thought it would be wise for NWS to add that kind of language to their warnings in certain situations. As we figure out what can survive and what can’t, we can move down that path and hopefully save lives in the future.

Makes sense there too when you consider the lack of basements/availability of solid shelter for that region of the country as well.
 
I know many people who never watch 1 second of any news. I know numerous people that had no idea storms were coming. These are not dumb people they are just in their own little world dealing with their stuff.

Another thing, satellite radio is huge and you don't get NWS warning interuptions when listening to that like you do FM/AM radio.

This is a huge area that needs improved IMO. Unfortunately without legislation I don't think anything will happen. Google Home devices, Roku, Fire Stick, Chrome Stick, Alexa's. They all know your location, there is no reason they shouldn't broadcast something when a warning is put out.
 
It matters in the realm of science. Warnings, how they warn, the advice the warnings provide. Back in 2013 Mike Morgan got a lot of **** for telling people in the path of the el Reno tornado to get in their car and drive out of the direct path if they could. Ive always thought it would be wise for NWS to add that kind of language to their warnings in certain situations. As we figure out what can survive and what can’t, we can move down that path and hopefully save lives in the future.
He got a lot of **** because it is terrible advice.

In the 1999 Moore F5, 1 person, of the 100 that were in homes rated F4 or F5 damage died. 1%

"Get underground or die" is a myth. Even in F5s, in Oklahoma, without basements, it's better to be inside than in a car or exposed.

BUT, 35 people died in other places that were not F4/5 damage. Including 3 trying to hide under an overpass (another very bad idea). Some of those that did flee their homes in this study fled for overpasses. Putting yourself in the open and risking a track change, new development, traffic jam or other obstruction is making your odds worse.

 
He got a lot of **** because it is terrible advice.

In the 1999 Moore F5, 1 person, of the 100 that were in homes rated F4 or F5 damage died. 1%

"Get underground or die" is a myth. Even in F5s, in Oklahoma, without basements, it's better to be inside than in a car or exposed.

BUT, 35 people died in other places that were not F4/5 damage. Including 3 trying to hide under an overpass (another very bad idea). Some of those that did flee their homes in this study fled for overpasses. Putting yourself in the open and risking a track change, new development, traffic jam or other obstruction is making your odds worse.

If you're in a mobile home, or manufactured home, yes, you should obviously leave for your shelter, (preferably before there's a wedge moving in) but mass evac, and putting people in cars is increasing bad outcomes quite a bit.
 
They talked about how this was a rare 15% tornado threat for a week before this happened and people are still out driving around for whatever reason.

You turn on the news and they are begging people to head to their shelter and then it flips over to the traffic cam and people are out getting groceries instead.

This article says the woman was on her way home from work. Not exactly out getting groceries.

 
This is a huge area that needs improved IMO. Unfortunately without legislation I don't think anything will happen. Google Home devices, Roku, Fire Stick, Chrome Stick, Alexa's. They all know your location, there is no reason they shouldn't broadcast something when a warning is put out.

Kind of agree, but not fully.
 
This is a huge area that needs improved IMO. Unfortunately without legislation I don't think anything will happen. Google Home devices, Roku, Fire Stick, Chrome Stick, Alexa's. They all know your location, there is no reason they shouldn't broadcast something when a warning is put out.
My Alexa gives me NWS notifications. Granted, it just pings a notification and you have to tell if to play the notification, but better than nothing.