I've lived through three major hurricanes in Houston in 20 years. Rita never amounted to much, but following on the horrors of Katrina and due to the exodus of people from New Orleans to Houston, Houston tried to evacuate. Fortunately the storm didn't hit here, and the people stuck on the road from here to Dallas (250 miles away; the entire highway was a parking lot from here to there) didn't die in a raging hurricanoe. (Shakespeare; look it up.) But things were quiet for a while; stores were closed, gas pumps silent. I don't remember prices spiking after that, although they could have, as drivers limped back to town desperate for gas they'd run out of (literally) on the highway.Supply and demand aren't excuses—they are determinants of a commodity's value. If prices don't go up when supplies go low, you have shortages. If firms agree on freezing prices, they'd be committing crimes. But politics always comes before economics and logic and antitrust law. https://t.co/o4kdMg1Ocn
— George Conway🌻 (@gtconway3d) September 28, 2022
“It is no longer possible to safely evacuate,” he said. “It’s time to hunker down and prepare for this storm. This is a powerful storm that should be treated like you would treat if a tornado was approaching your home.”
"Hunker down" is a phrase made popular by Bill White, former mayor of Houston. He was mayor during the disastrous evacuation for Rita, when he urged people in the path of the storm to flee for their lives. He meant people on the coast (Houston extends to the coast and far inland out of the path of most hurricanes that come around here.) After the horrors on TeeVee of Katrina, most of Houston decided they were in the "path of the storm" and fled, with disastrous results. So the next time a storm came, Mr. White was still mayor and this time more measured in his pronouncement. He advised coastal residents specifically to evacuate, but told the rest of us to "hunker down."
And it's been a staple of hurricane warnings and government advice to those in the path, ever since. In fact, the phrase now is almost solely attached to natural disasters and how to survive them (well, the ones you can't run away from. Nobody hunkers down for a forest fire or a flash flood.).
You're welcome, America. Just doin' our part from down here on the Third Coast.
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