If you are in south Florida get the f@ck out now.

It's a bit early to panic just yet, but you should definitely get a "go" bag together and fill your tank up on the way home each evening and be ready to get the fuck out of Dodge at a moments notice.
Absofuckinglutely GREAT advice! I envision him stuck on one of the waterways in gridlock when that bitch touches down. Not that I dislike him or anything. Thank you.
 
That's because their dead.
I've done storm relief 5 time's and the actual number of dead vs official number is completely uncompariable .
I personally seen it with Ivan , tens of refrigerated trucks stacked with bodies.

No disrespect to any family members of the storms mentioned.
They were moving bodies from the local morgue because of power outrages, those weren't all storm fatalities.

I was in South Florida that summer.
 
Damn this is bad I live in h town hope this thing turns if it comes this way and hits that tropical storm it be terriable
None of the models show this storm going even as far west as Louisiana.

The main question now is which side of Florida is gonna get it the worst.
 
I was in Charleston, South Carolina when Hugo hit. I had hauled ass up to Summerville, about 50 miles from the coast, to stay with a friend at his place. We thought we'd be perfectly fine. It was a hell of a house, hand built. His father was a Captain in the U.S. Navy. He had a buddy of his from the Australian Navy visiting. We figured it was no big deal.

We were TOTALLY FUCKING WRONG.

50 miles isn't enough. 500...more like it.
 
I haven't really been following it.. isn't it coming from the south east side of FL?

Take your pick.... lol.

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Man...if it skirts up the east coast of Florida like that it's going to be bad. It will NEVER lose strength doing that. It's going to fuck Florida coming and going far worse than Andrew did.
Since I'm safe and far away and have nothing invested in the track, it's easier for me to guess. I'm thinking it's going to go up the west side of the peninsula. That's in some ways worse because the wind blows harder on the north and east sides, as it's added to storm speed.
 
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