This article attempts to explain why folks are rushing out to stockpile toilet paper. I especially agree with points 1 and 2 in this article....no clear message except stay off cruise ships......
An interesting article, and one that resonates with me.
Haven't noticed a shortage in local stores here but the second article I have seen panicking over toilet paper. I mean really, how long do people expect to be in self-quar, ntine. Months? Years? Will the trees we use for paper pulp stop growing? Will factories that produce butt-wipe shut down for months at a time leaving us scrambling for old newspapers and non-slick periodicals? Think of the childeren!
TP? Really?
- b/eads
@dcontesti wrote:
This article attempts to explain why folks are rushing out to stockpile toilet paper. I especially agree with points 1 and 2 in this article....no clear message except stay off cruise ships......
Interesting article! Thanks for sharing!
This (from the article) reminds me of Hurricane season prepping.
Panic buying begets panic buying: All those photos of empty shelves may lead people to believe that they must rush out and grab toilet paper while they still can. And what started as perceived scarcity becomes actual scarcity.
It allows some to feel a sense of control: Fischhoff said that preparing, even by purchasing toilet paper, returns a sense of control to what seems like a helpless situation.
If you take the inherent risk management methodology, apparently, being used, and then apply it to road fatalities that run about 1700 deaths a year, all vehicles would be banned from the roads.
Much safer and far fewer deaths, other than those experiencing cardiac arrest carrying large quantities of toilet roll home!
@AndreaMoore @dcontesti Then why is it when natural disasters occur, that people simply don't think it will happen? But this sort of situation gets people to think about Civil Defense Emergency Management (CDEM) and think about what they would do. It is a bit late when the latest Tsunami or high winds are about to inundate the coast line due to a King tide. When people expect the authorities to help them out and pull them out of situations, they could have been well prepared for in the first place?
Incidentally it is not just Toilet rolls, it is cold remedies as well - whole shelves have disappeared in supermarkets even in New Zealand and Australia. Now the authorities have limits on the number that can be taken away per family member. Now if one was thinking appropriately, one would go to the nearest Chemist Warehouse, and buy in bulk and take several family members along with you and it would be far cheaper too.
So is the answer invent a situation, which is not a Civil Defense Emergency Management event, and this will cause people to actually prepare?
There is something deeply disturbing, in the sense that human beings actually need to be fully motivated by doing something, but to do the correct thing appropriately.
Regards
Caute_cautim
The positive side is that I have not heard of Brexit in ages!
> iso27701 (Newcomer I) posted a new reply in Tech Talk on 03-11-2020 03:54 AM
> The positive side is that I have not heard of Brexit in ages!
Now *that* is a definite plus ...