>>>>Totally drug resistant strain discovered.
>>>>
>>>>
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/46010460/ns/health-infectious_diseases/>>>
>>>
>>>LOL
>>>
>>>I saw that news article and thought of you in the bunker
>>
>>LOL - Life is tough here in the Colonies.
>>My computer system is in the basement. (below nuclear blast level)
>>I call it the bunker, because pantry is there, too.
>>I also keep my collection of tin foil hats handy, just in case . . . .
>>The cats and I spend a lot of happy bunker time hiding from the flu and now, the dreaded incurable TB.
>>Fortunately, the temperature this morning is a delightful germ killing minus 31C (minus 24F), so today it may be safe to make a trip to buy supplies.
>>Keep your helmet on and your head down, Nicholas. ;-)
>
>LOL all the way through that one.
>
>Of course we all know cats are not equipped to survive a nuclear holocaust. Or who knows, maybe they're better equipped than we are.
>
>I have a fondness for post-apocalypse movies, even though sci-fi is not my genre. "28 Days Later" was set in England after the big one and was very well made IMO. For more fun, I liked "The Day After Tomorrow" starring Dennis Quaid. After a new ice age strikes the northern U.S. he heads south to escape. There is Dennis on snowshoes, trekking south, trying to find his son, played by a young Jake Gyllenhaal. The touch of humor, always appreciated in a Roland Emmerich production, was that so many Americans were doing the same thing that Mexico had erected a checkpoint to prevent Americans from swarming into Mexico illegally, LOL.
Isn't a more realistic post apocalypse The Road. All that "hopeful" stuff is cloud cuckoo land. Post apocalypse I'd move in with Bill Kuhn . He's got guns.