This is Katrina level horrifying. Even knowing all the rain and the terrain in the area this is fucking insane. The only other thing I can think of is how bad are the feds going to fuck up the response and how deliberate will that fuck up be.
Just
today, my area got power again (yes yes powerlevel, STFU). We never lost running water, thankfully. It wasn't as bad here, but we had a LOT of rain and downed power lines, and not too much flooding.
Appalachia is mainly poorer and white isnt it? I imagine the federal response will be crap and the local guys will be doing above and beyond trying to save people.
My dad was a Guardsman that helped out during Katrina, and
that gave him PTSD, but multiple deployments in the Gulf Wars and Somalia didn't. He always feared something like this happening in NC and went all in on being a prepper. Dad actually had a panic attack when this one came and it took mom ordering him to drink some whiskey and have a ciggy to calm him down (after mom spent years trying to get him to quit smoking).
Ironically, despite his panic attack, his prepper obsession wound up saving him, my mom, me, and a bunch of their neighbors since dad had the whole damn house roof wired up with solar panels, an Army surplus diesel generator, a well + septic, and loads of non-perishable food. Neighbors slept in the living room and dad's gaming room, and I just took a cot in the garage.
We've wound up having to pool together big time, because we're just a small ass town in the middle of nowhere, and we thought the government wasn't coming to help us anytime soon. We lost power for almost 2 whole days, but we didn't lose the city water, a lot of our roads were blocked by trees (which
we cleared ourselves), a few people's houses got destroyed, and we did a hell of a lot better than most. Still, we're not out of the woods, cell service is spotty (but landline internet's okay for now) and I'm grateful I have a few weeks of canned food and OTC meds. Guess I'll be waiting a while longer to start my new job.