I've been through so many hurricane's I can't count them all. Everything from weak category 1's to category 4's (evacuated on that one). It doesn't require a survivalist attitude at all, and stockpiling weeks of supplies is absurd.
Absurd like a fox!
Seriously, after Ivan, we had the recommended supply of food of water, enough for 4 people for 3 days. Then, on the second day after the storm, my sister and her family showed up, having lost their house. So now we had 8 people. Our water didn't come back on for another 9 days.
Actually its incredibly easy. Stores gear up quickly after hurricanes to get back into business to make money off the situation. Red cross stations are every where. I've never waited more than 30 minutes in any line after a hurricane. And there has never been a scenario where there were 0 gas pumps available since. Since you have days, sometimes even a week, of foreknowledge that a hurricane is in your area you have plenty of time to get a full tank of gas even though the hysteria fueled by the media pre-hurricane always causes a gas panic. There is nothing you need to be doing in the week or so post-hurricane before everything goes back to normal that would result in you blowing an entire tank of gas unless you just want to go out and "experience" the town.
I have personally waited in line for 2 hours to get ice and water after Ivan, idling in the middle of 9th Avenue. The aid stations were less everywhere and more in a handful locations in Greater Pensacola, serving a half million people.
As for gas, if you could find an open pump, it usually didn't stay open for long. You could very easily wait in line for an hour just to have the guy in front of you empty the last of the store's gas into a 55 gallon drum. It happened enough that my Brother in law, who's job it was to fuel up the vehicles, came back after a full day of hunting empty handed as often as not.
And not every job stops because there is a storm. I worked at the power plant, and my girlfriend worked at a hospital. We didn't really have the luxury of playing the post storm supply search.
As someone who lives in hurricane country, your description of post hurricane events is extremely exaggerated - probably in order to rationalize survivalist preparations. All you need is an ATM card to evacuate, and otherwise a few candles, canned food, and if you really want to blow yourself out a generator. Hurricane bunker not required. Again - I know and realize some people are sick and get off on things like hurricanes and that would make them deranged.
No. I did not have a survivalist mindset before Ivan. I'd been through dozens of storms, some pretty bad, before that, but I never thought much of them. Ivan changed all of that. My description is based on my personal experience with that storm. That is, a direct hit from a Cat 4 storm, even on a city that his quite a lot of experience dealing with hurricanes in general. Maybe it is a worst case scenario, but it did happen. And then, the very next year, it happened again.
If survivalists are people who spend time and resources to prepare to live through events that are extremely unlikely to ever occur, then they are by definition not rational because they are choosing to spend money on something which in every conceivable case has a negative expected return. If someone enjoys hunting and building a nuclear bunker knowing that they are never going to need it for a Vision of the Apocalypse since such things are not likely to ever happen, you could call these things hobbies.
See, here's the way I see it. In 2004, we took the hit for New Orleans. Ivan was projected to smack the Big Easy, then jogged East and hit us instead. We showed what a hit from a Cat 4 storm could do, again, on a place that wasn't particularly densely populated and was ready for such an event.
However, according to you, since this event is
extremely unlikelyNawlins, even getting the object lesson of Pensacola, was still perfectly reasonable to take absolutely no precautions against a storm at all other than a few cans of beans and some candles. How did that work out for them? Do we say that hundreds, perhaps thousands, of people died because they were unprepared, but at least they were reasonable and not deranged?
The fact of the matter is, having two weeks of stored food, water, and batteries works just as well if the basic services are out for two days as they do if the power is out for two weeks. If nothing else, it lets you share or not have to buy as much next time. It's neither absurd, deranged or even unreasonable.