Well, from my perspective, this does belong in "Politics."

Because it highlights everything wrong with capitalism in the U.S.

Twenty-five years ago, I was in Clarksville, TN when a middle-of-the-night tornado ripped through the downtown about a mile from my house. About a half mile north, other smaller tornadoes blasted through Fort Campbell. The downtown tornado sheered a church off at the eight foot high mark and destroyed the large town clock building. Just wrecked the downtown. Incredibly, because the downtown tornado hit non-residential areas during the night, nobody died.

With serious middle-of-night tornadoes in the forecast, how could factories in Illinois and Kentucky keep people working on third shift? What sense did that make? And why would people actually show up for work when the forecast clearly predicted a string of serious wind events? Do you mean the factories couldn't just shut down for 24 hours until the front passed through? It's insane to have people actually working in those buildings.

What they say is true, by the way. A tornado in the middle of the night sounds like a train coming. Even a mile away, the big one in Clarksville sounded like a train maybe 50 or 100 yards away.