I am rerunning Toles' Emergency Procedures cartoon, because Byron Smith has added a ninth step. I'd like to offer a prize to someone who can provide a step 10 strong enough to stand with Byron's step 9, but I can't afford it and I can't afford the lawyers to figure out how to do it if I could.
So I am handing out traditional, old fashioned pulp-publishing no-prizes instead. Only In It for the Gold no-prizes are hereby titled No Gold Medals, and Byron surely gets one for his (slightly edited)
9. Consider that fire may actually reduce the building's heating bill. Commission study by think tank to investigate.Another No Gold Medal to he-who or she-who comes up with point 10.
Update: Tony Lee got an LOL out of me with 10. Maintain that those involved in fire detection cannot be involved in firefighting policy. If they insist on getting mixed up in firefighting policy, we get to ignore everything they say.
No Gold Medals are being prepared for both contributors as I write! Many thanks to all contributors.
Excellent! I shall treasure it always.
ReplyDelete10. Observe that fires are naturally self-limiting as fuel is finite.
Pick up hammer. Swing hammer. Hit thumb. Drop hammer. Swear repeatedly. Consider alternative to hammer.
ReplyDelete10. Explain to everyone that the components of the building (both concrete and steel) survived much higher temperatures in their recent past and so this is nothing unusual.
ReplyDeleteAndrew
10. Notice that people often drive long distances to toast marshmallows over an open flame, so there are benefits as well as costs to be considered.
ReplyDelete10. Other buildings are on fire too; anyway, this building's sensitivity to fire is low.
ReplyDelete10. There's no point in trying to put out the fire in this building since there's no sign anyone else is putting out a fire in their building.
ReplyDelete10. Point out that given that we haven't managed to put the fire out yet, we should give up on extinguishing it and focus solely on fireproofing nearby valuables.
ReplyDeleteWell, actually, this is perhaps more a step 20 than a step 10, but it's certainly in there somewhere.
10. Fire? What fire? There is no fire.
ReplyDelete10. Smoke is plant food
ReplyDelete10. Decide that the sun causes fires, because it's a big ball of fire itself.
ReplyDeleteMake up explanation for grandchildren.
ReplyDelete10. Fund exhibition showing that fire was the driver of human evolution. Evolution is good.
ReplyDelete10. Maintain that those involved in fire detection cannot be involved in firefighting policy. If they insist on getting mixed up in firefighting policy, we get to ignore everything they say.
ReplyDelete10. Remind everybody that water is too precious to be wasted putting out fires.
ReplyDeleteAnnounce that the daffodils in the flower beds outside the building may be brought out a week early by the heat.
ReplyDelete10. In the meantime, everyone should be given opportunity to upgrade from painted timber flooring to wall-to-wall carpet. Liberally spread organic solvent to strip the paint.
ReplyDeleteCut funding for fire detection, because it doesn't provide new information and only makes everybody panic.
ReplyDelete10. Point out that fires have always occurred in nature (without human influence), therefore this is just a natural event (and we should let it run its course).
ReplyDeleteBart
Have a tea party.
ReplyDeleteUsing that fire extinguisher could be very bad for the economy, not there is a consensus about a fire anyhow.
ReplyDeleteWell, paraphrasing the usual talking points is rather boring, so I'll try something different:
ReplyDelete10. PROFIT!!!!!!
(I don't think there are that many prominent climate inactivists out there who do their inactivist work without thinking about the all-important problem of How To Make Money From It.)
Is this an anthropogenic fire or is it naturally occurring ?
ReplyDeleteBefore you call the fire department remember that you could be diverting resources from a poorer neighborhood, or the fight against AIDS, or something.
ReplyDelete:LOL:
ReplyDeleteHow do you know it's a fire? Smoke can be caused by other things too you know, therefore it's not a fire, you're just being alarmist!
ReplyDeleteStart a "blogospheric experiment" bemoaning the lack of dialogue with people who have never seen a fire and think it's just a trick of the light, or brightly colored paper flapping in the breeze.
ReplyDelete10. Hack into the e-mail accounts of everyone in the building. Quote mine to imply fire is a hoax.
ReplyDelete10. Point out that trying to mitigate will cause more costly damage from water than the cost of simply adapting to living in a tent on an empty lot.
ReplyDelete10. Insist that no action be taken in response to the fire until the national unemployment rate falls below 5.5% for four consecutive quarters.
ReplyDelete10. Under no circumstance sound an alarm. This would be alarmist.
ReplyDelete10. adaptation will be cheaper than mitigation. Pass the asbestos...
ReplyDelete10. Conclude that it's not a real fire. Shouting FIRE! is just an attempt to get research funding.
ReplyDelete11. Call Cuccinelli instead
10. Order and wait for a replacement fire extinguisher that runs on corn-based biofuels.
ReplyDeleteA little late to the party, but:
ReplyDelete10. Point out that it would be very expensive to put out the fire with today's technologies. Assert that it will be more economical to wait to put out the fire until the very inexpensive, technologically wonderful solutions produced by the free market become available Any Day Now...
10. Avoid fire prevention in the future because of economic hardship and loss of jobs (Firefighters, Firetruck Builders, etc)
ReplyDelete