hit, the volumes of businesses, the number of people affected, look to the population centers, because that is where you are really going to struggle to get the info. getting resources to people who are affected out here? that could be really difficult. >> pretty unbelievable. and, i am looking at this and wondering how it compares to other storms we have already seen. even in recent days. >> you know, i have been covering hurricanes for a long, long, long time. you can do all the protecting you want, in the and the water comes, and the storm comes in, and you find out what really happens. and the case of ike in 2008, what we saw what really happened was 15 to 20 foot surges in texas near galveston, about 25 billion dollars in damage. hurricane denys in 2005, 7 to 9 foot search on the florida panhandle, pushing up towards alabama,. their 2.2 billion dollars in damage. again, think about where it hit, how much building went on there, because some of these storms are very expensive because we have built a lot in front of them, compared two years ago. so, a storm that 50, 60 years