get to where it is and it s going to taketa long time to recede. and so the water threat remains. i don t know jon and with it you ve got all kinds of wildlife problems. we ve been talking about snakes that are out of their boroughs and they re swimming around, trying to get, i guess, to dry ground like the people are, huh? sure, and that s fairly typical, you know, the snakes, the mosquitoes, and rats, that s fairly typical for flood waters, and that will get a little bit worse, you know, in our part of the country, the temperature is rising, the humidity is rising, which is, again, that s typical for us, but those combinations of things will make this a very nasty type business to be working around. jon: meantime, you ve got so many people displaced, forced out of their homes, and it s got to be frustrating, the day after day after day they re just still under water. this is a very slow moving
and both our east end boundary and southern endry of the river and western boundaries of the lake. this water threat surrounds you. absolutely. well, you can see, itser just starting to lap up under the planks of the warf, so the water is just getting here. it will touch this wall and extend all the way to that wall over there. those buildings right there that you see across the way, those will be under water. it s just a staggering amount of water, isn t it? when you look at it from this perspective and, like i said, our people and nor has anyone else seen anything like this. not here. not in this spot. you re confident about these walls holding up? i have to be, yes. have to be. and if for whatever reason they fail total catastrophe. there s this entire city would flood without a doubt. are you angry that they re opening up the morganza spillway? am i angry about it?