Sunday, May 10, 2009

Darnell Hackworth

Today I interviewed Darnell Hackworth. He was shy telling his story. He and his wife run a retirement home for the dogs who fought in the war. He told me about the K-9 units that were used to find the infected, and how they never got enough credit. K-9's were first used to sniff the infected, there was something about the zombies that made the dog's go crazy. Darnell was saying that the reason why it was so effective was because of the training. As pups, the dogs would sit across from G's and immediately go crazy, the instinct to kill. I would think that the zombies could infect and kill the dogs while they attack. The main mission of the of any K team was scouting called LRP, Long Range Patrol. To sweep and pick out the zombies and it proved to be very helpful. Without the dogs the war could have been a lot worse.

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

General D'Ambrosia

Today I interviewed General D'Ambrosia, he spoke about the army commanders. He said that they had gone through trying to organize the army for the offensive. He made a good point saying that the zombies don't need a pep talk or supplies they just need someone to infect. This was a nightmare for army commanders because all basic and conventional tactics had become useless, you couldn't starve them, you couldn't assassinate their leader, you couldn't block off all their supply routes. He made another good point by saying that having your whole entire population at war was not a good idea because there is just people that cannot fight. Zombies never stopped, they had nothing to stop for. The total war was not a good idea, and should not be carried out. I think that General told me a lot of interesting things.

Monday, May 4, 2009

Terry Knox

Today I interviewed Terry Knox, the commander of the International Space Station. The space station could not be seen from Earth with the naked eye. The purpose of the platform was to refuel all the satellites in space so that none of them would fly into the gravitational pull of the Earth and be ruined. I think that they should have escaped, when they were given the option. He was sitting on the platform with his crew watching humanity die out. I think he could have done something, instead of watching humanity die out. Also, I think that the ultraviolet light could have damaged him.

Sunday, May 3, 2009

Cienfuegos, Cuba

Today I met Seryosha Garcia Alvarez in his ofie on the sixty-ninth floor of the MAlpica Savings and Loans building which is the second-tallest building in Cuba. The view was amazing. He started off by telling me that the first zombie cases were small mostly containing Chinese refugees and European businessmen. Travel from the United States was still largely prohibited so they were spared the initial blow of first-wave migration. Because Cuba had so many doctors their leader knew the nature of the infection weeks before the first outbreak. Before the Great Panic began Cuba was already prepared for a war. Cuba's invaders mostly came from the sea. Cuba had resettlement camps which Seryosha said were not as bad as prison camps but they put you to work for 12 to 14 hours. Each camp had a rumor about "zombie pits" if you acted bad they would feed you to them. Cuba had 5 million yankees and let 10 percent work outside the camps doing jobs that the Cubanos no longer wanted. Cuba became a very wealthy country and became the air hub for both North and South America.