Thursday, May 7, 2009

Going on the Offense


Today I interviewed Ernesto Olguin over at his beach house. He had a very big and expensive house so I enjoyed the interview. He told me that he went to the national conference which was held to discuss the zombie situation. All of the leaders there argued their case. The U.S. said that they had to go on the attack and rid the world of all the zombies. Others argued that more military units could not be spared just to be slaughtered. In the end, it was voted that all countries would go on the attack. Now I think that defense creates offense. What I mean by this is that if you first secured all the citizens then you could go on the attack. If the citizens aren't secure, then the zombie army is almost invincible. Think about it, when the zombies bite someone then another "zombie warrior" is created. So imagine if no citizens were bitten, then there would be a possibility of destroying the zombie infestation. Most people did not like the decision to attack because the army would lose more than the zombies. At this point, you could probably estimate that with every zombie killed, three more were created. That is a scary thought, but was most likely true.

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