Инсталирайте Steam
вписване
|
език
简体中文 (Опростен китайски)
繁體中文 (Традиционен китайски)
日本語 (Японски)
한국어 (Корейски)
ไทย (Тайландски)
Čeština (Чешки)
Dansk (Датски)
Deutsch (Немски)
English (Английски)
Español — España (Испански — Испания)
Español — Latinoamérica (Испански — Латинска Америка)
Ελληνικά (Гръцки)
Français (Френски)
Italiano (Италиански)
Bahasa Indonesia (Индонезийски)
Magyar (Унгарски)
Nederlands (Холандски)
Norsk (Норвежки)
Polski (Полски)
Португалски (Português)
Português — Brasil (Бразилски португалски)
Română (Румънски)
Русский (Руски)
Suomi (Финландски)
Svenska (Шведски)
Türkçe (Турски)
Tiếng Việt (Виетнамски)
Українська (Украински)
Докладване на проблем с превода

93 оценки
A woman walks into her local courthouse in Burleson, Texas... and sees this sitting there like it’s completely normal:
An official government pamphlet titled
“ZOMBIE ATTACK — ARE YOU PREPARED?”
Not a joke.
Not a display.
Actively stocked for the public to take.
Inside the guide:
• Evacuation routes
• Emergency survival plans
• Long-term supply checklists
• Step-by-step disaster response instructions
Even lines that read:
“When they get hungry… they won’t stop.”
And it’s being handed out in a courthouse… next to legal forms, eviction notices, and public services like it belongs there.
The strangest part?
Government agencies have openly admitted in the past that “zombie scenarios” are sometimes used as a placeholder for real emergency situations like outbreaks, mass panic