Got into an interesting discussion on what matters in communication.

Nuance gets missed a lot when people tell half-truths. For instance, an astonishing amount of folks say they want gas as their heating system because of power outages.

Most gas-fired systems still need electricity to operate. Which, anyone who has lived with one during a power outage, already knows.

That half-truth is that a gas-fired system can more easily be supplied with emergency power. But most people don't have that.

So does the point even deserve to be made?

Truly, I think it doesn't.

The loss of any primary system becomes an emergency in extreme cold. And you'd be better-off to prepare for that.

A gas-fired heating system is not preparation for that. It makes one consideration easier, sure. But first and foremost people need to make that consideration - which most don't.

And there are plenty of backup options. I, for one, would rather have some propane on-hand for a portable heater when shit hits fan.

@TechConnectify It's like your "but sometimes" video!

Is it possible to hand-light a gas stove when the electricity is out? Yes.

Why are you planning for the 0.5% use case? This is a house, not a space ship.

@preinheimer @TechConnectify
A 0.5% use case is still about 2 days per year, which seems worth preparing for. That's especially true if that rare case is as easy to plan for as keeping a book of matches in your kitchen.
Preparing to be self-sufficient in a disaster is also important because bad events tend to correlate. For example, checking into a motel if your power goes out might work for a transformer failure but won't if the grid is overstressed by a blizzard.