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Originally Posted by Devlonir
Let us all not forget the fact that Clem's neighbourhood had at least 1 Roamer before Lee's car accident happened. Namely: the one he hit.
For a zombie to become a roamer, he first needs to have nothing left in the near area to eat. That means that from all the sounds he hears in the near vaccinity, the highway must have been the one most ressembling food at the time. So no more people nearby in houses to see or smell, only other dead ones.
I think the neighbourhood was already hit relatively bad in the morning of Lee's drive. The city just had priority for the police.
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The walker they hit wasn't in Clem's neighborhood though, it was on the highway.

More seriously, the "route" Lee used to get to Clem's neighborhood can't be used to get back to the highway, especially not by walkers since it's basically a sheer drop of atleast twenty or thirty feet. The one they hit just as easily could've been some poor shmuck who died on the highway itself - hell, that might not even have been the first time he was hit by a car on that highway.
There's also the fact the Walkers in the area left Lee alone despite his shouting and being within what, 30 feet of the cop? They didn't start pursuing until the gunshot, which would make me wonder if they could even hear the traffic on the highway.
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Originally Posted by Cyreen
It's not "mutually exclusive", that's what I'm saying - Clem's neighbourhood fell first. Zombie's don't have to move fast, they just need to infect. The bitten would have driven to city hospital facilities. Zombies are more about chain reaction - infect, move, turn, rinse and repeat.
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Except the problem with the idea is that Clem's neighborhood has more than its fair share of walkers (which are, in and of themselves, readily apparent casualties, what with the missing faces and limbs). On the one hand you're trying to claim the police basically gave up the neighborhood up for dead since it fell first and didn't report on what they had seen because... tiddlywinks, while also trying to claim there weren't many casualties - those two positions are mutually exclusive.
Given how quickly the infection evidently progresses and causes things like loss of conciousness, if mass numbers of zombies-in-waiting were driving to the city odds are we also would've seen more wrecked cars on the highway. Hell, it's specifically mentioned that Clem's dad "didn't feel well enough to drive".
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What do you mean incorrect? What? Do you seriously think they were having issues with "civil disobedience" or is it more likely zombies were munching on people in the streets causing panic and the police had no clue what they were dealing in their radio transmissions?
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There's no evidence they were full on eating people in the streets yet, as far as we can tell, which is what you claimed was going on. Given the tone of Diana's message in Savannah: "Ed had a little incident with some crazy guy at the hotel", it doesn't exactly sound like there was all that much panic at the outset. Plus, if they were having issues with mass cannibalism, it wouldn't be difficult to call it as such.
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On that note, the bitten can drive and board planes.
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Actually, apparently the bitten can't drive; Ed couldn't. We're told as much on the answering machine.

Given their tendency to pass out shortly after being bitten, that also raises questions about their ability to stand around in lines and go through security at the airport.
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Don't be so condescending, you're obviously not that intelligent (that would be "dilettantes" to those that can spell).
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It's not my fault you apparently didn't understand that debris-filled roads and grounded aircraft happen to increase response times.
If nitpicking a typo is all you can do to make yourself feel better about it, knock yourself out. Oh, and you screwed up a quote tag; neener-neener.