I remember south Louisiana and areas like Lafayette and Houma and how they were during the 80's and it was not fun. Even being in school you felt the oil crunch and it would have taken living in a cave not to see all of the auctions of homes and equipment that were an almost weekly occurance. I have also seen what south Louisiana has done since. Lafayette and Houma have diversified and both have become huge in the medical fields, but neither can survive on just that either. It takes a mixture of all, agriculture, seafood, oil and gas, medical and other areas. But when one suffers all suffer and we are not talking about a slow down in the oil field we are talking about an illegal shutdown of almost all drilling. This does not just affect Louisiana but all surrounding regions. Here in south Mississippi we have many legs to stand on including agriculture, seafood, aerospace, military, heavy construction, tourism and gaming and others but a shutdown of oil and gas production hurts us also. Go to Orange Beach and stay at a condominium and look around at the car tags many are from Louisiana and most of them are from south Louisiana. The whole region rises and falls together and this drilling ban will have long lasting effects on the whole country what we see as a bad recession can easily turn into an even worse depression as oil prices rise and industry slows even further due to transportation costs increasing and yes I feel economic shifts much quicker than mosts since I see the flow of the mortgage market as an appraiser and this is a market that is full of fear and no market likes fear or unknowns especially when that fear is caused by the same people who were chosen to lead and guide the country.