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A Nuclear Attack Quick Actions Checklist – Part 2, by Anon-6

(Continued from Part 1. This concludes the article.)

– To filter air:

– Cooking/eating:

– Sleeping:

– Radios/Communication:

– Security:


– Power:

– Lights:

– Bathroom needs:

– Hygiene and Washing:

– Information/entertainment:

iPads
iPhones and charger cords
2X Prepper laptops from library closet (in large Mylar bags) [these are just old school, work site ruggedized Panasonic laptops with DVD players – eBay for a couple hundred each]
Library hard drives to plug into the laptops
Physical DVDs in the dresser in basement by door
Decks of cards
Board games
Kindle
Bible
Walkie talkie radios (from above)

– Go Bags:

– Dog:

– Clothes:

3 changes of clothes
6 pairs socks
6 underwear
Tennis shoes
Boots
Coats and sweaters as needed

– Reading glasses

– Toolbag and power drill with spare battery and charger

– All precious metals (gold and silver) and cash brought down
PMs needed later for purchases if dollars are no good.

– Turn off gas to house (outside of the house on the downhill side)
Will need the large crescent wrench from the toolbag
Turn the red valve to align the hole with the other red hole on the main lines [I painted both holes red]

– Gas cans:
[I have several 5 gallon cans of gas – no ethanol and treated with Pri-G – stored in an outside storage area]
Bring them and the pouring spigot inside into garage to refuel the generator
If there is a wildfire danger, move them out of the house down to bottom level of back yard and cover them with tarps and rocks – much depends on time and circumstances

– Vehicles:
Pull (wife’s car) out of the garage and back the truck [gas powered F250 SuperDuty] into the two bay garage side
This is to protect the truck and the gas in its 34 gallon main tank and its 40 gallon spare tank, and to be able to covertly load it while in the closed garage if/when we decide we’re leaving – allows “open up and go” option

[Medical items are covered by the large stash of supplies and equipment already pre-positioned in the movie room]

(End of Checklist)

Please feel free to copy, modify, and otherwise use it as you want. By removing the “location/layout” specific wording for my house and my “make and model numbers” you should end up with a fairly clean version. At least it could serve as a start for making one or modifying your own.

Hope for peace, but while hope is important “it is neither a strategy nor a tactic.”

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Additional note: I’ve attached “My Creed” below that I scribbled out years ago. It’s sort of a “who am I and what are my core life and prepping duties” thing. Every morning I read it at the end of my Bible and prayer time. It was the starting point for me in my prepping journey and a driver in developing things like this nuke attack checklist.

My Creed:

I am a Man, a Husband, and a Father “As a man I will strive to use my time and money wisely in preparing for troubled times. I am responsible to support and defend my family. I will support my family financially, spending wisely, working steadily to remove the family from all debt and saving where I can. I will defend my family against the threats they face from a hazardous daily life, an uncertain economy, and a dangerous post-disaster world. I will prepare for these by planning, buying, training and praying. I will prepare myself physically for the challenges of age and the uncertainty of future events.
As a husband I know I am blessed with a beautiful, attentive, hardworking and loving woman. I will be faithful to her, I will respect her and will work to please her wherever I can as we prepare together for trouble. Though aging, I will be strong for her. I will tell her I love her, appreciate her, and respect her.
As a father I will be an example for my children in all things. I will love them unconditionally. I will tell them that I expect their best but we are all imperfect. I will accept these imperfections and let them know how special and wonderful they are and that I am blessed to be their father. I will strive to listen more than I talk. I will teach them to be ready for trouble so they know what to do. I will work to see them as adults but always love them as my children.”