Odds ‘n Sods:

A disturbing proposed rule change that would give the POTUS a kill switch on communications in the name of “sending an alert” nationwide. New alert system gives president special code for emergency messages. – E.A.

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A SurvivalBlog reader sent in this amusing note:

“Today I swung my front door wide open and placed my Remington 30/06 right in my doorway. I left six shells beside it, then left it alone and went about my business.

“While I was gone, the mailman delivered my mail, the neighbor boy across the street mowed the yard, a girl walked her dog down the street, and cars stopped at the stop sign near the front of our house. After about an hour, I checked on the gun. It was still sitting there, right where I had left it. It hadn’t moved itself outside. It certainly hadn’t killed anyone, even with the numerous opportunities it had been presented to do so. In fact, it hadn’t even loaded itself.

“Well you can imagine my surprise, with all the media hype about how dangerous guns are and how they kill people. Either the media is wrong or I’m in possession of the laziest gun in the world. The United States is 3rd in murders throughout the world. But if you take out Chicago, Detroit, Washington DC, and New Orleans, the United States is 4th from the bottom for murders. These four cities also have the toughest Gun Control Laws in the United States. All four are controlled by Democrats. It would be absurd to draw any conclusions from this data — right?

“Well, I’m off to check on my spoons. I hear they’re making people fat.” – M.R.

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Facebook ‘Friends’ Its City, Pays for Officer. – T.P.

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New CNN Host: Firearms should have GPS Chips, it’s not big brother. – G.L.

o o o

NO common sense. Families should avoid Ohio. When I was a kid in the 50’s on the CT farm, parents said “don’t go in the woods”, when I went across the rural road to play with a girl friend. I, of course, being a “child of the woods”, ignored them and explored acres and acres, and played in streams way back in the woods. I built forts, ate wintergreen leaves, caught minnows, et cetera. I never got caught and learned a lot, like how to depend on myself! Kids need to be kids-– FREE RANGE! Yes, there are risks, but there are MORE risks growing up with overbearing parents who want to put kids in bubbles! Most children today have a very sanitized, BLAND, BLAAAAA childhood with no risks, no fun, and no rewards! No wonder they grow up scared of most things. There can be too much safety; it is NOT good for the SOUL or the MIND! Son Skips Church, Father Arrested for Child Endangerment. – H.L.



Hugh’s Quote of the Day:

“To progress, man must re-make himself, and he cannot re-make himself without suffering. For he is both the marble and the sculptor.” – Albert Einstein





Book Review: Ankara Fever: Homecomings

  • Author: Brian S. Vinson
  • Copyright Date: 2014
  • Publisher: Left Brain / Right Brain Publishing
  • ISBN: 978-1500242114
  • Amazon Link: Ankara Fever: Homecomings
  • Suitable for children? Late teens and older

This is the second installment in the Ankara Fever series, which appears to be scheduled as a trilogy. After reading book two, I’m really looking forward to book three!

The first book– Ankara Fever: Journeys– was about Roger Westover trying to get himself, his new girlfriend, and his son to safety at a bug-out location. In book two– Ankara Fever: Homecomings– we get to see what is happening at the bug-out location. If Roger knew what was going on, he might have just stayed where he was!

I won’t give away spoilers, but book two introduces the rest of the group that has planned to bug-out to DARE Ranch, and it shows some of what can go wrong when you don’t stay current with your planning and don’t follow your procedures. I mean, these people had a nice set up, but just a couple of mistakes can bring all of that down around your ears.

The story is told from several different perspectives and includes a lot of characters, who are trying to work together but who have their own individual goals– just like in the real world. I’m not usually a fan of a lot of characters, as many authors seem to be unable to keep them straight or make them too similar to one another. That’s not so here. Brian Vinson fleshes out characters as individuals– some you’ll really like and some you just won’t want to see hurt. Either way, you’ll care about what happens and may even see something that will help you in your preparations as well.

The epilogue has a great tie-in to book one and leaves you really looking forward to book three. So, if you’re just looking for a good read, looking to learn something about prepping, or maybe just need a good reminder of why we plan for things, I highly recommend Ankara Fever: Homecomings.

Thanks,

L.H.



Scot’s Product Review: SimGar The Simple Garden

I have wanted to review a self-watering/fertilizing container gardening system ever since I started writing for SurvivalBlog. I was thrilled when SimGar contacted me and offered to let me borrow one of their SimGar Plus kits. It goes for about $150.00. SimGar stands for The Simple Garden, and it has only been on the market for about a month.

I’ve gardened off and on for thirty plus years and have had both great and rotten results. While I’m lucky enough to have some decent space for a garden where we live now, my soil isn’t very good for vegetables without a lot of amendments. I also chose the site poorly when we arrived here, and it has since become shaded. Because of this, I had to move it a few weeks ago to the other side of the yard. I have issues with bugs, birds, and mammals. I’m hoping that something like the SimGar will prove an efficient supplement to my garden in the yard and help bridge this period while I’m reestablishing it. Additionally, it will be really nice to have some things located immediately next to the house, and I’m hoping that being that close will make it less attractive to critters.

As well as loaning me a kit, I got a chance to visit VizCO-US– the company that makes the SimGar. It is a new firm launched this year by longtime Florida resident Christopher R. Cantolino. He is a man with a clear passion for both his product and gardening. He worries that very few people know how to garden these days and made the point that before WWI, most people in the United States had gardens. When the call came for Victory Gardens during both world wars, there was no problem producing them. Since WWII, however, home vegetable gardening has fallen from favor, and few people have the knowledge to grow a tomato or carrot. He hopes his product will help change that by making it easy for people to be successful.

The basic idea is that you have a system that recirculates water and nutrients through plant containers. I’ve seen a couple of approaches to this idea, but I really like SimGar’s scheme, which has a 30 gallon water tank that can be mounted on castors. There is a small pump that circulates water through the bottoms of two containers that sit on the top of the tank. The pump is powered by a solar panel, so you don’t have to mess with batteries or a power connection. This is a bit like a hydroponic system, where the plants grow in circulating fertilized water, though it also resembles growing plants in pots using soil.

One of SimGar’s claims is that their containers accelerate plant growth, since they can be kept well fed and properly watered. That makes sense to me as surely a consistent, rich supply of food and water will allow them to grow rather than just survive. Cantolino says that with the water and fertilizer circulating it is “almost like an IV to the roots” and adds that it is hard to overfeed plants with his system.

Another feature of this system is that the containers are elevated a bit on the top of the tank. As I get older and feebler by the second, it is very nice to not have to bend as much.

A big part of the appeal to this type of system, as opposed to regular containers, is that it waters the plants for you whenever there is enough light to power the pump. I’m not good at remembering to water containers, so you can see why that excites me. SimGar says you can go up to 30 days before needing to replenish the tank. They also say that the water flow helps keep the soil cool, which I think answers a problem I’ve had with container plants not doing as well as they should over the summer.

This type of system is excellent for those with limited space, particularly if they cannot have a regular garden in the ground. You could even use it inside with grow lamps. I could see it being rolled inside to protect young plants from a cold snap as well as being used as a nursery to start plants that will then be moved to an in-the-ground garden. Cantolino has had a lot of success growing from cuttings with the SimGar, since it maintains a moist soil. I see a lot of uses for this thing.

When the kit arrived and I picked it up, I told the young lady at the UPS store that it was plastic, so it would be very light. Oops. It is made of very heavy-weight plastic, thank you very much, and there are some steel reinforcing tubes in the platform it sits on. Further, it has heavy-duty castors. Heavy duty means heavy in weight, and then you add in the solar panel, which isn’t a flimsy piece of junk, either. In other words, old and feeble here had to actually use some energy to get it to the car. The box is pretty bulky but easily made it into the back seat.

It took me about an hour to put it together, but had I followed the instructions better (I’m a guy, you know what that means) I think it would have shaved off five or ten minutes. The only thing that was a little hard was getting the two plant containers apart. It took a minute or two of patient prying. A bit of packing between them might have made it easier to get them apart, but it looked as if something heavy had been put on top of the box in shipping, so they might have been squashed together. I found the great assembly video after I put it together. It would have made it go a bit faster as well as guaranteed that I got everything right the first time.

The tank, as mentioned above, sits on an optional mobility kit, which has some serious castors. I have often gotten things on castors that couldn’t handle much weight, but these are going to be fine. They do need a hard surface to roll on. Inside the tank is a box that holds a pump and some filtering elements in three separate compartments. The first holds a washable filter. The second gets some rocks and a charcoal filter that can be replaced, and the third gets the pump. There is also some tubing to connect the pump to the two containers and the wire that connects the solar panel to the pump.

The rocks and charcoal are intended to add filtration to the water. The rocks also help keep the pump on the bottom of the tank. The filtration will help keep the water clean enough to go through the pump. I can imagine that things could grow in there, particularly since fertilizer is going to get into the water. Even if you don’t use a liquid fertilizer, there will be nutrients in the soil and the water flow will pick some of them up and carry them into the tank.

I was impressed with the quality of the components, particularly the wiring connections to the solar panel. It screwed on tightly, and I’m pretty certain will keep moisture out. Everything felt as if it will hold up sitting outside in the sun and weather. SimGar confirmed that the plastic parts are UV resistant, which cheered me up. I’ve had a number of things just not last long in the sun here. The hardware is stainless steel, which also provides longevity.

The whole thing was now about four feet wide, thirty inches deep and two feet tall to where the top of the soil resides. The solar panel came to about four feet high, and it resides on the top of a tube that projects from the tank. Most of the parts are a pleasant tan color, and the lid of the tank is a nice brown, so it should blend in attractively in most settings.

I was intrigued by the ribbing in the various parts of the unit and particularly in the growing compartments. I assumed some were for structural strength while others were to help lock components together in the right position. There seemed more, however, than were needed for those purposes. Cantolino explained that they play a role in directing water through the system. Although the company is new, Cantolino has spent years working on how to make sure the water would flow through the containers without eroding the soil. Erosion was something I had wondered about, and it impressed me that it had been taken care of. Ridges are molded into the containers that create a capillary action to make water climb the walls, which speeds its distribution to the plants. Very neat.

Once we have picked our location, which should be relatively level, SimGar says we should put some water in and make sure the pump works and everything is properly connected. Mine worked just fine. I was very a bit surprised with how much water began flowing. Not only that; it flowed pretty well even when it got cloudy, which surprised me even more. It didn’t pump much during a thunderstorm with very dark, heavy clouds, but I didn’t see that as a problem. I have often been disappointed with solar gadgets but not this one. I didn’t fill the tank all the way until later, when I put in the soil, just in case I had to change something.

Speaking of rain, Cantolino said that one of the design features of the SimGar is that it catches most of the rain that falls on it and directs it into the tank for use later. That struck me as a good thing, too.

While talking about water, I should mention that Cantolino says that the pH (the measure of acidity or alkalinity) of the water is important, more important than that of the soil even. Since the water is continually working through the soil, the soil will take on the pH of the water. The containers are small, closed systems and can be quickly affected by whatever is going on in the water. I’m going to use a pool chemistry kit to keep tabs on the SimGar. Those are good things to have, by the way, as they also check chlorine levels when you use it to sterilize water for domestic use.

If you need to lower the pH (make it more acid), Cantolino suggests vinegar or sulfuric acid. Potassium hydroxide is a chemical frequently suggested to raise pH levels in hydroponic gardens. I also saw a number of products intended to raise and lower pH in a local store that carries organic and hydroponic gardening supplies.

Cantolino also suggests a couple of other things that can be added to the water. The first is Epsom salts, which contains magnesium and sulfates that plants require. The second is hydrogen peroxide, which does a couple of things. It adds oxygen to the water, which promotes plant growth and kills some of the harmful bacteria that can grow in the water tank. As I researched hydrogen peroxide, I noticed there is some controversy about using drugstore varieties, which have extra chemicals to stabilize the peroxide. You can get stronger solutions intended for gardening without those stabilizers at some hydroponic stores.

Okay. Everything went together. It all works, and it looks solid and durable. I found a place on our patio that catches a lot of sun. Now what? Thankfully, SimGar offers a lot of information on their website. The first thing we need to do is add some soil. Hmm. Dirt. It is, as serious gardeners know, pretty critical stuff and needs to be suited for what we intend to grow and the conditions in which we are working. SimGar Soils and Potting Mixes webpage gives us guidance as to what we need in the conditions of the SimGar containers. The most important elements appear to be a soil that allows water and air to flow through it. It can come from your yard or from a bag, purchased at the garden store. My dirt is not a good thing for the SimGar. I live on a lake, and the top layer is fine silt, while the layers below are a hard reddish clay based mixture. Neither meets the needs of growing things in the SimGar, so I had to go to the store. I chose one of the suggested organic potting soil mixes and found that a two cubic foot bag nicely filled both containers.

The soil was rather dry when I put it in, but I was pleased to note that moisture worked up to the top in about ten minutes, which meant that those ribs must be doing their job as this went faster than I thought it could move up by simple absorption. I was also happy that it was fairly easy to move around on the paver patio where we plan to keep it. At this point, with water and soil, it has to weigh over 200 pounds, so that’s some serious weight to push about.

After we get water and dirt, we need to consider fertilizer. While the soil we start with probably has nutrients in it, it will need to be replenished. As mentioned above, the SimGar folks like liquid fertilizer. It can be a commercial one or if you have access to manure or compost, you could make a tea with it and add it to the tank. I don’t think it would be smart to add anything to the tank that isn’t water soluble, though. Cantolino likes Miracle Grow, which has a widely available line of fertilizers. I’m probably going to go back to the organic garden shop and buy one of their liquids for the time being. I do plan to make some teas from chicken manure, as I want to be able to run this without store-bought fertilizer. I also don’t see any reason you can’t add solid fertilizers to the soil, but you won’t obtain the quick results you can get with liquids fed directly to the roots.

One very nice advantage of this system is that if you add fertilizer, it is going to stay in the system until the plants eat it up. The water flow may take some with it on the way back to the tank, but it will just get pumped back through over and over so the plants get another crack at it.

So what are we growing anyway? Well, most anything, though we do need to consider acidity and test the pH before we plant. While you can grow ornamentals in the SimGar, I suspect most of my readers will be using it for vegetables or herbs, like I am. Most vegetables need slightly acidic conditions. Be prepared to make changes as needed. It will be a lot easier to change it in the SimGar than in your in ground garden.

SimGar provides a nice planting guide on their website. It doesn’t cover everything, but it is a good starting point. I like the inclusion of what plants are good to plant together and what should be avoided in the same container.

I decided to plant black-eye peas (cowpeas to Yankees) in one container and green peppers in the other. It is very hot here now and not a good time to plant most things, but these two should be ok. Green pepper can be grown as a perennial if you can protect it in the winter, so they are a great plant for a container. I am pretty sure, short of my letting the tank run dry, that they are going to do well, and I plan to provide updates on how they are going through the growing year. At this point, I’m very encouraged and have high expectations.

The routine maintenance of the SimGar will mainly consist of making sure the tank doesn’t run dry. If it does, you might get an airlock in the pump, but Cantolino says it will clear up if you power cycle it by unplugging it from the solar panel. The other maintenance will be cleaning the sponge filter every couple of months. He does say that folks who use organic fertilizers may need to pay closer attention, as more stuff can grow in an organic solution. They might benefit a lot from the hydrogen peroxide mentioned above. The charcoal filter will probably need to be replaced every year or so.

Cantolino promises continued improvements in his products and is very interested in suggestions from users. There will also be upgrades to the website. He has some additional products coming to market, including indoor kits with reflective covers to maximize the grow lights as well as screens to use outdoors. Besides protecting your plants from bugs and critters, the screens can help with temperature control. Cantolino says that it gets too hot to garden normally in Florida summers, but the white screen combined with the cooling effect of the circulating water will change that. There are also some neat little clips that allow you to attach tomato cages to the plant containers. He is working on some other exciting ideas he isn’t ready to market yet. If you are a gardener and this approach interests you, it might be a good idea to keep tabs on SimGar. – SurvivalBlog Field Gear Editor, Scot Frank Erie



Recipe of the Week: Easy Meatloaf, by M.J.

Ingredients:

  • 2 lbs 80% ground beef
  • 2 cups Progresso Italian Style Bread Crumbs
  • 2 cans Campbells tomato soup
  • 2 lbs onions (3 lbs, if you love onions)
  • butter flavored spray

Directions:

Combine beef, bread crumbs, and soup, thoroughly. Spray baking pan. (This is for the dish washer so the pan is easier to clean.) Put mixed ingredients in approximately 10 X 10 X 8 Pyrex or Corelle baking pan. (I don’t like metal baking pans, so this is a personal preference.) Cut larger onions in quarters and small onions in half. Place the onions in the outermost part of the baking pan so they cook first. Cover and bake for 2 hours at 400 degrees. Your oven may be hotter or cooler than mine so, pay attention to make sure it doesn’t burn.

This goes really well when served with vegetables of your choice and applesauce.

o o o

Do you have a favorite recipe that would be of interest to SurvivalBlog readers? Please send it via e-mail. Thanks!



Two Letters Re: So You Think Starting a Garden Will Be Easy After TEOTWAWKI

Onions are a winter crop, which speaks to planting for three seasons or even four. I am working on soil quality, as that would be hard for a looter to carry off, and I am working on it in more than one place with double digging and nitrogen-fixing cover crops like clover, black-eyed peas, buckwheat, and vetch.

He mentioned 100 jars of food. I figured out that I need 400 jars (pint) for my family of six (grandma, husband, wife, and three children). I am using pints, because you can always open two; keeping half of a larger jar is not convenient without power. That gets me through winter with some margin for error in Zone 8, if a crop fails to germinate. (You can’t live on radishes forever.)

I am also practicing the harvesting of seeds. I have handed out a third generation batch of heirloom spinach to my sister and nephew just last week. My current challenge is the carrot. I got a couple of second year plants with lots of flowers, but they are being coy. – R.V.

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HJL

I find it frustrating to read any article on growing any plant without the climate information. I understand if the person doesn’t want to give their city and state, but they could give a zone number from the USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map You could publish one of these maps on your site and everybody could use it as a reference. Without this information any gardening article is much less useful.





Odds ‘n Sods:

The Office Of Refugee Resettlement – Facilitators For A ‘Manufactured Human Crisis’. – B.B.

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An example of just how “out of touch” with reality the average person is. Steven Spielberg Slammed Online For ‘Killing’ Triceratops. – T.P.

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Man Finds FBI Tracking Device on Car, Posts Photos Online, Gets Visit From FBI . – G.L.

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Poor ATF. Too many guns… not enough “capacity” to track them all… Report: Government Agency Doesn’t Have Capacity to Track Illegal Gun Sales

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Downloading Tor could have landed you on an NSA watch-list. – D.S.





Notes for Sunday – July 13, 2014

Today we present another entry for Round 53 of the SurvivalBlog non-fiction writing contest. The $11,000+ worth of prizes for this round include:

First Prize:

  1. A Gunsite Academy Three Day Course Certificate, good for any one, two, or three course (a $1,195 value),
  2. A course certificate from onPoint Tactical. This certificate will be for the prize winner’s choice of three-day civilian courses. (Excluding those restricted for military or government teams.) Three day onPoint courses normally cost $795,
  3. Two cases of Mountain House freeze dried assorted entrees in #10 cans, courtesy of Ready Made Resources (a $350 value),
  4. A $300 gift certificate from CJL Enterprize, for any of their military surplus gear,
  5. A 9-Tray Excalibur Food Dehydrator from Safecastle.com (a $300 value),
  6. A $300 gift certificate from Freeze Dry Guy,
  7. A $250 gift certificate from Sunflower Ammo,
  8. A roll of $10 face value in pre-1965 U.S. 90% silver quarters, courtesy of GoldAndSilverOnline.com, (currently valued at around $180 postpaid),
  9. Both VPN tunnel and DigitalSafe annual subscriptions from Privacy Abroad (a combined value of $195),
  10. KellyKettleUSA.com is donating both an AquaBrick water filtration kit and a Stainless Medium Scout Kelly Kettle Complete Kit with a combined retail value of $304,
  11. APEX Gun Parts is donating a $250 purchase credit, and
  12. TexasgiBrass.com is providing a $300 gift certificate.

Second Prize:

  1. A Glock form factor SIRT laser training pistol and a SIRT AR-15/M4 Laser Training Bolt, courtesy of Next Level Training, which have a combined retail value of $589,
  2. A FloJak EarthStraw “Code Red” 100-foot well pump system (a $500 value), courtesy of FloJak.com,
  3. Acorn Supplies is donating a Deluxe Food Storage Survival Kit with a retail value of $350,
  4. The Ark Instituteis donating a non-GMO, non-hybrid vegetable seed package–enough for two families of four, seed storage materials, a CD-ROM of Geri Guidetti’s book “Build Your Ark! How to Prepare for Self Reliance in Uncertain Times”, and two bottles of Potassium Iodate– a $325 retail value,
  5. $300 worth of ammo from Patriot Firearms and Munitions. (They also offer a 10% discount for all SurvivalBlog readers with coupon code SVB10P),
  6. A $250 gift card from Emergency Essentials,
  7. Twenty Five books, of the winners choice, of any books published by PrepperPress.com (a $270 value),
  8. Two cases of meals, Ready to Eat (MREs), courtesy of CampingSurvival.com (a $180 value),
  9. Dri-Harvestfoods.com in Bozeman, Montana is providing a prize bundle with Beans, Buttermilk Powder, Montana Hard Red Wheat, Drink Mixes, and White Rice, valued at $333,
  10. TexasgiBrass.com is providing a $150 gift certificate,
  11. Organized Prepper is providing a $500 gift certificate, and
  12. RepackBoxis providing a $300 gift certificate to their site.

Third Prize:

  1. A Royal Berkey water filter, courtesy of Directive 21 (a $275 value),
  2. A large handmade clothes drying rack, a washboard, and a Homesteading for Beginners DVD, all courtesy of The Homestead Store, with a combined value of $206,
  3. Expanded sets of both washable feminine pads and liners, donated by Naturally Cozy (a $185 retail value),
  4. Two Super Survival Pack seed collections, a $150 value, courtesy of Seed for Security,
  5. A MURS Dakota Alert Base Station Kit with a retail value of $240 from JRH Enterprises,
  6. Mayflower Trading is donating a $200 gift certificate for homesteading appliances,
  7. Ambra Le Roy Medical Products in North Carolina is donating a bundle of their traditional wound care and first aid supplies, with a value of $208, and
  8. SurvivalBased.com is donating a $500 gift certificate to their store.

Round 53 ends on July 31st, so get busy writing and e-mail us your entry. Remember that there is a 1,500-word minimum, and that articles on practical “how to” skills for survival have an advantage in the judging.



Arming Your Neighborhood in a World Gone Feral, by E.M.

I occasionally prowl prepper forums to read the opinions being expressed on various survival-related matters. Some people offer opinions that provide excellent insight into a particular problem or concern. Other people offer opinions that reveal profoundly weird or nonsensical views about issues. Of course, that situation certainly isn’t limited to the field of preparedness.

I recently saw a posting on a forum by someone who asked whether, in making his preparations for a possible societal collapse, he should acquire “pass out” guns to hand out to his neighbors who, though mildly interested in survival matters when he discussed it with them, were unwilling to buy firearms at this time. He also asked for suggestions about which guns he should buy for them, in case he ever found it necessary to arm them after “the balloon went up”.

Many of those who responded to his query said he should go ahead and buy the guns. Since this could involve the expenditure of considerable funds, surplus Moisin Nagant rifles, Mossberg shotguns, Maverick shotguns, Hi-Points automatic pistols, and various .22 LR firearms were recommended as being serviceable weapons that he might consider and which wouldn’t deplete his bank account too much.

Others who responded flatly with an objection stated that he should not give these people guns if they were not trained to use them. Others warned him that arming neighbors was a bad idea because these people were likely to turn on him with their new firearms.

In my opinion, if this is the world view of the people with these latter opinions and if it is based on their current circumstances, these people probably need to move to a new neighborhood, but, then again, that’s just me and my opinion.

My comments that follow here are intended to be applied to a “World Gone Feral” (WGF), where no help from local authorities can be expected in the foreseeable future and where everyone is simply on their own during a period of dramatic and prolonged social chaos. To be very clear, it is not about OPSEC violations and the wisdom of revealing your personal preparations to neighbors in advance of social chaos. It is not an in-depth discussion about choosing the best defensive tactics when defending a neighborhood. It is also not about charitable motivations or concerns about helping your neighbors in times of need. It is simply about how you and your family will be safer if you are surrounded by armed neighbors who are able to help you and your family make it intact through serious and prolonged societal chaos.

Jim Rawles nails it when he says that people will be safer post-TEOTWAWKI if they have others on which they can depend for support and who can help contribute to security needs. To suggest, as some do, that it is always best to go it alone is, in a word, suicide–or at least, it very well could be.

Be serious. You, your spouse, and your eight and five year old children can’t maintain adequate security 24 hours a day at your lakeside retreat, two bedroom walk-up apartment in the city, or suburban tri-level. While it may not “take a village” to be as safe as possible, you will likely need more than you, your spouse, and a couple of kids to provide a safe environment after “The End of The World as We Know It.”

I suppose that those who are able to construct a homestead so deep in the wilderness that no one could ever find them might make it on their own, if they have enough physical resources there, but it’s because their very remoteness is their primary (and passive) security measure. They do not believe that they need to take active security measures in providing for their safety because their sheer distance from other elements of society provides enough security. Yet, living so deep in the wilderness is not a realistic, or at least an acceptable, option for most people for all kinds of reasons. Some reasons people choose not to live in the wilderness is because they want to earn a decent income, have access to professional medical treatment, or be able to socialize their kids with other children, or simply because they are not willing to spend their whole lives waiting for society to collapse, so figuring out how to keep safe while in close contact with others is a problem that most of us need to address and figure out.

So let’s consider just how most of us, who live in more typical environments with others, might deal in the best way possible with our security needs when it really matters after the WGF.

First, about how many neighbors might need to be armed in order to provide a decent level of security, considering that conventional U.S. Army tactics provide for one defender to meet three attackers. A brigade defends against a division, for example. The reason for this is easy to understand. A unit on the defense that is dug in and ready finds it easier to defend ground against a much larger force that has to maneuver in front of it.

While this formula won’t work across the board in a WGF, due to the fact that the bad guys might be much better armed, and your neighbors may well have inferior skills and training, it is unlikely that you will need to meet the bad guys one-on-one.

Whether or not neighbors can “hit the broadside of a barn from inside the barn” with the weapons that they have newly acquired from your personal inventory, at worst, these neighbors will be able to serve as early warning devices for the neighborhood, much like watch dogs that bark but which aren’t inclined to actually attack intruders.

If the need arises, even a volunteer “computer nerd” or a volunteer “soccer mom” posted on the neighborhood perimeter who have never held a gun, much less squeezed a trigger until this very day, can begin firing rounds and make the bad guys duck and cover for a couple of critical minutes. While doing so, they will alert others to the danger.

When this happens, they can give more capable members of the neighborhood “rapid reaction force” time to arrive and to deal with the threat. The bad guys may even be in a total state of confusion, while they attempt to figure out where the shooter is and how to advance safely on the shooter’s position. Hopefully, they will waste a precious couple of minutes trying to figure out whether this defender can shoot the wings off a mosquito at a hundred yards or whether they can even hit the inside of that barn. This time interval could be critical, and it could save lives on your side of the fight.

Can you possibly believe that it would be better for you and your family for the computer nerd or soccer mom to cower unarmed in a basement when the bad guys arrive, or for them to spot the bad guys and simply yell helplessly from the far side of the cul-de-sac and do nothing else?

If your paramount concern is you and your family’s security, from a purely pragmatic (not cynical) perspective, you and your family will likely be better off even if the computer nerd and soccer mom ultimately sacrifice themselves while providing this critical interval in which you and your rapid reaction force can properly deal with the threat. Also, just how well served will the computer nerd and the soccer mom and their families be if they sit quietly out of the fight and become “victims in progress,” all the while hoping against hope that the bad guys will just go away and someone else will make things better? As has been said in a different context, “’Hope and change’ is not a strategy.”

Try to think like a predator would think post-TEWOTWAWKI. Consider this scenario:

A leader and his buddies are cruising down the road in vehicles straight out of “Road Warrior.” They are decked out in full “battle rattle” and each of them is armed with an AR or AK, and each of them has several full magazines for their weapons. At the same time, they also have empty stomachs and almost empty fuel tanks for their vehicles. The situation is getting grim for them. (These same predators may have been a respected high school physical education teacher, a customer service rep, or a Sam’s Club cashier just three months earlier, but I’ll save the discussion of that transition for another article.)

The predators first pass a small subdivision where people are observed to be socializing or walking around in Ray-Bans, t-shirts, and flip-flops. A half-mile further down the road, they pass a subdivision where people are observed to be walking the perimeter and performing security functions at the entrances, while carrying shotguns and black rifles slung from their shoulders or carried at the ready position. Assume that this fellow and his predator buddies have gone to “the dark side” in the last three months, and that they are now desperate, and that conventional senses of morality have no effect on any decision they make in their effort to meet their needs. Assume, further, that they have decided to strike some new target that night. With those factors in mind, which of the two potential subdivisions described above poses the best risk–to-benefit ratio for this predator and his buddies?

This was not a trick question.

An armed neighborhood would give the clear impression to potential predators that your turf is not the “low hanging fruit” in the area. It will not serve you and your neighbors well to have an invisible but obvious “Kick Me” sign on your backs. While it may not be a serious issue in the first couple of weeks, sooner or later, appearing to be a soft target only invites trouble. After a societal collapse, as soft targets are hit one-by-one, if your neighborhood appears to be easy pickings, it is just a matter of time before the wolves get around to your part of the flock. In a feral world, predators almost always attack the old, the weak, and the young. In a post-TEOTWAWKI situation that is completely out of control, add to those traditional victim categories the unarmed.

I was a prosecutor for several years. I never, ever had a case involving purse snatching when the victim wasn’t an older woman or a small woman. Again, choosing such victims was simply part of a risk-to-benefit ratio that even the “perp” with the 80 IQ could calculate. Predators almost always do the math.

“Si vis pacem, para bellum.” This translates, “If you want peace, prepare for war”– Publius Flavius Vegetius Renatus in De Re Militari. In addition, leaders, from the Emperor Hadrian to President Reagan, have used the phrase “Peace through strength”. I feel confident that ol’ Vegetius, Hadrian, and, God bless him, Ronnie, would also agree with my paraphrasing when I say, “If you want peace, appear to be prepared for war” and “Peace through the appearance of strength”.

Socialist radical Saul Alinsky, who is hardly a role model in this discussion, did express a sentiment that you should keep in mind, “Power is not only what you have but what the enemy thinks you have”. Simply appearing to be strong surely won’t be the solution in every situation, but it’s certainly likely to help you in many situations, and it just may get you through a crisis with you, your family, and your neighbors safe and intact.

As an example of this, a couple of years ago, I read on this fine blog a posting by a former Los Angeles Police Department officer (or perhaps a senior LAPD officer now). He was a young patrolman with the LAPD during the 1992 Rodney King Riots in Los Angeles. He mentioned that while many store owners fled their stores and found them looted when they returned after order was restored, many Koreatown shopkeepers and merchants armed themselves and guarded their businesses so as to prevent looting. Just their appearance while armed and on rooftops and in front of their stores kept most potential looters at bay.

If you search, you can find videos of shots actually being fired by these store owners on YouTube during this riot, but this LAPD officer pointed out how successful most of these shopkeepers’ efforts were, and that, most of the time, gunshots weren’t necessary to keep the scum away. Of particular interest here is that he also said that it was a little known fact that some of these Koreans were actually armed with toy guns. The mere appearance of guns in their hands, however, was sufficient to cause most of the looters to try their luck elsewhere. Once again, the denizens of LA’s uneducated, bottom-feeding, and lawless class were perfectly capable of calculating the risk-to-benefit ratio, and they found it wanting in significant parts of Koreatown.

Put simply, after everything has gone to pot, in a world Without Rule of Law, it is very unlikely to be in your interest and your neighbors’ interest to appear to be living in “a gun free zone”.

Some have suggested that it would be a good idea to merely make one’s home look abandoned and already looted. This is supposed to cause the bad guys to look elsewhere. All I can say about that idea is that even if you are personally willing to do this, the level of societal chaos will need to have sunk to Dante’s Ninth Circle of Hell before most of your spouses will allow your homes to be trashed enough to fool the bad guys. (That first “shucking” action you hear is likely to be coming from your wife with the 12 ga. Mossberg 500 behind you.) Also, if your neighbors refuse to follow your example by trashing the external appearance of their own homes, just how is that going to help you very much in keeping the bad guys away from the area?

About the only time I can even imagine that it would not be in your interest to let potential predators know that you and your neighbors are armed to the teeth is when an ambush is planned. That may work in novels. In real life? Not so much. Trying to execute a serious ambush would be far beyond the capabilities of most people who have never fired weapons.

If you think that a group of marginally experienced neighbors should keep weapons hidden so as to sucker unknowing bad guys into an ambush, and that this is a really great idea, you probably also draw to inside straights when playing poker. Why would you ever want to invite an attack from predators who have misjudged the risk and mistakenly believe that your group is weak? In combat operations, the military is required to coldly calculate what are determined to be acceptable losses. Someone, perhaps Robert E. Lee, but I am not sure, said something to the effect that victories are purchased with the lives of men. Who among your family, your brothers, your friends, or your neighbors do you consider “expendable” in situations such as these?

The old adage is that “the best way to survive a gun fight is to avoid a gun fight”, and the logic is beyond dispute. Let predators believe, rightly or wrongly, that attacking you and your neighbors is going to be very dangerous and that “the game is not worth the candle”. Let them believe that attacking you will be very costly to them, at best, and let them believe that, even if they can hurt your group very badly, the result would still be very close to ”Mutually Assured Destruction”.

Before I close here, about that idea of neighbors turning on you with their new firearms, I am reminded of Cody Lundin’s remark when he and Joe Teti were in a bad place in some scorched, dry climate and came across a fetid pool of water. He posed a question and asked whether or not it was a good idea to drink from it. He answered his own question in words to the effect of, “Sure. You may be in a hospital wretching your guts out in three days, but it’s better than dying from dehydration by tomorrow morning.” Applying that logic here, living six months after arming your neighbors is better than dying in three weeks after going it alone. The crisis may be ended or substantially better in six months, and the conflict with your neighbors may never occur.

My view here is that if you have the financial resources to buy extra firearms to hand out to friends and neighbors in a very serious crisis, then you should seriously consider buying these firearms. Each one may represent an insurance policy that pays off handsomely for you and your family. What is the downside for having the ability to do this if you decide that it is in your interest to do it?

There surely would be a great upside and no downside if you had this option, and it’s not as if these firearms have expiration dates on them. The worst case scenario is that, if nothing else, you would have exceptionally valuable barter items after the collapse.

As long as you’re at it, don’t forget to buy adequate quantities of ammo for these firearms that, otherwise, would be large paperweights or clubs. This ammo will also be a terrific barter item, something that is likely to be the new “coin of the realm” post-TEOTWAWKI.

“A man can never have too much red wine, too many books, or too much ammunition.” -Rudyard Kipling



Letter Re: Tuberculosis

I read the TB article linked to at SurvivalBlog. The comment section in it explains why we have a problem– all NYT liberals wanting to save the world…

Charity, while noble, should be private and personal. (I am not an organized church believer, so even that meets with my disdain, as example the harboring of the illegals being advanced by so called church “Christians” now, all Marxists in sheeps clothing….)

The influx of illegals now will cause a health crisis so that should be the number one concern; close the borders.

Thank you for all the work you do.

I am a legal immigrant and permanent resident alien. The term doesn’t bother me at all. Changing the words used allows the left to define the battleground to their advantage. Nomenclature shades the tides of discourse (war) against us. Instead of “pro choice” being countered with “pro life”, it should be “murder”. An even better term is cannibalism of our babies, where we have pictures on hand. The same “undocumented worker” versus “illegal alien” are terms used to create shock and awe, which isn’t just for the physical battlefield. Be well. Best wishes





Odds ‘n Sods:

Another article on Nagin: Gun-Confiscating Former New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin Sentenced to 10 Years in Federal Prison – D.C.

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Man Who Shot at Cops During No-Knock Raid Acquitted on All Charges . – T.P.

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Another victim/target rich environment for criminal activity: Store Ignores Obvious Signs, Goes Overboard With Its Anti-Gun Policy – JBG

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I am not one for these kind of shows. However, this one is worth watching. It shows just how screwed up the justice system is. Despite the fact that a strong body of evidence and human evidence showed otherwise, one of the convicted innocents was forced to sign an admission of guilt to finally get her freedom. This case shows just how sad the prosecutor in the case was to have railroaded the wrong person and even then, when there was plenty of evidence to the contrary, forced the poor woman to admit guilt to go “free.” If you have the time, find it and watch it. Dateline – NBC – RBS

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Democrat Congressman: Tax Drivers for Every Mile They Drive. – T.P.