Reader Joe G. sent this: China faces its worst economic crisis: water
Massive jump in people who renounced US citizenship last quarter
Items from The Economatrix:
Eminent Domain and Underwater Mortgages: Solving the Municipal Fiscal Crisis
Some pointed commentary from Claire Wolfe: America’s UberGovernment. And the rest of us.
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Here is something new: The Ron Paul Channel
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The Pseudo-Republican: Chris Christie Signs 10 Gun Bills Into Law. The article states: “One of the new laws will disqualify any person on the federal terrorist watch list from obtaining firearms identification cards or permits to purchase handguns.” Later, the article notes: “Civil liberties advocates have criticized the watch list for its secrecy. The list is not public, nor can one petition to have his name removed from it. There were about 420,000 names on the watch list as of 2011. It has swollen to nearly 900,000 as of this year.” This secret list–which treats people as guilty without any trial–is also notoriously inaccurate. And Christie still has five more gun bills awaiting signature on his desk. Like California, New Jersey is now a lost cause for gun owners’ rights.
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Paul B. sent this: SOL: The $350 Ubuntu laptop that runs on solar power
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Voting with their feet: Firearms maker blames New York gun law for move to Pennsylvania
“And it came to pass at the seventh time, when the priests blew with the trumpets, Joshua said unto the people, Shout; for the LORD hath given you the city.
And the city shall be accursed, [even] it, and all that [are] therein, to the LORD: only Rahab the harlot shall live, she and all that [are] with her in the house, because she hid the messengers that we sent.
And ye, in any wise keep [yourselves] from the accursed thing, lest ye make [yourselves] accursed, when ye take of the accursed thing, and make the camp of Israel a curse, and trouble it.
But all the silver, and gold, and vessels of brass and iron, [are] consecrated unto the LORD: they shall come into the treasury of the LORD.
So the people shouted when [the priests] blew with the trumpets: and it came to pass, when the people heard the sound of the trumpet, and the people shouted with a great shout, that the wall fell down flat, so that the people went up into the city, every man straight before him, and they took the city.” – Joshua 6:16-20 (KJV)
Today is the birthday of James Paris Lee (born 1831, died February 24, 1904.) He was a Scottish-Canadian and later American inventor and arms designer, best known for inventing the bolt action that led to the Lee-Metford and Lee-Enfield series of rifles.
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Today we present another entry for Round 48 of the SurvivalBlog non-fiction writing contest. The prizes for this round include:
First Prize: A.) Gunsite Academy Three Day Course Certificate, good for any one, two, or three course. (A $1,195 value.) B.) 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, and C.) Two cases of Mountain House freeze dried assorted entrees in #10 cans, courtesy of Ready Made Resources. (A $350 value.) D.) a $300 gift certificate from CJL Enterprize, for any of their military surplus gear, E.) A 9-Tray Excalibur Food Dehydrator from Safecastle.com (a $300 value), F.) A $300 Gift Certificate from Freeze Dry Guy. G.) Two BirkSun.com photovoltaic backpacks (one Level, and one Atlas, both black), with a combined value of $275, H.) A $250 gift certificate from Sunflower Ammo. and I.) A roll of $10 face value in pre-1965 U.S. 90% silver quarters, courtesy of GoldAndSilverOnline.com. The current value of this roll is at least $225.
Second Prize: A.) A gift certificate worth $1,000, courtesy of Spec Ops Brand, B.) A Glock form factor SIRT laser training pistol and a SIRT AR-15/M4 Laser Training Bolt, courtesy of Next Level Training. Together, these have a retail value of $589. C.) A FloJak FP-50 stainless steel hand well pump (a $600 value), courtesy of FloJak.com. D.) $300 worth of ammo from Patriot Firearms and Munitions. (They also offer a 10% discount for all SurvivalBlog readers with coupon code SVB10P.), E.) A $250 gift card from Emergency Essentials F.) A full set of all 22 of the books published by PrepperPress.com. This is more than a $200 value, and G.) Two cases of Meals, Ready to Eat (MREs), courtesy of CampingSurvival.com (a $180 value).
Third Prize: A.) A Royal Berkey water filter, courtesy of Directive 21. (This filter system is a $275 value.), B.) 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, C.) Expanded sets of both washable feminine pads and liners, donated by Naturally Cozy. This is a $185 retail value, D.) A Commence Fire! emergency stove with three tinder refill kits. (A $160 value.), E.) Two Super Survival Pack seed collections, a $150 value, courtesy of Seed for Security., E.) A Tactical Trauma Bag #3 from JRH Enterprises (a $200 value).
Round 48 ends on September 30th 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.
I am a Vice President o a very successful company in the western side of the Midwest. I am in my early 60s, and after 30 plus years with the company – I will retire in next year or so with no debt, a good retirement plan, stable lifestyle – no worries, right? So, why do some of those around me think I’m crazy (even me sometimes)? Here’s my story.
I grew up a farm boy working the family farm with my grandma and grandpa, old school Swede – German homesteaders – milking cows, slopping hogs, baling hay, walking beans, driving tractors, gathering eggs, and yes, shoveling S#%*. Small rural town, 40 kids in my graduating high school class in late 1960s, sports, 4-H, Boy Scouts (be prepared), etc. Dad and Mom were both Marines in WWII. Brother was Marine in Vietnam (I missed the mandatory draft by 30 days in 1972 – otherwise I would also be a Marine.) My darling wife, an Asian pre-teen immigrant in mid-60’s, has similar old time conservative culture values from her early years of primitive, survival type sustenance in post-war Korea, which was not a pretty picture or an easy life in the 50’s – 60’s. As kids growing up, on opposite sides of the ocean, we weren’t rich, but we never went hungry either.
Flash forward over next 40 years – college (didn’t have enough money to farm), college professor, corporate job, worked hard, moved around, promotions, and the good times rolled. In 2005 we purchased a small farm in an un-named western midwest state, as an investment, and was finally able to renew my farming roots (“Green Acres is the place to be…”). Bought some cows, chickens, and a donkey, and hooked up with a neighbor farmer to help manage-operate, and viola, I am again a farmer boy. Not much of a cash flow farm, but a neat place with wooded rolling hills and pastures, lower quality crop ground, well fenced, two ponds stocked with fish, two wells, a couple of buildings, and a rocky bottomed creek that runs year round, plus an artesian water tube that also runs pure and clear most of the time.
2008 hit us hard – stock market crash and global financial collapse fears, Enron fiasco (yes, I too had, and still do have, way to much money tied back into ‘the’ company). This, coupled with my growing concerns with the changing ways of our society and culture, both domestically and globally, all led to a growing sense of concern of the future. In 2010, I cashed in a chunk of my retirement and paid off the farm, the cars and truck, and the McMansion house in town. Debt Free!!!
But during this time I also started to think even more about about ‘preparing’ (Boy Scout). Prepare for what – I do not know, other than my growing sense that our society is not sustainable the way things are going (Agenda 21?). I stumbled on SurvivalBlog and got interested. Since then, I have read many of the ‘survival’ books and blogs – yours and others – and I envision a day in the future that things won’t be the same as they have been for ‘us’ over the past 50 – 75 years.
Even though I myself am spooked, now five years later in 2013, (stock market 15,000), I have to admit that I probably won’t live to see a SHTF world. But, I do believe fully that my children or grandchildren likely will. So, my prep activities are focused primarily for them. Okay, now here’s what I am doing and planning.
Hunker Down: Refer to farm described above. Very isolated. 10+ miles from nearest small town (<2000). 60+ miles from nearest small city (100,000). 75+ miles from nearest Interstate highway. 200+ miles from 3 larger mid-size cities (250,000+). ~700+ miles from nearest mega city (CHI), 75 miles from nearest Interstate highway, 150+ miles from nearest ‘strategic’ military base. Sits on secluded, low-travel gravel road, 2 miles from nearest county paved road. County population is <19/sq. mile. Few neighbors (<20 in 5 mile diameter). Closest neighbor (1/4 mile) is a like-minded, well prepped and avid hunter and trapper. I see this as Wyoming-like, in a Midwestern state, and I call it Redoubt-East.
Currently we are building a ‘retirement house’ on the farm – off-grid and self-sufficient capable with redundant solar, propane, diesel, electric, and wood power-heat systems, deep water well along with alternate artesian water source. Constructed with solid concrete basement and concrete upper walls, small high, burglar-bar windows, steel external doors, and video/sensor security system. Also has concrete root cellar under basement and underground ‘escape tunnel’ out of basement. Sized to hold our 3 families (if we crunch up). Will be finished in early 2014. Should be sustainable and secure for localized rogues or small scale insurgents, but probably would not withstand an army-like assault (if they can find us) – like I read about in some of the Armageddon books. Also, we are keeping eye out for roving Obama drones! Oh well.
Practice – not so much on shooting, but in the last couple of years, more so on gardening and more primitive food preserving skills. My Korean wife remembers lessons from her grandma (watching) in food gathering and preserving. Turnips, yams, kimchi, other basic staples – to take the bounty of the current year and preserve it to get through the winter (non-growing seasons). In our practicing, we have ‘discovered’ a really neat way to naturally sun-dry some of the veggies and fruits we are growing (or buying at the farmers market). We use two spare window screens (from the McMansion), thinly slice the veggies – fruit, and place between the 2 screens, clamp the edges, and set out in the sun to dry. It takes about three days of good sunshine to fully dry. No bugs, no muss, no fuss. When dry, put in Zip-los bags (modern, yes, I know) and store in a cool dry place (root cellar is best). This makes excellent, naturally preserved veggies and fruit (fancy food preservation machines not needed), that will provide flavorful and nutritious basic staples (scurvy) through the winter and beyond, if stored properly.
Food – currently have at least 1+ year supply of easy living basics, even if electric-fuel grids go kaput. Working at two year supply of very basics. After 1 year adrift, we will go big time to gardening (have heirloom and hybrid seeds, tools, water & land), home-raised livestock (cattle & chickens) and abundant wild game (deer, turkey, fish), as needed. Assuming Mother Nature and OPSEC security provides, should be sufficient to survive and lead to the ‘rebuilding’ process.
Security – we have decent assortment – rifles (varmint & long guns), assault guns, shotguns, handguns, knives and ‘special’ tools, accumulated over the years by the direct family members (and like minded neighbors). We are not optimal in large stocks of ammo though, as we only got serious on this in last year or so, just when the ammo supplies went south, but we are able to self-load though. Rather than blow brains out in current ammo craze (serious money), I will be patient and stock up further as retail stocks reappear. (Hopefully in near future).
Barter – we have been accumulating stuff (things), like booze, cigarettes, meds, households, ammo, gold-silver-coins, gadgets, etc. No idea what will be useful or needed for a future SHTF scenario. If it does happens, then ‘stuff’ should come in handy. If not, then grand kids can all get together some day and go through it all, and laugh about their crazy old grandpa.
Survival Tip – Mr. Rawles advises that articles on practical ‘how to’ survival skills have an advantage in the judging. So, those of you old enough to remember the movie ‘The Graduate’ remember the ‘one word’ success tip whispered to Dustin Hoffman: “Plastics.” So here is my ‘one word’ survival tip – Donkeys. Yes, I said ‘donkeys’. Here’s what a ‘multi-propose ‘survival’ donkey’ can do:
* Anti-predator – keeps roving coyotes, cougars, wild dogs (wolves?) away from cows/calves or sheep. Really amazing to see!
* Intruder Alert – donkey ‘brays’ at strangers coming up the lane (if you’ve never heard before, it definitely gets your attention). Also, watching the donkeys laser-like ears and eyes is dead-on if you want to know where a lurking intruder is located. Her (jenny) ears, eyes, and nose are much better than ours.
* Halter Breaking calves – another story in itself.
* Pack-bearing – can haul couple hundred pounds of gear/supplies.
* Cart Pulling – can pull cart (or person) with gear/supplies.
* SHTF transport – can ride – for when doctor (son) must make ‘SHTF calls’ around the township/county for house calls or emergency (good enough for Jesus).
* Family-Friend-Companion – it’s amazing what an apple a day can do.
So, am I crazy? No question about it. I could be planning an easy, fun-filled retirement with golfing, a beach home, and world travel vacations. NOT – been there, done that! Yes, I am crazy, but we are also HAPPY and EXCITED. My wife and I are looking forward to the next 15+ years of a ‘back to the farm’ lifestyle, growing old together, rediscovering our rural roots and old fashioned passions, enjoying weekend visits and summer farm vacations with our kids and grand kids along with new found friends and good times with our rural neighbors. And oh yeah, if the S does HTF, we will be ready, I hope. Crazy as Fox.
Sir,
It occurs to me that the sudden desire to “privatize” Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae is simply a way to deploy the wet ink dollars out of the Fed and big banks without overwhelming the money supply. We all know what would happen if those dollars entered the mainstream market place. This just seems to me to be yet another ploy to stall the inevitable, but I haven’t seen anyone else talking about that. Am I missing something? – Big Jon
JWR Replies: You are essentially correct. The majority of the U.S. Dollars that have been magically created by Quantitative Easing (QE) have been used to buy up Mortgage Backed Securities (MBS) derivatives paper. This was $70 billion per month in QE2 and $85 billion per month in QE3, and this has been going on month after month. QE2 began in November of 2010, and QE3 began in September of 2012.
Quantitative Easing doesn’t do much for the real economy. It is really more of an asset swap that benefits high level financiers. They reap the benefits, while only a portion gets trickled down into the economy at large. It is a grossly inefficient mechanism for boosting the economy, but it has done great things for the bottom lines of the investment houses. It has proved to be just the trick for re-inflating the bi-coastal real estate bubble. Quantitative Easing effectively increases the money supply, since lower interest rates let banks generate more loans. (It unleashes the fractional reserve banking multiplier effect.) But because all of that QE money is top fed and directed primarily at the real estate sector, it is creating false prosperity for both the residential and commercial real estate markets. Granted, a lot of that money is almost immediately reinvested in other vehicles/sectors, but that doesn’t change the fact that this money is created out of thin air, and in he long run it will prove to be very inflationary. And, as I’ve mentioned in my blog several times before, inflation is a hidden form of taxation. Creative legerdemain like QE might outwardly look low risk, beneficial, “and all that happy stuff” but the long term effects will be devastating: Injecting all this artificial money encourages malinvestment, encourages casino style investing, discourages thrift, and does little to build up a long term economic base in sectors like manufacturing. A decade from now, we will look back on QE as one of those World Class “What on Earth was I thinking?” varieties of big mistakes.
All of the recent talk of “privatizing” Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac largely ignores that fact QE money has already been used to prop up both of them. A report issued by the St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank in 2011 notes:
“The first round of QE began in March 2009 and concluded in March 2010. One of the primary goals was to increase the availability of credit in private markets to help revitalize mortgage lending and support the housing market. To accomplish this goal, the Fed purchased $1.25 trillion in mortgage-backed securities [MBS] and $200 billion in federal agency debt (i.e., debt issued by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and Ginnie Mae to fund the purchase of mortgage loans). To help lower interest rates in general (and thaw the frozen private credit market), the Fed also purchased $300 billion in long-term Treasury securities.”
In July, 2013, the House Financial Services Committee pushed forward a bill that would Liquidate Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. It was heralded by HuffPo as a way to “…dramatically reduce the U.S. government backstop in the mortgage market.” But in actuality, it is not privatization (or, more properly, re-privatization.) It is simply a new venue for Uncle Ben’s Instant Rice Dollars. You and I (indirectly, through dilution of the value of the U.S. Dollar) will be paying to “privatize” Fannie and Freddie. Most of the “privatization” money will be coming from QE Dollars! So the bottom line is that our wallets will be fleeced to enrich a bunch of Wall Street mortgage financiers.
The opinion molders at HuffPo go on to say:
“The House bill would abolish government-controlled Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac within five years and replace them with a non-profit, utility-like platform that investors would use to securitize mortgages. Unlike mortgage securities offered by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the new securities would be issued without a government guarantee.”
Oh, really? That might sound great on the surface–as if it will take the American taxpayer of the hook–but what is really going to transpire? Instead of two great big assets for the taxpayers (with a huge underlying liability), they will become assets for the banksters. But here is the kicker: the bankers have been implicitly told: “Don’t worry: you are Too Big To Fail”, and we will always bail you out. (And they have been, again and again. It is no coincidence that the $182 billion government bail out of American International Group (AIG) in September, 2008 came just a week after the government takeover of “quasi-private” Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The real story didn’t emerge until two years later.) So we–the American taxpayers–will give up the assets, but retain the liabilities. How charming. And the banksters won’t be using their own money to do this. They will be using the unending stream of QE Funny Money–that again, is a hidden form of tax! Someone with a corner office on the 67th floor with a great view of Central Park must be saying: “Sounds like a ‘win-win’ to me!”
As a blogger who lives out in The Hinterboonies, I am just a distant observer of all these machinations. I can only shake my head in disgust. I know that writing more letters to my senators and congressman will be futile. But one thing that I can do is step back and look at the big picture: The folks in Washington D.C. and their banker buddies are systematically destroying the U.S. Dollar. They are doing so because the American people are ignorant and treated like mushrooms (i.e. kept in the dark and fed Schumer) by the mass media. There is nothing that I can do to stop it. But I can protect myself from the inevitable resulting mass inflation, by shifting most of my assets out of Dollar-denominated investments and into tangibles. The D.C. crowd can debase the Dollar all they’d like, but they can’t erase the inherent value of a box of .45 ACP Hydra-Shoks. I recommend that you diversify, similarly.
Captain Rawles,
I have a question about military wall lockers. I have searched high and low trying to locate some military wall lockers for gear storage but have been unable to find any as you mentioned in your novel “Patriots”. I was just wondering if you had any ideas where I might be able to find some. Thanks for any help you can give me in this area or any alternatives you can suggest. Thanks, – Tony from Texas
JWR Replies: Any large steel lockers or cabinets with solid backs and tight-fitting doors will do. The crucial thing for storing your food and field gear is that they be mouse proof.
Check Craigslist and Freecycle first, for local bargains. If you can’t find any individuals with lockers or cabinets for sale then do a web search or your local Yellow Pages for any nearby used office furniture or used industrial shelving companies.
Reader Tom K. mentioned that the Defense Reutilization and Marketing Office (DRMO) has sales to the public at many locations around the world.
Why we can kiss the US economy goodbye (Wayne Allyn Root)
Our friend Tam (over at the great View From The Porch blog) wittily refers to this movie as “Occupy L5”: ‘Elysium’ director Neill Blomkamp, star Matt Damon deny movie has political agenda
No Great Surprise Department: U.S. Congress wins relief on Obamacare health plan subsidies. (Congress almost always exempts themselves from their socialist schemes.)
Items from The Economatrix:
Chain Reaction of Breakdowns in Progress–Dr. Jim Willie
Gold Markets Get Strange – Is Economic Danger Near?
Job Market Faces New Problem, Hitting One Unlucky Group Really Hard
“How could anyone possibly need more than a 10 round magazine?” Well, for instance: Alaska man kills charging bear with assault rifle
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Scarcity inspires creative “reinvention” and “technological disobedience”: Cuba’s DIY Inventions from 30 Years of Isolation. (Thanks to M.R. in Kansas for the link.)
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Sun Will Flip Its Magnetic Field Soon. (We are at solar maximum, but it is a relatively weak maximum, for this 11-year cycle But the big Carrington-size flares can happen, regardless.)
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H7N9 bird flu in likely China spread between people, researchers find. (Of course a receptor mutation would be needed before the bug would become easily transmissible.)
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Dim Tim sent: Rust-Oleum NeverWet, Superhydrophobic Coating That Makes Everyday Materials Repel Liquid
"The loss of freedom, tyranny, abuse, hunger would all have been easier to bear if not for the compulsion to call them freedom, justice, the good of the people." – Aleksandr Wat, Polish poet (1900 – 1967)
Jenny of The Last Frontier blog, who was tragically widowed in 2012 is now Seeking a Husband. Her blog post echoes the theme of what Jim’s late wife Linda (“The Memsahib”) selflessly wrote on her deathbed, in 2009. (See: From The Memsahib: On My Bucket List–Looking for a Wife.) Jenny is a friend of mine. We recently had an unexpected and providential meeting, and have become fast friends.
Both Jim and I were widowed, and we were brought together by God’s providence. We’re praying that Jenny finds a new husband, in a similar way.
Do you know any single God-fearing men who are back-country pilots? Jenny is truly a sweet, honest, down-to-Earth, straightforward in communication, looks you right in the eye with a very calm spirit, kind of woman. Her strong faith in God is very evident. She is extremely interesting and fun to talk with. My prayer is: May only truly God-fearing Gentlemen apply!
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August 8th is when America celebrates our national Sneak Some Zucchini Onto Your Neighbor’s Porch Night 🙂
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Today we present another entry for Round 48 of the SurvivalBlog non-fiction writing contest. The prizes for this round include:
First Prize: A.) Gunsite Academy Three Day Course Certificate, good for any one, two, or three course. (A $1,195 value.) B.) 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, and C.) Two cases of Mountain House freeze dried assorted entrees in #10 cans, courtesy of Ready Made Resources. (A $350 value.) D.) a $300 gift certificate from CJL Enterprize, for any of their military surplus gear, E.) A 9-Tray Excalibur Food Dehydrator from Safecastle.com (a $300 value), F.) A $300 Gift Certificate from Freeze Dry Guy. G.) Two BirkSun.com photovoltaic backpacks (one Level, and one Atlas, both black), with a combined value of $275, H.) A $250 gift certificate from Sunflower Ammo. and I.) A roll of $10 face value in pre-1965 U.S. 90% silver quarters, courtesy of GoldAndSilverOnline.com. The current value of this roll is at least $225.
Second Prize: A.) A gift certificate worth $1,000, courtesy of Spec Ops Brand, B.) A Glock form factor SIRT laser training pistol and a SIRT AR-15/M4 Laser Training Bolt, courtesy of Next Level Training. Together, these have a retail value of $589. C.) A FloJak FP-50 stainless steel hand well pump (a $600 value), courtesy of FloJak.com. D.) $300 worth of ammo from Patriot Firearms and Munitions. (They also offer a 10% discount for all SurvivalBlog readers with coupon code SVB10P.), E.) A $250 gift card from Emergency Essentials F.) A full set of all 22 of the books published by PrepperPress.com. This is more than a $200 value, and G.) Two cases of Meals, Ready to Eat (MREs), courtesy of CampingSurvival.com (a $180 value).
Third Prize: A.) A Royal Berkey water filter, courtesy of Directive 21. (This filter system is a $275 value.), B.) 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, C.) Expanded sets of both washable feminine pads and liners, donated by Naturally Cozy. This is a $185 retail value, D.) A Commence Fire! emergency stove with three tinder refill kits. (A $160 value.), E.) Two Super Survival Pack seed collections, a $150 value, courtesy of Seed for Security., E.) A Tactical Trauma Bag #3 from JRH Enterprises (a $200 value).
Round 48 ends on September 30th 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.
In a situation that will be characterized by, among other things, gutted pharmacies and unmanned hospitals, the remaining population at TEOTWAWKI will be required to provide their own medical care and to meet their own pharmacologic needs. While there have been numerous helpful articles outlining the importance of antibiotics in the context of TEOTWAWKI there has been very little addressing the importance of an overall pharmacologic strategy.
Some of you—especially those who take daily prescription medication—have likely considered this problem before. But perhaps you are young and healthy, unburdened by any medical diagnosis. There should still be a pharmacologic component to your overall survival strategy. Even the robustly healthy occasionally encounter the minor health annoyance—a stomach bug, say, a case of diarrhea or constipation, or perhaps a urinary tract infection. The problem, of course, is that, in the context of TEOTWAWKI, the minor health annoyance can rapidly spiral into something life-threatening.
Consider the title of this article, for example. Constipation is, for most people, an infrequent and easily remedied problem—a couple of Sennekot and a quart of juice cures 95% of cases. If worse comes to worse, there are suppositories—or enemas.
But suppose that you have no access to over-the-counter laxatives. Suppose you are plagued by constipation for several days but because it ranks low on your list of immediate problems, it goes untreated. By the time you get around to dealing with it, you’ve got a very large, rock-hard ball of stool in the lower rectum, and it isn’t going anywhere. This what medical folks refer to as a fecal impaction. Impactions are common among already sick, weakened individuals; the treatment is manual removal. Without intervention, an impaction can lead to colon perforation, peritonitis, sepsis, and eventually septic shock and death.
Or perhaps, in desperation, you attempt to unimpact yourself, or have a willing family member do it. In the process of this procedure, you inadvertently lacerate one of the delicate rectal vessels–and suffer a large hemorrhage. Incidentally, I have encountered this exact scenario before, working as an EMT in rural Alaska.
It sounds ridiculous—that a case of constipation could lead to such dire straits. But make no mistake. Due to decreased fluid intake and no access to fresh fruits and vegetables, there will be hordes of constipated people at TEOTWAWKI.
Consider another common health complaint, especially for females: the dreaded urinary tract infection. Normally it is cured with a three-day course of nitrofurantoin, or, if you lack health insurance, a slightly longer course of ciprofloxacin, which costs ten dollars. But suppose you have no access to antibiotics, and again, decreased fluid intake. You have nothing with which to treat the fever that develops. Eventually you start passing bloody urine, then clots. The pain evolves from a mild discomfort during urination to a stabbing sensation in the flanks; by day five or six or seven it feels as though every organ in your abdomen and pelvis is on fire. The infection has migrated from the urethra, to the bladder, up the ureters, and has now settled in the kidneys. You have developed what is referred to by medical folks as pyelonephritis. The fever climbs to 105. Your blood pressure bottoms out as the infection spills over into your bloodstream. Untreated pyelonephritis leads to urosepsis. Outcome same as above—septic shock and death.
The point is, if you have a body, eventually something will go wrong. Eventually you will require pharmacologic intervention.
THE FOUR CATEGORIES
From a pharmacologic perspective, there will be four categories of people at TEOTWAWKI: The first are those who are healthy and dependent on no medication, or very little medication, for day-to-day function. They may have diagnoses ranging from seasonal allergies to mild asthma, psoriasis, and the like—the loss of pharmacologic treatment might be inconvenient but it would not be catastrophic.
The second category includes those with diagnoses like hypertension and hyperlipidemia, who currently enjoy relatively good health. The loss of pharmacologic treatment will have no immediate impact on function. But in the grand scheme of things, lack of access to drugs will permit deterioration of organ function; in the case of untreated hypertension, for example, long-term exposure to high arterial pressures will cause the heart muscle to become thickened and stiff. A stiff, noncompliant heart does not pump efficiently: the inevitable result is heart failure and all its symptoms. This group also includes those with type II diabetes, as long-term exposure to elevated blood glucose spares no organ system in the body.
The third category of people encompasses those who are able to maintain a normal lifestyle in the sense that may still be capable of work, of managing activities of self care—indeed they may even be fit and athletic depending on the nature of the diagnosis–but they suffer from a condition requiring daily intake of prescription medication, the loss of which would be serious or even fatal. This category includes individuals with diagnoses like type I diabetes, some types of heart disease, and severe hypothyroidism. It also includes patients who received a donor organ for transplant and rely on immunosuppressive drugs to prevent organ rejection.
The last category of people are those who would be considered unhealthy, either because of a systemic disease that limits function, function that cannot be fully restored even with daily medication, or because, even though they may still have moderately good day-to-day function, they are dependent on a constant supply of medication and/or medical technology for survival. The former suffer from severe heart disease, cancer, congenital heart disease, and degenerative neurological conditions such as Huntington’s or Parkinson’s. The latter group includes dialysis patients, COPD patients who require constant supplemental oxygen, tracheostomy-dependent patients, or those who can only take nutrition via tube feeds.
This article is aimed at all but the last group. Not that members of the last group have no chance of survival at TEOTWAWKI, but the preparations that would be required are outside the scope of this article. Pharmacologic preparation of the first three groups, if undertaken with a specific strategy and numeric goals in mind, is quite feasible.
THE STRATEGY
A WORD ABOUT OTC MEDICATION
Don’t discount the potency or usefulness of a drug just because you can buy it at the local drugstore. Many drugs that used to be prescription-only are now sold OTC. One example of that is the proton-pump inhibitor omeprazole, used to treat acid reflux disease. To expand on this example, imagine a situation in which a person who suffers from acid reflux disease exists solely on a diet of canned chili for an extended period of time, without access to his usual proton-pump inhibiting medication. One day he begins vomiting blood, having developed a gastric ulcer as a result of his untreated condition. If one of his companions has a supply of omeprazole on hand, currently available at any Walgreens or CVS without a prescription, his condition could be treated in the same manner in which it would be treated at the ER—with a large dose of a proton-pump inhibiting medication.
Another example is aspirin. Aspirin has a multitude of uses beyond pain relief. It is a blood thinner. For this reason it is often the first medication someone receives when they show up at the ER exhibiting signs and symptoms of stroke. Aspirin is a central component of the standard protocol in treating patients who are suspected of having a heart attack—the blood thinning properties of aspirin are useful when a clot has occluded a coronary artery. Aspirin also has unique anti-inflammatory properties—its use is normally avoided in children, but in the context of certain pediatric diseases, high-dose aspirin is a critical component of treatment. Every time I shop at Sam’s club for groceries, I purchase aspirin in bulk. Aspirin is inexpensive and potentially useful in so many ways.
A WORD ABOUT PSYCHIATRIC MEDS
Not long ago a friend mentioned to me that he had thrown away some expired anti-depressant medication. I suggested that he might instead sock away such medication for the possibility of a survival situation. His position was simple: in a true survival situation, he would have no tolerance for psychiatric illness. People suffering from depression and other psychiatric maladies would be a drain on resources and a liability for everyone around them.
I considered my friend’s position on this matter for a time and concluded that he was mistaken, for several reasons. Number one, in extreme situations like TEOTWAWKI, people will inevitably experience depression, psychosis, PTSD, and so on. Many scientists consider the aforementioned to be adaptive evolutionary responses to trauma, disappointment, and loss (research “Behavioral Shutdown Hypothesis” and “Analytical Rumination Hypothesis” if interested in further information). These conditions affect the toughest, most seasoned soldiers in the US military, so it is folly to assume that a meticulously chosen survival companion will be immune to them. Depending on the nature of the psychiatric illness, at the very least it will affect the morale of the group; in the worst-case scenario it may indeed adversely affect the group’s chances of survival. Having the means to treat such a condition may ultimately determine the fate of an entire group—consider a well-prepared, well-stocked family, the head of which is then struck down by a paralyzing depression—imagine that this happens at the worst possible time, at the very height of danger.
Second, a survival companion may (whether they have chosen to share this information or not) already be taking a medication for depression or other psychiatric illness. As aptly noted by author West Texas Prepper in the article Letter Re: When the Anti-Depressants Run Out, ceasing certain medications cold turkey leads to a crippling withdrawal syndrome. Having a small supply of the same medicine on hand would allow a dose taper, thereby sparing the individual of any withdrawal symptoms. I have witnessed patients, normally fully-functioning, contributing members of society, completely bedbound with nausea, vertigo, and paresthesias after running out of their daily anti-depressant medication. In an already tenuous survival scenario, it would be imperative to avoid such a situation.
Third, many psychiatric medications have multiple indications. Some were developed and manufactured for the treatment of other diseases years before their usefulness in treating psychiatric illness was discovered. Case in point, my friend had thrown away four sample packages of the drug Depakote, known generically as valproate sodium, or valproic acid. It had been prescribed for a patient diagnosed with bipolar disorder who was experiencing a depressive phase of the illness. But, unbeknownst to my friend, valproic acid is used to treat a multitude of other conditions, most notably seizure disorders, but also migraine headaches, and chronic pain characterized by neuropathic symptoms.
A WORD ABOUT EXPIRATION DATES
The expiration dates assigned to drugs is arbitrary and very few drugs are actually toxic past the expiration date (tetracycline and doxycycline being the exception). Testing has demonstrated that drugs maintain their potency decades after their expiration dates. Save drugs you are certain you will never use, or never need again, save the ones you think were prescribed in error. It is impossible to predict what might be useful. Save them regardless of the expiration date, regardless of how few tablets might be left in the package or how little ointment left inside the tube.
My grandmother suffered an extended illness, the cause of which was unknown for a time. Her physicians, not knowing what they were treating, hoping to eventually hit on the right drug, prescribed countless medicines, medicines from different classes and of varying strengths. When I helped my grandfather clean out his medicine cabinet last summer, I found a cardboard box filled with bottles of unused diuretics and anti-inflammatory meds used to treat autoimmune diseases (and also useful in treating malaria). With my grandfather’s permission I took the unused medication, removed the pharmacy stickers from the pill bottles, and replaced them with medical tape on which I wrote the names of the drugs and the milligrams per tablet. For those without medical training, I suggest also recording the indication and recommended dose.
Although there are laws prohibiting the stockpiling of prescription medications, there are no reports of arrests for stockpiling medication in the manner described above. Those who fall under legal scrutiny do so because they stockpile controlled substances, with intent to supply their own habit or to profit financially from supplying the habits of others. That being said it is best to not discuss this type of preparation with others. Nor would I advertise on craigslist requesting unwanted prescription antibiotics. Limit those you involve to immediate family and trusted friends.
A WORD ABOUT YOUR PRIMARY CARE DOCTOR
Your primary care physician (PCP) may or may not be a good resource.
On the one hand, he or she may be in total agreement with you, and willing to write scrips for an extra supply of your regular medications, and perhaps even some antibiotics. On the other hand, he or she may interpret your desire to prepare for a worst-case scenario as a manifestation of mental illness, one that is potentially dangerous and requires further investigation. If the physician knows you have weapons at home, the situation becomes further complicated. Therefore I do not recommend that people approach their PCP and ask for prescriptions for stockpiling purposes.
If you decide to do so and are honest about the reason why, and your physician responds by asking searching questions about your psychiatric history, or says, “Now tell me, how long you have had this obsession with the apocalypse?” then abort the mission immediately and refocus all efforts on damage control.
However, there are ‘legitimate’ reasons that physicians sometimes write prescriptions for large amounts of antibiotics, and there are numerous taken as needed (PRN) drugs that physicians write prescriptions for on a daily basis. Odansetron, the anti-nausea medication, is one that comes to mind. Benzonatate, the cough medication known as “tesselon pearls” is another. If you are willing to ask for such medications, citing the presence of nausea or a cough that keeps you awake at night, you can easily obtain such prescriptions. If you ask that refills be available if needed, your doctor is likely to oblige. Refill the drug on schedule as refills are sometimes limited to a twelve-month period.
Be a hypochondriac for a year. Get more than one PCP. Pay out of pocket for duplicate prescriptions. Ask for samples. Have a lot of colds.
Another strategy is to go to the physician with a request for prescription meds for international travel. Present a list of recommended drugs to have on hand when traveling in that area, perhaps one printed from a reputable web site (CDC). I don’t know of any physicians that require the patient to present their boarding pass before writing such prescriptions.
APPENDIX A: RECOMMENDED PRESCRIPTIONS
APPENDIX B: Recommended OTC Drugs
Appendix C: Drugs for Bartering
The two categories of medication likely to be most useful for bartering are antibiotics and pain medication.
Appendix D: Pharmacology Bookshelf
JWR Adds: In addition to storing OTC laxatives (such as Senna tablets and plenty of Metamucil,) I also recommend stocking up on sprouting seeds and stainless steel screen mason jar lids (sold by several SurvivalBlog advertisers,) for growing sprouts at home. Be sure to regularly practice growing sprouts. Growing your own dietary roughage is the most healthy and reliable way to keep yourself regular.
Dear JWR:
By way of background, I’m a middle aged woman in reasonable shape. I go jogging, do pushups and take karate. I have never been in the military.
Around a month ago I tried ruck marching with my 25 or 30 lb bug out bag (BOB), to see how well I could handle it. I wore wool Army socks and a pair of boots that I thought were reasonably broken in, and walked laps around a park as fast as I could walk. The ruck was a civilian backpacker’s external frame pack with a belt. I carried some water separately from the ruck – not as much water as I would want to carry in a bug-out though.
The cardio walking briskly with a ruck was similar to that from jogging, and that was manageable – but I got blisters on the balls of my feet and a sore arch after only 2 miles that made me have to stop.
After I got around the rest of that lap to the car, I put first aid tape on my feet, and at home I also taped on a small pad of paper towel to support my angry arch. I had to wear this tape for about a week, and ended up buying arch supports and finding a pair of my boots that both they and my feet would fit in.
What I took home from this (besides blisters) was this: with a ruck on, your feet get a lot more punishment than if you’re unencumbered. If you are going to embark on a hiking bug-out carrying any kind of weight, it would behoove you to protect your feet from blisters before starting. One hiker told me she used duct tape for that purpose. Another thing you can do is wear some nylon knee-highs under your socks. Nylons have additional “prepper” or “tactical” uses, your imagination is the limit there. They also come in various thicknesses, strengths, and slipperiness. Support or slimming hose tend to be slippery and strong, this is what you want for walking.
Granted, there may not be an opportunity to doctor up your feet before fleeing from someplace on foot, but if you have time, then do it. Your feet will thank you, and it might make the difference as to whether you can walk the next day.
Packing a ruck also is an art, deserving of a whole other article. The things you carry should also be in layers, and be a little redundant, so that if you have to ditch the outermost layer several times you will still have something to work with. The innermost layer is your knowledge, experience, and your muscle memory – you don’t want to be stripped down to that, but you want that layer to be real good, because it’s what makes the rest of the layers useful. I guess you could argue there’s even a layer under that – the grace of God.
Finally, it’s a good thing to practice your bug-out route on foot. Start small like I did, and stick close to your car or house at first just in case something like blisters or sore arches happens to you, until you work up to the actual route. And come up with a ready excuse as to why you are romping around with a ruck on, before you start. I had Nosy Nellies asking me stupid questions. – Penny Pincher
James:
I thought the article “Car-Mageddon” was very good. What she describes is very similar to how my cars are set up. I’d like to add a few thoughts based on my own personal preferences too.
1. Disposable fire extinguisher – these come in containers that look like wasp/hornet spray. They are cheap and can be found at Wally World.
2. I keep my water in stainless steel containers with threaded lids. You can buy these at Wall-Mart, CVS, and other general stores for about $4 each. These won’t break or puncture as easy as plastic water bottles, and you can refill them with tap water (do not filter the tap water or it won’t keep as long). I suspect with a little ingenuity you could even use these to boil water in an emergency.
3. Fix-a-flat. I keep 2 cans in each vehicle, and they will keep you going after a puncture flat (nail, screw, etc). It is faster than changing a tire, adds a few lbs of pressure, and will seal leaky nozzles too so that if you have a major blow out and find that your spare is not holding air this works great.
4. My favorite food item to keep in the emergency backpack in my trunk is a box or two of Cliff bars.
5. Lastly, I buy those Halloween glow sticks for 10 cents each after Halloween is over and throw a dozen of them in the car. I have just tested some that are over two years old and they still work well. Flashlights are better, but batteries don’t keep well in hot/cold weather in the trunk or glove box.
Oh, I know I said “lastly” above, but I always fill up as soon as my gas gauge gets half way down. I think a full tank of gas on most vehicles will get a range of about 300 miles, but if you are trying to leave an area where a disaster has taken place, so is everyone else. That 75 mile drive to the “safe” area might take several hours. You don’t want to become disabled in heavy traffic half way there. Be safe, – Mark V.
Dear Mr. Rawles,
Becky M.’s letter prompted me to write with a suggestion for other people with small children. My daughter is just on the verge of being too big for her stroller, but I still keep it in the trunk and plan to keep it there for quite a while. If the car breaks down or we get stranded for any reason, a five-year old will get tired of walking pretty quickly. For now, the comfort of crawling into her stroller and pulling up the sunshade will go far to calm her down in a stressful situation. Even when she is too big for the stroller, we will be able to put my purse, our car kit, water bottles, her doll, etc. in it and keep our hands free and our backs unburdened.
My husband asks me if I’m getting ready to reenact “The Road” and I tell him I hope and pray I never have to go that sort of extreme, but if the day should come that we do need to fend for ourselves on the road, I want to be ready.
God bless you and the work you do. Sincerely, – Emily S.
JWR,
I greatly enjoyed the article “Car-Mageddon: Getting Home in a Disaster, by Becky M.”. Being a person who has to drive about 45 minutes every day to and from work (1.5 hours daily) I have spent some time thinking on this
same theme.
I have equipped all of the family cars with a small survival bag. Most of the items Becky recommended are in mine. But I have a couple of things to suggest:
Basic categories: All bags should have at a minimum: cordage, a blade (knife of some sort), snacks, walking shoes & jacket (women may need some additional items to avoid long walks in dresses/skirts), a poncho (or large
garbage bag), and a fire starting kit. Flashlights are helpful but should be used carefully to avoid drawing attention.
Note on water: I have found that the Venom brand energy drink cans are a great survival item. The aluminum can is thicker than most “disposable” cans and really is a cheap aluminum bottle. In addition to the 230 calories and
liquid in the can, it could easily serve as a container for boiling/sterilizing water found along the way, and with the screw on lid, can store 16 FL Oz of water at a time. A similar camping or hiking bottle of aluminum costs around $12 to $20, versus $2 for the Venom drink.
But in addition, don’t forget: a compact MAP in case you have to find a new route. CASH: never know when you need to buy something and power is down. A battery powered radio (I have a tiny MP3 player that is also an FM radio). Always keep a day pack handy; it’s no use having items in the car if you have no way of transporting them!
Alternate Transportation: Skates, skateboard, a Razor scooter, or a folding bike are all portable solutions to a long walk. If you have never used a Razor scooter, take a look at them. They are similar to skateboards, but have a handle that can be used for balance. Just about anyone can quickly learn to scoot along on one in minutes, and it would cut energy expense in half because one push with your foot can propel you for several yards. They are also lightweight (unlike folding bikes), and unlike skates, don’t require you to change footgear.
Alternate weapons: I sometimes keep a pistol locked up in my car. But sometimes that is not safe/possible, so I keep a youth baseball bat in the car. A padlock can be put into a knee-sock or bandana (tie a knot above the
lock to keep it in place) can make an innocuous but effective defensive weapon. – Patriot Refusenik
Hi,
First time writer here, just read the post on car preparedness and thought I’d share a few thoughts I had as reading it:
Gasoline: rather than just keeping it above a quarter tank, keep it full. It’s only expensive the first time if you stay on top of it and keep it there. I deliver pizzas part time and fill up after every shift. It not only is good just in case of blackouts as OP stated, but it’s just convenient to not have to stop and fill up in the middle of my shift thus losing money.
Food: Keep it in a mouse proof container! I learned this the hard way. I kept a bag of trail mix and assorted crackers and fruit and nut bars on my passenger floor board within easy reach, only to see a mouse on my passenger floor board one morning on the way to work. My unwelcome visitor was disposed of the next night with a trap baited with peanut butter, but I’d rather have never had him in there, and I’d still have the food he ruined. Go for either a sealable small plastic bucket or an old metal lunch box or the like, maybe even an ammo can, but the lunch box would be much less attractive to burglars than the ammo can.
Light: A hand crank is great in theory, but I wouldn’t want to count on any of the ones I’ve ever owned. Get a large mag light that will double as a defensive weapon if needed. Get a small one for EDC as well. I have a Fenix E01 that lives on a small carabiner clip on my belt loop with my key fob and takes just one triple-A battery, and it’s still on its first battery with almost-everyday use when I’m locking up the chickens at night.
She mentioned kids a few times. Keep a stroller in your trunk or cargo area if you regularly are carting the kids around. Even if you don’t have them with you the stroller would make a great cart to get any other goodies home.
One glaring gap is a fire starter. Even though I quit smoking over a year ago now I still keep at least 2 lighters in my car at all times and one on my person. – Aaron B.
Derivatives Bubble: The Number One Threat That Our Financial System Is Facing
Only 40% Of Federal Student Loan Borrowers Are Currently Making A Payment
Items from The Economatrix:
Pandemic of Pension Woes Plaguing The Nation
40 Percent Of US Workers Make Less Than What A Full-Time Minimum Wage Worker Made in 1968
Yet another data point, for selecting a retreat locale: How Many Illegal Immigrants Live in Your State?
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Reader Craig J. sent this: Popular gun range target blamed for forest fires, called potential bomb source. The “forest fires” claim is a red herring. Chainsaws and off-road motorcycles start dozens of fires on USFS and BLM land each year, yet nobody has suggested banning them. Our congresscritters tend toward free floating anxiety followed by spastic fits of legislation. So all that I can say is: stock up on Tannerite! (If there is an explosive target ban, then there will likely be a grandfather clause.)
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Circuit Court: ‘Unsettled’ if 2nd Amendment Applies Outside of Home. Note that this precedential decision comes from the “Third Circus” court. Here is the decision. A Constitutional Right is is not subject to he vagaries of “Only on Tuesdays”, or “Only Inside Your Home.” Hopefully the supremes will eventually overturn this travesty.
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Joey D. sent us this tale of California’s Political Correctness, run amok: Assembly approves bill on gender identity in schools.
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F.J. mentioned: FlameStower: Compact ThermoElectric Charging for Happy Campers