"Can our form of government, our system of justice, survive if one can be denied a freedom because he might abuse it?" – Former NRA President Harlon Carter
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Notes from JWR:
A wicked DDOS (“Ping”) hacker attack on SurvivalBlog began just before midnight, GMT, on July 3rd. This was obviously timed for maximum effect, since the hackers assumed that the Sys-Admins at our server site would be on vacation. Thanks for your patience while we get the site back up and running on one of our backup servers.
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Happy Fourth of July, America! Please pray that our liberty is restored. Plan, purchase, train, and set the course of your actions to make that happen!
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The U.S. Merchant Marine sustained the highest per capita losses of any service group in World War II. They are still often excluded from official remembrances and honors. Isn’t it time that our nation recognized their service and sacrifice during World War II before they’ve all passed away?
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Today we present another entry for Round 47 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.) Two BirkSun.com photovoltaic backpacks (one Level, and one Atlas, both black), with a combined value of $275, G.) A $250 gift certificate from Sunflower Ammo. and H.) 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 and F.) 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.) A Tactical Trauma Bag #3 from JRH Enterprises (a $200 value), and F.) Two Super Survival Pack seed collections, a $150 value, courtesy of Seed for Security.
Round 47 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.
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Survival Is Not Fun, by Wild EMT
Bug-Out!
A friend and I recently discussed some of the possible physical difficulties that might be associated with a rapid exfiltration from a devastated area during a major grid-down scenario. We thought it would be interesting to explore the personal effects of increased stress, combined with decreased caloric intake, which might be encountered while “bugging-out.” We wanted to move away from academic knowledge to personal experience, so we created a seven day bug-out “challenge” for ourselves.
Background note: my survivalist friend was a U.S. Marine who served in Vietnam and then spent his career working on computers. I’m a 46-year-old male who exercises daily by running and lifting weights. I’m also a Wilderness EMT-B and I teach wilderness survival and wild plant skills as serious hobbies. We both grew up in rural Utah, and we’ve spent many years backpacking throughout the Rocky Mountains. We also invited another survivalist buddy (lawyer) to participate in the seven day challenge.
The Challenge
- Consume only 1,200 calories daily
- Run 5K or bike 10K each day
- Work manual labor (or) lift weights one hour each day
- Sleep only 6 hours a night on the floor or ground
- Refresh your (heavy) bug-out bag and wear it at least 30 minutes a day
- Capstone: Run 15K or bike 30K with a (light) pack at the end of the challenge
We picked 1,200 calories per day because this is the approximate amount of freeze-dried survival rations that we carry in our bug-out bags (and it’s also the amount with which we’ve stocked our families’ bug-out bags). The idea was to test these calorie limits while under increased stress. We couldn’t simulate everything perfectly, as we still had to work each day and support our families. However, we thought this limited set of experiences would be achievable and educational.
Our friend the lawyer never started the challenge. In addition, my Marine Vet friend shifted to 2,000 calories by the third day after struggling with effects of calorie reduction, although he continued with the physical challenges. I personally stopped the challenge after five days – here’s why:
Body Temperature
By the end of the second day I started getting cold and then I stayed cold. I went from one blanket to two at night. This was odd for me, as I don’t get cold very often. My metabolism is fairly high and I was probably feeling the effects of a reduced metabolic rate as my body adjusted to fewer calories. One takeaway is that in a major crisis, I would probably want a larger sleeping bag than the ultra-light one I currently carry. In addition, I’ll probably include an extra base layer of lightweight underwear just to maintain body heat when additional food isn’t available.
Physical Fatigue
Under these austere conditions, by the third day I was taking nearly twice as long to run my standard 5K route (7,000s-foot elevation, two large hills). For me that was huge, as I run this route regularly. After four days of this grueling exercise regime, I became a little light-headed just climbing a few flights of stairs. The lack of calories really affected my overall physical performance. Occasionally while I ran, I would get a weak out-of-body feeling. I felt feeble in my arms when I did pushups or worked outside with a shovel. I also experienced difficulty sleeping only six hours — I was a little wired at night, but then I had trouble getting up the next morning. My stomach growled constantly and I even experienced low blood sugar “shakes” in my hands after exercising. I simply didn’t have the fuel to perform at normal levels. A key takeaway is that I’ll need to factor in a slower pace when backpacking and running long distances, as well as more time to complete light construction and related manual labor during a crisis. I might also need a small, manual-wind alarm clock of some kind.
Lack of Mental Clarity
By the fourth day images of food consumed most of my mental down time. When I wasn’t thinking about family or work, I found myself drifting off while wistfully envisioning peanut butter on bread. I love peanut butter, and my brain probably associates that food with calories, so images of peanut butter became my near constant companion. I awoke the morning of day five to a vivid Technicolor dream of eating stacks of pancakes in my grandmother’s kitchen. I also found myself mentally “dull” or not as “quick” when it came to making decisions and/or responding to everyday challenges. The takeaway here is that with a fuzzy head, falling back on training will become important during a crisis. As a Wilderness EMT-B we are drilled to follow standardized patient treatment pathways and protocols for every single medical scenario. This ensures that we hit all the critical steps while under stress. During a collapse, training will probably dictate many of my decisions when I’m too hungry and exhausted to think clearly.
Sickness
By the fourth day I also began to get a sore throat (remember that we were really pushing ourselves physically). My immune system was clearly weakened due to lack of food and sleep. I’m sure that if this exhausting regime continued for another few weeks, sickness would become my constant companion. I responded to the sore throat by sleeping an extra hour, popping lots of vitamin C, and drinking more liquids. This helped, but what if I couldn’t add another hour of sleep or if I didn’t have a ready supply of vitamin C? I could potentially supplement with wild rose hips, which are plentiful in my area (even during winter). But what if I didn’t know what plants to use? Historically, during wars and other periods of extreme deprivation, more deaths occurred from malnutrition and sickness than from direct hostilities. When your immune system is weakened, a simple cold that you dodged during seasons of plenty might become a serious health concern. My takeaway here (besides obviously trying to eat and sleep more when possible) is to throw into my bug-out bag a small bottle of multivitamins and/or vitamin C, as well as dedicating even more study time to what local plants may be helpful (albeit feebly) when sick.
Behavioral Changes
My wife complained that I was grouchy during the challenge. I’ve learned that care must be taken to control irritability and the tendency to snap at others in your family or team when fatigue sets in from too many sleepless nights and not enough food. Kindness and patience come easily when your stomach is full, your family is happy and healthy, you are fully employed, and your DVR successfully records your favorite television program. But can you practice charity and self-control when everything is collapsing around you and you can’t even think clearly?
Weight Loss
After the fourth day I was down nine pounds. This much weight loss in such a short period of time simply wasn’t healthy – I pulled the plug on our little experiment at the end of day five. I remember once reading an article on SurvivalBlog.com that suggested being 10 pounds overweight during a system collapse might be advantageous. As a middle-aged exercise junkie I thought “how could being 10 pounds overweight be even remotely beneficial?” Well, I’ve just learned that under stress and with reduced caloric input, I’ll easily burn 10 pounds or more in a week if I’m carrying a heavy pack and dragging my family away from a crisis zone. Of course, the assumption here is that one is in excellent physical shape (regardless of being a few pounds overweight) so they can actually perform under great duress. Over the course of the last year I’ve increased my exercise regime knowing that being in shape may be the difference between living and dying in a collapse scenario.
Cheating
I cheated twice during the experiment. I ate an extra 100 calories of peanut butter on two separate occasions. My body was literally screaming for food and my brain was starting to rebel. Most folks will probably cheat a little bit under similar conditions. But stealing a few extra calories now and then may reduce how long you can survive with your given stash. Because I teach wild plant food skills and I grew up hunting, I’ll (theoretically) be able to augment my food storage with a few (very few) additional calories. But knowing that I have a tendency to want more calories than I currently have stashed for myself and my family, my personal takeaway is to add to my total larder (and especially to our bug-out bags) while the stores are still open. My initial estimates of how much food my family will need while bugging out (or “bugging in”) were too low.
Recovery
Coincidentally, I had a doctor’s appointment immediately following the challenge. The nurse asked if I was dehydrated, as she had a very difficult time finding a vein from which to draw blood. My resting heart rate was approximately 64 and my blood pressure was approximately 106 over 71. I thought I had been over-hydrating during the increased exercise. It turns out I hadn’t hydrated adequately. I also gained back about two pounds later that day when I ate as many peanut butter granola bars, peanut butter sandwiches, and glasses of milk as I could hold! I diligently lived up to the exercise component of our challenge, and I learned that I simply wasn’t drinking enough water (and I thought I was pretty good at hydrating). The takeaway here is that in a crisis, forcing yourself to drink more water than you want (or can perhaps even hold on a shrunken stomach) will be critical. Water will always be more important than food in any crisis. I probably need to add an additional water bottle (or two) to my bug-out bag in case finding water becomes difficult.
“Survival Is Not Fun”
This real-world experiment might seem a little strange to most, but I personally learned a great deal about how my mind and body react to stress, increased physical exertion, and the significant lack of calories that will accompany many of the larger collapse scenarios. Your experiences may vary under similar conditions based on your own level of fitness and your personal metabolic rate. The ultimate goal here was to test ourselves, our equipment, and our survival food choices. We achieved that goal, although the experience wasn’t much fun. As Les Stroud of Survivorman fame states: “Survival is not fun. It’s not pretty. It’s never comfortable. It may involve eating gross things, enduring pain and deprivation, and battling fatigue and loneliness.” Prior to this exercise I was quite cavalier about how little food I would need to maintain optimal performance levels under stress (I’m invincible, right?). Now I know from personal experience that I need to eat more calories and drink more water than I previously estimated if I want to stay physically and mentally sharp during the first critical phases of any future collapse.
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Letter Re: Corn: Our Best Ally Against Starvation
We have begun our corn harvest. We just finished canning the corn from 2 rows of hybrid sweet corn. We planted two rows 100 feet long. We made approximately 400 ears of corn. From this we ate all we wanted and canned 39 quarts and 12 pints whole kernel. We don’t can any cream style, because it doesn’t do well. Many times the corn has a musty taste. We put it in jars rather than the freezer to protect it from a grid down scenario. We gave 20 ears to a local widow, and 48 ears to a local gentleman in his mid 80’s.
I plant my corn seed in pairs about 6 to 12 inches apart and ½” deep. They can be a little deeper, but not much closer to the surface of the soil. I drop my seed by hand. It doesn’t take long once you develop a method. I can drop a 200 foot row in about 10 minutes. I usually plant a couple weeks before the last frost date, because it takes awhile for the seed to sprout. The frost may “bite” the young corn plant, but not kill it. A hard freeze is another matter. The soil temperature should be 55 deg. F. and rising. Corn requires a lot of fertilizer. I place 13-13-13 in the row and mix with soil and then drop my seed and cover them with soil. When the corn approaches 2 feet in height, I apply another band of 13-13-13 by the plants and cover with dirt along with any grass or weeds that escaped any previous plowing.
We are growing 3 more types of corn, most of which is drying on the stalk in the field. We purchased some Golden Bantam heirloom variety corn from an Internet seed business, Southern Exposure Seed Exchange. I purchased this seed because there was no local source for non-hybrid heirloom sweet corn seed. After planting and eating a little, I highly recommend it. It has a very large starchy kernel. It is unique because the kernels are extremely easy to bite off the cob when cooked due to the shape of the kernel and the spacing of the attachment points to the cob. This corn would be easy to bite with dentures. It also has two other things that I like. The stalks are very short when mature (5 feet), which makes it wind resistant and it requires a lot less moisture to grow a 5 foot stalk compared to an eight foot stalk. I’m saving all this seed for future planting. The only negative is the ears are rather small.
I’ve planted 20 rows 200 feet long of heirloom Yellow Dent corn. I purchased this at a local feed store. I was also given some by a neighbor. These corn stalks have reached a height of 8 feet and have huge ears, usually two per stalk, due to all the rain we’ve had this year. I plan to use this as feed for my geese and ducks, for grinding into corn meal, and extra feed for my herd of donkeys. I will also save at least five 5-gallon buckets for seed for the future and for barter.
I’ve planted 10 rows 200 feet long of pencil cob corn. This is an heirloom variety that is grown locally. I purchased the seed from a local feed store. I’m growing this corn as the primary feed for my donkeys in a “worst case” scenario. The cobs of this variety are only ½” in diameter. You can easily break the ears into 3 pieces by hand. My donkeys will eat the whole piece and they love it. When commercial feed is no longer available, this will be their primary feed along with grass or winter fodder. This corn also makes excellent corn meal.
Since I’m nearly 60 years old and can remember things well, I can remember the first hay baler in this area. The hay was cut with a horse-drawn mower. After it cured or dried it was pulled with a horse drawn rake to the stationary baler where it was pitch forked into the baler and hand tied. Why am I including this in a corn essay? The reason is that I want to share some information that few people remember or know. What did poor farmers do before these hay making methods came along? What did farmers do that didn’t have the land to raise hay? The answer is in the corn field. Once you have picked the ripe corn for canning, you go back and cut down the stalk, place them in small bunches until they air dry. They are then placed in a dry storage area until fed in the winter. If the corn is to be dry harvested, you cut the stalk off above the highest ear after the silk has turned completely brown. Then do the same as the above. If you want more feed, then you go back and pull the leaves from the standing stalk, twist them together in a small sheave and hang them between the ear and stalk. Once these have air dried, place them in dry storage. You then return and pull the dried ears of corn a few weeks later. The ear will be turned down and the shuck will be completely dry. All that will be left in the corn field is a short corn stalk to be removed before the next planting. The corn field will now be filled with grass and weeds by this time. This is when I turn in the cows and let them clean the field. This method requires many hours of hard labor. Right now, I’m continuing to use my diesel tractor and round baler, but I know what to do if these items are no longer available. Doing this will provide you with many tons of feed for your donkeys and milk cow thru the winter. My father used this dried corn fodder to feed his family’s plow horse and milk cows. This is how my father as a young boy and his family survived the Great Depression. My father said they never had any money during this time, but they were never hungry. He always smiled when he spoke of these times. – M.E.R.
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Economics and Investing:
Brian C. sent: The Eight Least Expensive States to Live in the U.S.
Argentina Legitimizes Black-Market Currency With New Dollar-Backed CDs. (Thanks to H.L. for the link.)
Preppers Beware : Our “Hoarding” Can Be Deemed Illegal
Items from The Economatrix:
Consumer Spending, Jobs Data Point To Lukewarm Growth
Meredith Whitney: Did The Fed Just Torpedo The Muni Bond Market?
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Odds ‘n Sods:
In their latest podcast, the folks at the Pantry Paratus blog interviewed Pete Kennedy, the president of Farm to Consumer Legal Defense Fund. They represent small farmers who are being targeted through government policies and regulations. An interesting podcast!
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Hikers rescued trying to reach famed ‘Into the Wild’ bus. JWR’s Comment: Someday, a spectacularly unprepared hiker visiting this Shrine to Lack of Preparedness is going to die of exposure. OBTW, a similar locale exists in Utah, where people want to visit the spot where Aron Ralston was forced to amputate his own hand.
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Reader B.B. sent this food for thought: Unless You Win
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True Defiance: I Challenge You To Survive The Coming Collapse
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RBS sent: Get Ready for Invading Asian Tiger Mosquitoes
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Joe H. liked this one: A female perspective on carrying and encounters in public and online.
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Jim’s Quote of the Day:
"Individuality, liberty, and property– this is man, and in spite of the cunning of artful political leaders, these three gifts from God precede all human legislation and are superior to it." – Frederic Bastiat
Notes from JWR:
Today (Wednesday, July 3, 2013) is the last day of Freeze Dry Guy’s 25% Off Special All Mountain House #10 Cans. And meanwhile, Camping Survival has started their own 25% off sale, which runs until July 7th.
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Today we present another entry for Round 47 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.) Two BirkSun.com photovoltaic backpacks (one Level, and one Atlas, both black), with a combined value of $275, G.) A $250 gift certificate from Sunflower Ammo. and H.) 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 and F.) 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.) A Tactical Trauma Bag #3 from JRH Enterprises (a $200 value), and F.) Two Super Survival Pack seed collections, a $150 value, courtesy of Seed for Security.
Round 47 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.
Teaching Opportunities, by J.L. in Pennsylvania
My story begins as another closet prepper. As many of you, I did not have the support of my spouse for my new found drive to prepare for the unknown. Often I would attempt to sneak items that I planned to lay up long-term into the grocery bill without her noticing. I would even have online purchases delivered to a neighbor claiming to him that it was for her birthday or our anniversary. Needless to say, I usually (always) got caught, which would lead to long discussions about me “wasting money.” As fate and the good lord would have it, I finally got my window of opportunity to prove what I was doing had merit.
As I recall, it was late February. Pennsylvania had another one of its wonderful snow storms topped with ice. We awoke without power to a somewhat chilly house and a few feet of snow. Nothing out of the ordinary. The morning, afternoon, and early evening went as they usually would without power. However we were starting to become concerned because power is usually restored in no more than 16 hours. My son was only about a year old at this time so his needs were a little more than our own. The house was becoming colder and as a new mother, my wife was starting to become unglued. Although I upgraded our home with multiple heating sources (not without protest and a little help from the bank), all of them required electricity to operate the circulating pumps. A major new prepper mistake. Our refrigerator was slowly starting to warm, making us concerned about his supply of milk. Lucky for me, I made one of my “secret” purchases a few weeks back. I had attended an estate auction in town and purchased a small gasoline operated generator. At the time, I had no idea if it was large enough to run anything other than the drill I used to test its function ability. I was also afraid of somehow burning my house down with a electrical fire. It was around hour 36 of the outage when her meltdown occurred and she looked to me to fix the situation as she always has. In her eyes I am the man of the house, the provider. It is my job to fix and solve the things that end up over her head. I bundled up and headed out the back door to the shed, hoping my plan would work. Lucky for me it did. About 45 minutes later I had the coal stoker and the refrigerator up and running. We had heat. As I returned to the house, I could easily read the look in my wife’s eyes. It was her classic “I don’t know how you did it, but you did and I love you for it” look. I was their hero. I saved the day. That is when the dimly lit light bulb went off in my head. After a long discussion and a few confessions on where the generator came from, I had her convinced. Without my purchase, we would have had no choice but to brave the roads to a unknown family members house, with our son in the car, in the middle of another wave of storms. This is when she saw the light and realized that not all of the “wasted money” was really wasted. I drove this entire concept home throughout the entire 4 days without power. Without my inexpensive siphon, I wouldn’t have been able to use some of the gas from the vehicles to keep the generator running. Without the powdered milk, what would the little man have had? Without the bottled water? Without the small propane burner? The list kept going. Needless to say, I was in a bit of trouble with all of these “secret” items I had hid from her view, but I was forgiven quickly. After all those months of trying to get her on the bus, it only took 36 hours without electricity.
Now that I had her partially on board, I was looking for opportunities to teach her skills that would benefit us in the future. The following summer provided several occasions for just that. My wonderful wife was raised by her grandparents who grew up in the classic “oldest of 12 kids during the depression” scenario. (In my humble opinion, this generation is one of the best untapped resources for learning new and useful skills and knowledge for a post-TEOTWAWKI situation.) Needless to say, they waste nothing and are avid gardeners. During one of our normal visits, her grandfather had mentioned to me that canning season was upon us and the next few weekends would be consumed by the task. I volunteered us to give them a few extra sets of hands. My wife was more than happy to give something back by helping out, and she had no idea she was learning a valuable skill. After 3 consecutive Saturdays, she was canning like she had been doing it for years. During our weekly work parties, I got a chance to get some serious feedback from her Grandmother on the importance of stocking up for the uncertain. The advice from someone who has been there multiple times, some times worse than others, was truly priceless. Coming from her grandparents, my wife took every word to heart. She is now an avid canner, storing every small bit from our tiny undersized garden, and “clearance” farmers market deals. Once she seen the savings of doing our own canning, this lead to more. She now typically buys items in bulk from the warehouse stores. Once you break the price of the item down per ounce and compare, the savings are obvious. We now go looking for sales on food goods instead of the new Abercrombie store at the local shopping mall. I can’t complain a bit. We now have enough food in our pantry to sustain us for about three months. All the savings have also started her into extreme couponing. She has created a sizable larder of things like tooth brushes, tooth pastes, soap, shampoo, deodorant, and razors. She has even mentioned these would be great for charity or even barter for other comfort items. (I was so proud.)
During a trip to an local amusement park, I inadvertently discovered my wife was incapable of reading a simple map accurately. Before our trek into the park, I picked up two maps to help us get around. I marked three separate and simple rally points (RPs) on the map. When something as simple a pre-determined RP has saved you in the past, it kind of sticks with you. I often worry about an active shooter scenario when in a large group of people. My wife volunteered to go to the vehicle to retrieve some items for our son. As the two of us continued around the park, my wife called me to find us. After a quick scan of my surroundings, I noticed we were practically on top of rally point three. After a few gripes, we hung up the phone and with the aid of her map, she headed off to rally point three. Fifteen minutes later my phone rang again. With her nowhere in sight, claiming to be at the RP, I asked her to describe her surroundings. I was easily able to determine her location and meet her. She quickly became aggravated and defensive when I accused her of being lost. That is when I realized our bug out plan had a fatal flaw. After a quick landmark recognition land navigation class, she led us around the rest of the day. She still needed a little more advanced help. Motivating her to learn something she has no interest in is extremely tough. Lucky for me, I found Geocaching. For those who are unfamiliar with it, Geocaching is where someone hides a cache (Usually an ammo can) with clues and coordinates on where to find it posted online. Inside the can you typically find a visitors log, and items to trade. A lot of newer GPS units have a feature built in for this from the factory. Some caches are entry level easy, increasing in difficulty to the multi-caches where only one point is published and once you find it, it gives a second location to find another. During a family camping outing, I introduced it to her. After her first find, she was hooked. Armed with my GPS, she was off to the next cache and I was playing catch up. Once she had that mastered, I threw her a curve ball. After obtaining a topographic map from the park office and making sure my compass was in my pack, her GPS batteries mysteriously went dead. She had to find the last of her two day trek multi-cache. After teaching her to plot to paper and correct for magnetic north, she found it easily. (She actually did much better than most of the guys with whom I went to the Platoon Leader’s Development Course (PLDC.) She also learned how difficult it was with a pack on your back and a baby strapped to your front.
Now that she is on the same page, knitting needles as mother’s day gifts excite her. She has started knitting and sewing some items for our boy. Her ability to re-purpose items amazes me. She even suggests going to the rifle range for our monthly date instead of dinner and a movie. She is even becoming a little obsessive about accuracy, taking over my reloading press for hours at a time. Even showing her uncle how to “properly” shoot with a sling. She is now constantly coming up with new ideas on how to store more stuff and other items we may need in our bug out bags. Her job as a bank teller even has her starting to stack pre-1965 silver. Face value is the best way to buy! I highly recommend if you have a stubborn wife like I do, take any opportunity that arises to be used as a teaching opportunity. Be creative, and be persistent. Identify areas where they may not have the appropriate skills to carry out your plan, and find a way to get them involved. I know this sounds cheesy, but you must be able to seize the opportunity. If you can make it fun, they will learn without them even knowing it. Some of these would also work great for kids. With your spouse on board, two minds are better than one. Wait for your opportunity to show them how awful it could be without prepping and the real reason behind it. Be ready. Molon Labe.
Letter Re: Why Precious Metals?
James,
I think that you are off base when it comes to buying guns and precious metals. Both could go down in price. The same for ammo. And it has a shelf life. So why not buy stock in companies that that do well in both good and bad times? People always buy booze, and cigarettes and Pampers and Cheerios. So why not invest in the companies that make those? What is so [deleted] special about “tangibles”? Thanks For Your Time, – G.D.C.
JWR Replies:
First, I must mention that ammunition has a shelf life of at least 60 years, so I don’t consider that an issue. Just be sure to store it in watertight milsurp ammo cans and toss a small packet of desiccant in each can. It will store just fine, for generations.
Now on to your main point: I don’t recommend any dollar-denominated investments because presently the currency unit itself is at risk. People face the prospect of losing almost everything that they’ve earned if there is a transition to mass inflation. The U.S. money supply has been created in a near upright spike since 2008, and the public debt doubled in the same time period.
Buyers of silver and other precious metals can feel content for nine distinct reasons:
First, you are sheltering your wealth from the ravages of inflation. No matter what happens to paper currencies, your metals will always hold some value
Second, you are buying something liquid and instantly marketable
Third, you are buying something that is easily divisible. If for some reason you can’t trade it for smaller increments, there is always the cold chisel.
Fourth, you are buying privacy. If you pay cash, there will be no paper trail.
Fifth, you are buying a useful tangible item.
Sixth, you are not buying someone else’s liability.
Seventh, (for gold an platinum only) you are buying transportability. Precious metals trade in every nation. A million dollars in gold will fit in just a briefcase. (Albeit heavy.) But silver is about 65 times more bulky, per dollar.
Eighth, if you store you metals in a home vault or cache, you aren’t at risk of losing your investment because of someone else’s mistake. Companies rise and fall. So do currencies. So do banks. So do governments. But precious metals are just about impervious to all of that.
Ninth, because the money multiplier effect works in reverse whenever you withdraw cash from your bank account then you will help starve the banksters of their power.
All in all, I am very happy with how my investments have fared, since I switched to all tangibles. My ranch has only appreciated about 20%, but my silver has nearly quadrupled, and most of my ammo has tripled in value. Most of my guns have more than doubled in value.
Obviously tangibles investing is not for everyone. A pensioner that need interest or dividend income would not do well. But for most folks tangibles are a fine investment. Just keep in mind that ammunition and storage food must take precedence over investing in precious metals. – J.W.R.
Economics and Investing:
The “Cyprus Model” Is Gaining Traction. (Thanks to F.J. for the link.)
G.G. suggested this piece: 76% of Americans are living paycheck-to-paycheck
Not Darkest Africa, but Darkest Nigeria – 120 Million Without Electricity
Reader B.C. sent: The Eight Least Expensive States to Live in the U.S.
Items from The Economatrix:
Consumers To Factories Point To Durable US Expansion
Dr. Doom: A Lot Of Problems Are Coming … Revolution … Social Strife
Bank Bailout: Germany Requires Compulsory Levy of 8% To Savers
Odds ‘n Sods:
Reader Lee M. sent: Take a Look Inside the Hidden 100 Year Old Caverns Underneath Kansas One Man Says Could Save Humanity
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I just noticed that someone updated a list of my quotations at the Wikiquotes page. Thanks!
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Calgary, Oil Capital of Canada, Could be without Power for Months.
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Some good commentary over at Ryan and The Other Ryan’s blog: How Much Is Enough?
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D.S. wrote to recommend: The Trash Can EMP Shield.
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The FBI has pulled a ‘most wanted terrorist’ ad because …they’re all Muslims.
Jim’s Quote of the Day:
“The federal government was not intended to be a charity, nor an insurance or retirement agency, nor doctor, pharmacist or health advisor, champion of the poor or rich, changer of foreign regimes, protector of the planet, educator, space explorer, diet and nutrition czar, arbiter of interest rates or prices or wages, nor trafficker in currency unsecured by gold or silver. As legally constituted it may neither promote nor restrict transfats, sugar, tobacco, alcohol, coal, gasoline, drugs, salt or food of any kind; nor may it enact legislation favoring or victimizing or exempting any gender, race or ethnicity. In short, those things DC is doing outside of its enumerated powers are unlawful.” – Ol’ Remus, The Woodpile Report
Notes from JWR:
The “Rawles Gets You Ready Preparedness Course” has had surprisingly strong sales now that it is priced at less that $20. You’ll get immediate delivery, via digital download.
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Today we present a guest post from Mac Slavo, that first appeared in his SHTFPlan blog.
How Horrific Will It Be For The Non-Prepper?, by Be Informed
Editor’s Note: You have no doubt had your own set of issues dealing with friends and family members that simply don’t see the writing on the wall. The following article may serve to assist you in convincing those who simply don’t know, don’t want to know, don’t care, or have never even thought to contemplate. Some of the scenarios outlined below may be frightening, as they should be, because when it hits the fan millions of people will be thrown into desperation with no hope of a solution. Be Informed provides a variety of point-by-point details that may (and hopefully will) convince the non-prepared individual to at least insulate themselves with the basic necessities. The consequences for not doing so, as you’ll see, are severe and often deadly.
I have become personally so disenchanted with the way people fail to prepare. People still don’t understand how important it is to put away. I have gotten into arguments over this and had cretins call me a fool because I put away food, water, and supplies. I thought about this and the frustration that other preppers have with this laid back idiotic attitude that there is no need for preparation. There are good people that just can’t/won’t start preparing. They have the money to do so, but just don’t want to. Many have only seen what happens to non-preppers on television, but it still doesn’t make an impact.
In this article I detail some hard core realities to show just how awful it will be for those that don’t prep. Every one of these scenarios is something that has occurred to the non-prepper throughout history. While strong images come to mind, the purpose is to jar some people out of their inaction and into action before it is too late.
Preppers are good people and care much about those around them, and unless something does jar those around them that choose not to prep, their own survival chances could be reduced. For every bit of food, water, ammunition, or supplies you sacrifice to the non-prepper, the fewer irreplaceable supplies are left for you and your family in a crisis situation. It is hoped that the following can help certain people put into true perspective just how horrific it will be for those that don’t prepare.
Here are the awful consequences for those refusing to prepare.
As the world continues to decay at multiple facets, the common person has and continues to be lulled into a sense that everything is improving and will continue to for the distant future. After all, to them unemployment has peaked out and will drop until everyone that wants to work will easily be able to find good paying work, North Korea is no threat because all their long range “bottle rockets” fizz out, sanctions will eventually make Iran give up their nuclear program, oil prices will start going down after June or so, Europe will bail out Greece and Spain and everyone else, and U.S. debt will eventually come under control.
After 2012 everyone that has prepared themselves will go back to more “sensible” lives. “Good times are coming”, baseball season is here, let’s get back to watching some more crackerjack news.
It is amazing how people become good conversationalists with most others discussing all the gossip related news, while becoming mentally tranquilized into a totally deceptive state of denial of truly dangerous issues of the times. It’s the blind leading the blind… right off the cliff.
Rather than dealing with harsh reality, people surround themselves with easy to digest material that can be talked about without directly influencing anyone’s lives. Meaningless chatter. Even for those unwilling to even think to prepare for a societal catastrophic event, there is also no desire to even face the extreme possibility of a sudden loss of one’s employment. A personal SHTF.
Look at some of the terrible personal pain experienced in America right now – and it hasn’t even hit the fan on a grand scale. Those people who have lived it up on credit, who failed to put much of anything away for a rainy day, who’ve lost their job, and who eventually lost their unemployment benefits are experiencing the first level of collapse. This is happening to millions of people in our own country, all around us, as we speak.
These Americans, who once enjoyed the luxuries that modern living had to offer, are now at their wits end, with very little hope for a return to their previous lives. They are no longer able to pay most or any of their bills. Many have to humiliatingly turn to others for help to pay for food, or worse, to obtain old, unhealthy and poor tasting food from locally funded food banks. Their credit cards are totally worthless. Many have been evicted from their homes and have uprooted their families to live either on the street, in tent cities, with relatives, or have been forced to live at homeless shelters, They’ve have had their vehicles repossessed, or simply can’t afford the gasoline anymore. Their living conditions often make it difficult, if not impossible, to look presentable for job interviews. For many, the life of stability they knew just a short while ago is gone, replaced with fear and a constant stress to the point of nervous breakdown.
A personal economic meltdown is confined to the individual or family, or at worst a few families. The human civilization remains intact and so do society’s safety nets.
With food assistance, rental assistance, homeless shelters, and family to turn to, even the most destitute are almost always able to find some sort of help – however menial.
It is no wonder with these known assistance programs, then, that people have forgotten or never thought to consider what happens IF and WHEN human civilization goes through a strong enough SHTF event. If that happens on a mass scale what happens to everyone that needs help that has not prepared ahead of time? What happens when governments are in such total disarray or destroyed altogether that they can’t help even if they wanted to?
The media and others have portrayed the good people that sacrifice much if not all “luxuries” of life to prepare themselves and their family and friends for extreme times, as Chicken Littles. Those who have made the choice to store up emergency food, water, and other necessities to avoid extreme life threatening risks, including suffering horribly during and after a widespread SHTF event, are laughed at and ridiculed often for “wasting” their lives on delusional paranoia.
But who is delusional? Those who see the signs around them and understand how vulnerable the system is, or those who believe that things never change, that politicians have their best interests at heart, and that if the worst happens the government will be there to provide everything they may need?
How many have considered the dire consequences of their failure to prepare in the event that the infrastructure and everything a country’s people depend on totally collapses?
The misery from long term unemployment and lack of money is like a walk in the park compared to the severe anguish and dangerous conditions that await those who have failed to prepare for the aftermath of a large scale cataclysm. The “minor” problems of unemployment that seem extremely major and painful to most today should serve as a wake up call to what life will be like when something much, much worse happens – when those proverbial safety nets are no longer there to catch us.
Many preppers have become deeply frustrated at those around them, especially those that truly mean something to them, because they simply refuse to put away anything at all for emergencies. The prepper is usually a person that cares a lot and it is often difficult for them to take a tough stance towards the people that they care about. However, unless someone changes the habits of those people that fail to get ready, decisions will need to be made, and they won’t be easy.
The choice of what the prepared prepper should do will boil down to either either adding these people to their own circle or survival group and reduce the group’s safety, supplies and self sufficiency, OR, they will have to let the non-prepper fend for themselves. This is a very personal choice, and each of us will need to decide based on our own morals, ethics and personal relationships.
As a last ditch effort, discussing the following scenarios with the non-prepper may help them understand what life will be like without what has sustained them so comfortably for so long.
This is the hard reality the non prepper needs to understand:
- Without power the water company cannot get water to their faucets. Without water dehydration occurs within 24 hours. Dehydration causes much suffering before death.
- Toilets in homes, unless they have an incineration toilet that still need power to work, don’t flush without water. Where will they go to the bathroom and then where will they dispose of human waste?
- There will be no clean water available anywhere, especially in major cities, and they cannot live more than about three days without it.
- Drinking dirty and polluted water will make them incredibly sick and accelerate the dehydration process.
- Polluted water must be purified and that means having a good filter, bleach or other disinfectant, or fuel and something to bring water near a boil.
- Understand just how fragile the power and the infrastructure is that pumps water to the public. A breakdown in our power infrastructure or a cyber attack against utility systems will render them useless.
- A single event can rapidly lead to a cascade of other events that would certainly collapse almost, if not, everything. This is why major snow storms, hurricanes or solar events in the past have affected millions of people in an entire region all at once.
- A single, seemingly unimportant event may become quite terrible as its repercussions spread; this can include a far and away disaster.
- Understand that the economies of the world are so interwoven that when one major economy falls it affects everyone.
- Not having any food in the house means that if the stores are emptied suddenly in a bad enough situation that there will be no food available for a long period of time afterward. Recent history during disasters around the world has shown that stores can literally be emptied in minutes.
- Think about how totally horrible the feeling of being very hungry is and what circumstances would cause one to be desperate enough to eat anything.
- ALL stores can be closed instantly under martial law.
- Understand that you may not be able to purchase anything after it starts, especially with any credit cards.
- Understand the complexity of food and water distribution; breaks in these chains can stop anything from getting to the people.
- What life will be like if no toilet paper is stored?
- Understand that without modern light sources–interior, exterior, and street lighting. Some nights will be pitch black, often with zero visibility. [JWR Adds: Driving conditions will be a lot like England during the WWII Blackout. There, traffic fatalities were higher in some months that than the bombing fatalities.]
- There will be no communications, other than probably martial law type of instructions over the radio, that is if they have batteries for the radio.
- Other than ham and shortwave radio, any information that is available will be sent out by the government as filtered propaganda that “they” want everyone to hear.
- Without power consider what it will be like to not have any heat to stay warm, or air conditioned air to stay cooler – with no way of alleviating the situation.
- Traveling will likely be by foot or bicycle, as their will be no fuel and roadways may be blocked.
- Realize that any travel outside of the home or neighborhood will be extremely dangerous as anyone who moves becomes a target
- Non preppers will be pushed way beyond their limit because of lack of supplies.
- The non prepper must realize their government does not really care about them individually, that they are a mere number and help will likely not come from them.
- They have to figure out somewhere to get food. This can mean wild plants which they must know how to identify as safe, or risk poisoning themselves.
- They have to understand that when we refer to “having no food” it doesn’t mean not having the food they are used to enjoying, it means no food to eat at all.
- They have to understand that if they are fortunate enough to have any running water, they will probably have to bathe in cold water for lack of stored fuel to heat water.
- They have to realize that the very strange and totally unexpected is going to be all around them, made that much worse because of lack of any reliable self defense stores or skills.
- They might have to remain on the run constantly because of looking for water and food.
- They must understand that bad will be magnified magnitudes to living misery because of lack of food, water, and other necessary items that they took for granted for so long.
Okay, now comes the “truly ugly and unthinkable” life that most, if not all, people that have failed and refused to prepare themselves will deal with. Clear vivid visualization is key here for anyone that ho hums the idea of prepping.
What horrors they will likely face after a cave-in of their nation’s economy, war, geophysical upheaval, or whatever crisis is bad enough to disturb or stop their nation from working and functioning? There are plenty of very potential SHTF events that are simply awaiting a catalyst to trigger them.
- The Non-Prepper (NP) has to realize right off the bat that 911 and other emergency calls in will be met with silence or some recording telling the caller not to panic.
- The NP that has no reliable self defense that can stop an attacker, will not get help from public services, and will become a victim of rape, assault, torture, or murder.
- The NP that has no reliable self defense and will not only be at the mercy of criminal elements, but also have to contend with many desperate animals, some with rabies.
- The NP that has no food will either have to find food or be ready to beg for food or worse, like sacrificing their bodies or other horrible acts or things to get a bite of food.
- The NP will have to go through the worst, most rancid conditions of garbage to just maybe find what they should have stored up.
- The NP will go through panic and near if not total psychosis looking for any water source right before their bodies begin shutting down during advanced stages of dehydration.
- The NP will go through unbearable mental trauma when their children and other people around them are crying, screaming, and suffering with intense hunger pains in their stomachs.
- The NP will have to deal with the awful stench of rotting wastes from many sources because they have not taken the effort to even store up waste disposal plastic bags.
- The NP will have disease and pathogens everywhere, not only because they have no trash disposal means, but because they haven’t prepared how to deal with trash and waste.
- The NP will have to live in very primitive conditions after things around them deteriorate rapidly, because they have neglected putting away anything to make life more bearable.
- The NP and those around them will likely develop all sorts of infective skin rashes from the lack of insight of storing up toilet paper. Imagine the smell for a moment.
- The NP will have to handle biting insects and other vermin that will collect amongst the filth that will pile up. No pest control stored up along with no other supplies.
- The NP will have no way of treating sickness certain to follow a SHTF event, no first aid and likely no training or knowledge about how to treat the ill on top of this.
- The NP will have sick and dying people around them because of not being able to treat minor injuries. Didn’t even stock up on disinfectants. Unsanitary conditions lead to infection.
- The NP and others around them will experience much grief as they watch helplessly as their family members literally die of starvation right in front of their eyes.
- The NP won’t believe how desperate hunger drives them and those that mean everything to them to “trying” to eat food that taste so bad it gags them and comes back up.
- The NP will likely have family and friends around them that have also not prepared committing suicide because they can’t take it any longer.
The NP will witness some of those people around them lose any sense of civilized humanity in them and behave like wild animals after some time from lack of necessities. - The NP and family members, maybe friends also, will at some point end up barbecuing or eating raw the family dog, cat, bird, any pet dear to everyone for food.
- The NP will likely get into physical fights with other family members over any scrap of food available as rational thoughts are lost to wanton hunger.
- The NPs will eventually go out of any safety of their home looking for food and or water, become disorientated and lost, and die a hard death somewhere.
- The NP that is “lucky” enough to find some government help will likely have to almost sell their soul, probably all their freedom, to get tiny rations – just enough to keep them alive.
- The NP will see widespread violence and barbarism that will shock them to the core and will wish that they had purchased some form of firearm and stocked up on ammunition.
- The NP had better get used to attempting to explain the children and other adults why they wasted all that money on gadgets and trinkets, and didn’t buy any emergency food and other supplies.
- The NP, no matter how positive they are will drop quickly into depression and lose willpower as having nothing to hold on to does this, along with lack of any nutrition.
- The NP will feel the worst guilt imaginable as they hear their family moaning in anguish from lack of anything to eat, knowing they could have done something to prepare.
- The NP will most likely not see the rebuilding and recovery after A SHTF event. They will, like almost all NPs, be statistics. Some will die hours or a day before help arrives.
- The NP from lack of food, drinking bad water, no light at night, the horrid smells, no good self defense, the overall horror, will often be paralyzed with fear and despair, blank stare.
- The NP is totally helpless after SHTF, will have to rely totally on charity of those prepared to live. They will take all sorts of desperate measures likely to get them shot. They’ll attempt to eat hazardous foods like an animal trapped in a house will do, and get sick and suffer much before dying. The NP will likely die (ugly and hard) as they lived, unprepared for anything.
If we were to use one single word to describe the torments that someone who “chooses” not to prepare will go through after a true you know what hits the fan it would be “PREVENTABLE”.
Almost every single person, even a very poor person, has the capacity to put away emergency food and supplies. Even homeless people have stashes of something just in case things become so bad that the normal hand outs and thrown-away items dry up. Many people with good sources of income don’t even have an extra can of food or any water put away at all. This is stupidity beyond words.
Every day lightweight disasters happen in all parts of the world that disturb services enough that people are confined to their homes for a certain amount of time. While recovery is short, people are still uncomfortable during these times. Look what happens after a power outage at night and you will be mystified at how many homes are completely dark for hours. People have not even bought an extra couple of candles or any battery operated light sources. Even in well-to-do neighborhoods you may hear only a lone generator going after a blackout. This lack of preparedness is truly frightening and plays itself out again, again, and again every time services are disrupted for minor to major reasons. It’s as if there is something wrong with storing extra food, water, and supplies.
Even after “lessons” played out to what happens to those non-prepared, most people still feel that it just cannot happen to them, or won’t ever happen to them again. It should be proof enough to people what happens to those unprepared after disasters simply by looking at those that have gone through it firsthand. The difference, though, comes in that these disasters have had recovery periods and help from others. Even Haiti received some help and conditions remain putrid over there.
After a true SHTF event, it is presumable that government help and others coming to the aid of those in need WON’T happen for long periods of time. During that time those that have chosen to not put food, water, and necessities away are going to be in life threatening positions. Most people just don’t get that when the supermarket shelves are empty they will stay that way for an extended period. When the utilities go down, especially water, it may be weeks, months, or longer before they come back, if ever. Without what someone needs to survive each day, it is not going to magically appear, and depending on the goodwill of others to feed them and sacrifice their own family’s survival chances is a terrible choice.
People must know what life will be like after SHTF in mega fashion if they refuse to prepare. This is NOT new. Terrible events have plunged people into the deepest levels of desperation and hopelessness, and they will happen again and again.
While the above consequences to the non-prepper are extremely abysmal for anyone to read, the simple fact of the matter is they have already happened time and time again to those that have nothing put away. People have resorted to cannibalism and gone to levels of primitive savage behavior out of shear desperation and out of literally losing their minds to the physical depletion of food and water that keeps the physical body operating. Sometimes showing the extreme severity and results of a person’s lack of action, such as failure of the simple act of putting away extra food, water, and supplies, can be the kick in the complacency that they need.
It’s really easy to put away food and supplies. All one has to do is add a little bit of extra food to the grocery cart for long-term storage. Over time this adds up to a well stocked pantry of supplies.
There is something that is in a can of food that everyone can eat and enjoy the taste of, so talk to family members about their nutritional preferences and start stocking up. Toilet paper and other supplies that really don’t have any expiration date can be put away and forgotten about ’til needed.
There must be common sense and intelligence to see what happens IF they don’t stock up for the future. There has to be the desire to get started, and this is the real problem with so many.
Once started, however, prepping becomes a type of life saving routine or positive lifestyle habit. It is easy and can and will save one from misery. It may save their life and the lives of their family from ruin when SHTF, which is almost inevitably going to happen someday. Every month and year that goes by without a true SHTF event, makes it more likely that it will happen. Basic statistical chance shows this to be the case, but people continue the same pattern of behavior that has led them to the same devastation countless time before.
For those preppers that have people around them that refuse to prepare, you can at least have some degree of solace knowing that you tried to show the non-prepping person(s) what not having anything will mean to them and their families.
All we can do is try. Once we’ve given it our best shot, all we can do is let those who have been warned about the direness of the possibilities live their lives the way that want to. They will, unfortunately, live in a world of regret and suffering if the nation and the world falls apart around them.
To every action there is an opposite equal reaction. Preppers will see their efforts have been more than worth it. Objects that are motionless tend to remain motionless and non-preppers will find there are horrific consequences for their lack of effort and motion to put away “life insurance” preps for themselves and their families.
Note: Reposted, with permission. This article first appeared in the SHTFPlan blog.