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doctor_fungcool
11-23-2007, 03:11 PM
http://warrifles.com/forums/showthread.php?t=45183

I wouldn’t call them “mistakes”, I don’t hold the SHTF Bible so all I can give is my humble advice which may be correct or not, so all I can tell you is “ I wouldn’t do that if I were you”, and depending on how sure I


There’s simply some preparations that make little sense if you think about it, others that I’ve seen that just wouldn’t work, in spite of all the speculations.

a) Maybe the one that rubs me the wrong way the most concerns retreats. It’s also something many survivalists consider the summit of their preparations. A self sufficient fortification-ranch, with the nearest neighbor several miles away.

Isolated farms or retreats are targeted and are often victims of robbery and in some cases extremely violent home invasions. You may have 6-10 able men you are counting on to defend it when TSHTF… “when TSHTF” …so they aren’t there right now? Then you don’t have them, nor will you have them when you need them, most likely.

The isolation works to the attackers favor, who often take their time having their way with everything and everyone inside the house.
The “away from everything” theory just doesn’t work when taken to the field. Happens here and same happens in Africa where ranchers and farmers have to fight rebels, rogues or whatever they are calling them these days.

They’ll find you, they’ll know about you one way or the other. You cant hide simply by living a gas tank away from the city. If there’s a road that reaches your place, you are fair game, doesn’t matter if it’s a dirt road in poor condition. You get there with a car/truck? So can bad guys.

You are obviously safer from small time robberies or pickpocketers and snathcers, but you are more vulnerable to the worst kind of criminals. Not that living in a city or suburbs makes it MUCH safer, but I’d rather live here where I live now than in a farm house any day of the week. People can somehow organize to hire security, talk to the police. Yes, most people border idiotic and are pretty clueless, but it’s better than being alone with no chance of even trying to convince people.

I’m not talking about living in a large city being the best option, I’m talking about living in a small town or community, looking for safety in numbers but avoiding the problems of a metropolis.
I definitely would choose a house in a small town or subdivision near a city, rather than a far away retreat.

Rather than looking for the ultimate self reliance retreat in the middle of nowhere, look for a subdivision where you have enough land, where you can keep a small orchard and some small critters if you want, a place with a basement where you can build a NBC shelter as time and money allows. That’s what I’d look forward to if living in US.

b) The barter items thing is also pretty strange. I don’t see how it could possibly be a smart idea to buy goods to sell or trade after a crisis, surely not in the quantities suggested by some people. Beats me, are they going to set up a shop in their garages and sell everything? Would you buy food an other supplies from a guy that sells it with no possible way of verifying the conditions under which the food was kept? How much of a profit could you possibly make , comparing to having saved that same amount of money in gold, for example?

I don’t understand it and I don’t know of anyone that made a profit by doing this. Yet, people stock up on TP and many other cheap, easily obtainable items thinking that it will be “worth it’s weight in gold” after the crisis. Newsflash: if it’s cheap and easy to produce, it will keep being that way AFTER tshtf.

Some guys advice to “invest” in such goods, tools, food and supplies for after TSHTF. No, no , no. 200 or 500 bucks worth of tools rusting away in the shed is not an investment. Its’ 200 bucks worth of tools for which you don’t have any use. That’s not an investment.

An investment generates money, while products rotting away in some basement does nothing for you.

c) Forgetting about their financial security. I’d worry about REAL investments. Buying real estate that will provide me with a steady income on the longer run, an investment portfolio divided in a couple of reliable ( or as reliable as any organization can be) that will slowly grow, most of it set on minimum and medium risk investments, and not falling for the promises of high risk ones.

Money is so important, I cant begin to explain it. When prices skyrocket beyond the limits of superinflation, money does not turn into toilet paper as many survival experts predict, it become cherished, more valuable to you than ever. You have to turn yourself into a discriminating shopper, always looking for the best possible price, sometimes shopping in different branches of supermarkets so as to find the better deals and avoid those “hot” items grocery chains slip without you even noticing.
My father is visiting right now, handling business, and one thing he told me when I asked how did he see things going on here, he used the words “cheapskate” and “miserly”.

He said something like“ People count coins over and over, by the cent, and spend maybe 10 minutes thinking about spending every cent. They also look kind of shabby, untidy, I can’t explain it. Even the guys running around downtown with suits look bad”

I explained that his overall perception was indeed correct, mostly because the average person here uses clothes until they wear out, there’s not that much money left for looks, not getting haircuts as often as they should, shaving.

Yes, the fall on the purchasing power of people did affect the average person ( at least most of them if not all) and you can see it on the streets.
d) Not all places are equal in terms of crime, but if something like this happens in US, I’d worry about being armed at all times, and learning how to use it to defend myself.

Again, not talking about waiting for the end of the world to bug in and pull the shotgun out of the firing ports, go on with your life but to do armed.
Most people here don’t see things this way.

The anti gun campaign in very strong here, and the majority of “sheep” see guns as evil objects, even though rape, crime and violence is smeared on their face every day. What can I say, most people are pretty stupid.

Those of us who go armed in this country are a reduced minority. After a few words, we recognize each other at the range or at gunshops with a knowing nod, knowing that most people, even among shooters , don’t share our opinions.

Even among “gun people” we have our important share of “Zumbos”, elitist hunters who think that firearms are hunting tools and shouldn’t be used by the lesser “civilians” for self defense.

d)Not trying to bore anyone to death here or anything, but going back to the issue of money. It’s so important to be financially set. Rather than spending tons of money on junk you wont ever use invest it smartly. Rich, unprepared people will suffer after TSHF… only in your wildest dreams. Money buys everything, including expensive food, medical care, security and relocation if needed.

When the economy collapses a big chunk of what used to be middle class ( 50% as minimum, more for sure) ends up being poor. It doesn’t matter how much guns you have, doesn’t matter if you can start a fire with a couple of Popsicles sticks or build an atomic bomb with a Snickers bar and a paper clip. Skills are of course important but you finances affect everything.

If you are middle class do everything you can to improve, climb way up the ladder. No I’m not talking about making more money than Bill Gates, I’m just talking about something every determined middle class person can achieve , no need to be a freaking financial genius. Make sure you climb your way up to the upper middle class, because once the pyramid starts sinking you don’t want to be below the 50%.

If you are really serious about financial security, diversify your real estate and other investments in different countries. My father did this and it made all the difference in the world. The man is my hero.

When you see serious trouble in the horizon and survivalists are thinking about bunkering in their cabins, you simply go on vacations to check out that little apartment or house you bought in Costa Rica for a bunch of pocket change a month. If Zombies take over or China invades, you can look for a job there, or live like a king thanks to the income you receive from that other apartment you have in France, a place in a small town near a mayor University, which you rent to students each year.600 Euros a month will allow you to live comfortably in Costa Rica, and most countries in South America. And the best part of all this? If nothing EVER happens you just have a few properties here and there that are constantly generating money for you, in case you want to retire early or if you ever have a health problem or any other issue that puts you out of the job market. Again, a couple of properties here and there inst’ such a big deal, most people can achieve that with a bit of effort, its’ just a matter of priorities.

e)The lack of reality based preparations. Some people focus on preparing for something that will never happen, preparing for getting up one day and walking into Mad Max’s world. This is of course, not a smart idea. Not only are you forgetting about the other, more likely possibilities, but you also ignore that you’ll have to go trough them before it reaches to a road warrior point, if it ever gets to that.

People that have thousands and thousands of dollars in tools, equipment, and maybe spent hundreds of thousands more building the ultimate retreat, but don’t have a penny invested anywhere. When asked they‘ll say that it will all be worth nothing when TSHTF.

Hopefully, this person will have several years worth of food along with all the other stuff he’ll rarely get to use, so at least he wont starve to death. But is eating all you aspire for in live? Not to mention what would happen if he got sick/robbed/place burns to the ground/hurricane/flood destroys it and suddenly needs the money he said he would never need.
Prepare for a broad spectrum of possibilities. So you’ll have your food and supplies for short and medium periods of time where supermarkets may be closed due to looting, riots, lack of supply , etc and you have others plans in case things get worse or you are forced to get out of there.
Something like what happened here happening in US? Don’t go nuts, shooting the neighbor’s kid for crossing over to your yard to pick up his frizzbe. Just adjust to the situation.

Once the first few weeks are over and people start calming down, just be more careful out there, don’t throw away money on stuff you don’t need and try to keep a generally low profile. It’s also important to do well at work, because people get fired like crazy during those times, companies trying to reduce expenses or not needing you any more for lack of production.

During these times is when your investments kick in. Not only do you have a place to exile to if things don’t go back to normal or they don’t fit what you expect in life anymore, you also have a form of income that is out of the circle of your local economy. Let’s say the dollar looses ½ it’s value, you still have your apartment in France or wherever the heck you want to invest, pumping in Euros that are now much more valuable, probably compensating for the local inflation, so weather you decide to leave or stay, you have the means to go either way.

FerFAL

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

This thread is now open for discussion. You may agree or disagree with Ferfal............however, he's been through an economic collapse, and knows of what he speaks.

FUNG'S SCENARIOS


1. Dawn of the Dead (full blown rioting by hordes of
starving folks.

2. Mad Max (Folks have food, but roving gangs of
semi-military killers roam the countryside for
'whatever'. Motorcycle gangs, Ms13, and other
gangs merge to form a lethal force.

3. Semi-Mad Max. Scattered pockets of looting
throughout the country, with some areas which
are absolutely safe.

4. Martial Law. Thousands of troops (mostly foreign)
patrol the country, and gather trouble makers
and put them in camps.


5. The Slo Ride. Things slowly disintegrate as town
after town disintegrates ....the tax base erodes.
Eventually, scenario 1 or 2 takes place. Little
communication between states, so nobody knows
what's going on.

6. Zombieville-A slowly starving population becomes
weak from malnutrition. There are
a few outbreaks, but on the whole,, the population
slowly dies of starvation and disease.

doctor_fungcool
11-23-2007, 03:21 PM
another poster writes this,

"There are a lot of SHTF scenarios that are not Armageddon. And they are much more likely to happen. Monster Eqrthquake in Cali. Katrina on Steroids in the Gulf or in Florida. Dirty nuke or other large (maybe real nuke) terrorist attack in Chicago and/or NY or LA. Large scale rioting on a scale larger than we have seen before -- maybe coordinated terrorist attacks kill 5000 kids in a bunch of schools across the country and the good old boys go on a rampage torching Mosques etc and that leads to rioting, or stuff like that. Even a major Depression. Things that are major disruptions to our normal society, but which we eventually overcome. You need to be ready for that as well.

My goal for immediate "survival" is to have a good 72 hour kit, then a 30 day supply of food, water, and other stuff, and then stuff for longer term. Of course firearms are a part of everything from daily carry to 72 hour kit to 30 day to longer term. But there are lots of other things that are just as important. Being out of debt (I am not), having a good investment base that can generate income (for example the rentals FerFAL mentions, as well as investment in precious metals, etc. Those are as important as the other stuff because an economic SHTF is much more likely than a "The Postman" [Dancing with Fags] type situation or a "Road Warrior" situation.

Of course, you should all be getting your firearms accessories and reloading stuff from me as part of your SHTF preparations to help me with mine

doctor_fungcool
11-23-2007, 03:28 PM
Make no mistake about the sites you are about to visit. Gangs will be a big problem in the coming months and years, especially if the downturn I'm predicting is as bad as I think it will be.


WE'RE DOWN TO THE 3 COUNT
This story happened in just in the last few days. This is what open
borders and nearly unrestricted hispanic immigration, legal or
illegal, results in:

Nevada:
http://www.klas-tv.com/Global/story.asp?S=7305459
Oregon (w/ photo of the hispanic gangbanger):

doctor_fungcool
11-23-2007, 03:37 PM
http://www.warrifles.com/forums/showthread.php?t=18586

Now I want to shake you up a bit. So I'll ask you a question. The Poll question at the site I've given y'all asks, Would you resort to canabalism if you ran out of food?

Go to the site, and read the replies......27% answered, meat is meat..............So in a nutshell, that's what you're dealing with here.
A Darwinian world of natural selection.............

doctor_fungcool
11-23-2007, 04:36 PM
Go to this site and download the info there. Make a hardcopy for further reading.

http://www.survivalblog.com/glossary.html

Bad Hand
11-23-2007, 08:03 PM
I have enough food on hand to last until at least next Sept and probably longer. What I do is I go to the case lot sales at the local grocery store they have here every year (Morman area). We bought all of our canned goods, flour, sugar, salt, and a lot more. Then I bought a half a cow cut, wraped and frozen for $1.89 a pound and a half a pig same price. The beef and pork were locally grown and is great meat.

Doing it this way we save a lot of money on the food and we don't have to go to the store that often. If anything happens we will be ok. I do have a lot of tools but I use them.

The thing that I wonder about is if the dollar really falls is it going to be worth anything at all, will it turn into Germany 1930?

doctor_fungcool
11-24-2007, 05:45 AM
I have enough food on hand to last until at least next Sept and probably longer. What I do is I go to the case lot sales at the local grocery store they have here every year (Morman area). We bought all of our canned goods, flour, sugar, salt, and a lot more. Then I bought a half a cow cut, wraped and frozen for $1.89 a pound and a half a pig same price. The beef and pork were locally grown and is great meat.

Doing it this way we save a lot of money on the food and we don't have to go to the store that often. If anything happens we will be ok. I do have a lot of tools but I use them.

The thing that I wonder about is if the dollar really falls is it going to be worth anything at all, will it turn into Germany 1930?

Actually, the Germans in the 1930's were a disciplined people. Here in the USA, when TSHTF, the general environment, in my view, will be far from that..........Prep Now...

money matters
11-24-2007, 09:43 AM
As one who did relocate from a major metro area to somewhat secluded ranch-retreat in 1990, from what I have seen; no matter where you want to go to be "isolated", you are going to find others. Unless you are Ted Turner, and can buy half of MT, you will have neighbors.

Neighbors area good thing in the ranching spectrum. Close enough to consult with, self-sufficient in most aspects of their own daily lives. They make Good Neighbors for the survivalist.

Small town? None of them are exempt from the social problems of the Big City. Unlikely you will be able to pick your neighbors (unless you grew up there and know "the lay of the land"). You will get the luck of the draw on those matters. Lots of people in small towns are up to their eyeballs in debt, have drug problems, are shiftless; you are going to find few that are serious preppers. Maybe some do serious gardens, and the town will have some machine shops and fabricators etc, but...

If you live in some small town on the edge of wilderness in the Rockies, likely everyone there has to prep to some degree. Too damn far to the real grocers not to! Who pays 2 hrs drive-time for a plumber or electrician? In most ways, being more remote requires greater self-sufficiency.

What I have come to understand is that every Just In Time methodology has been fully embraced by anyone who was not seriously committed to self-sufficiency. Few individuals stockpile pantries and keep spares. Certainly almost no business concerned with staying competitive warehouses anything, or buys more than their models indicate. Being "on the grid" for truck delivery and package service means people have placed their reliance on expectations and guarantees.

I will say that if you expect any community spirit or prepared response to manifest in any small town that is within 3 hours of a metro area, you are really over-reaching. Those people are just extended metro residents, and are little different from other city dwellers. The same problems are there and fewer advantages. About the best you'll find is from cultivating your neighbors and knowing who is who.

SheWoff
11-24-2007, 10:37 AM
Money, you are right about the neighbors. And the best thing for us to do is find out now, not after, which neighbors are "prepped", who is willing to barter services and goods and who is dependable or not.

I lucked out in my neighborhood in that we have 2 R.N.'s, a rancher with cattle, a farmer who still uses donkeys to plow with and has the equipment. We also have a school teacher and a family that keeps horses. Most of us garden and put up for at least a year at a time. One of the neighbors owns and operates the local feed mill! But you need to find out all of this NOW, not later. Like they say...make hay while the sun is still shining!

She

Trasael Adnepos
11-24-2007, 09:43 PM
Well, Doc, he might have crashed his car, or moved back from Argentina, or even be really ancient and have working knowledge, (as opposed to childhood experience) of the Great Depression, but he lost me at diversify into really good investment funds or whatever. This tells me either he has no real inkling of the MAGNITUDE of what is on the horizon, or else has already opted to do business with The Beast on its terms as opposed to joining the Resistance and underground economy. As some have pointed out here, there are many variations on personal, community, regional, national and world-wide "emergencies", but those who prep for what they instinctively know is coming (worst-case scenarios) know the value of tools and essential goods.
As a man who uses tools constantly to earn his living these days, I opine he hasn't used them much, or earned much with them, as measured by expressed ignorance of their intrinisic and economic value.

JMHO

Tras

north runner
11-25-2007, 07:17 AM
All of the above 1-6 scenarios sound plausible to me. I don't know which way it would go. They all lead to a dieoff and a destruction of wealth. Its almost an automatic the survivors would form new communities in time the end result being a new era of Jacksonian democracy or the breakup of the u.s. into warring states. The survivors will assess their options and decide one way or the other. Gold would definitely be the new old currency.

doctor_fungcool
11-25-2007, 08:50 AM
Well, Doc, he might have crashed his car, or moved back from Argentina, or even be really ancient and have working knowledge, (as opposed to childhood experience) of the Great Depression, but he lost me at diversify into really good investment funds or whatever. This tells me either he has no real inkling of the MAGNITUDE of what is on the horizon, or else has already opted to do business with The Beast on its terms as opposed to joining the Resistance and underground economy. As some have pointed out here, there are many variations on personal, community, regional, national and world-wide "emergencies", but those who prep for what they instinctively know is coming (worst-case scenarios) know the value of tools and essential goods.
As a man who uses tools constantly to earn his living these days, I opine he hasn't used them much, or earned much with them, as measured by expressed ignorance of their intrinisic and economic value.

JMHO

Tras


Farfel was in Argentina when it collapsed. His story is important only insofar as he relays the social implications of that collapse. As far as investment funds, that is probably just his opinion, and of course, opinions can be found by the hundreds of millions. He has written other info on the matter, some of it quite telling. Unfortunately, he doesn't go into the real nitty gritty of surviving as, for instance, Jim Rawles would do at his site, http://www.survivalblog.com


..........Remember, never take anyone's post as gospel. After lots of searching, and comparing, always come up with your very own list of priorities......tailored to your particular set of needs.
Many times, there are kernels of truth strewn amongst lots of b.s.......that's the trick, separating the wheat from the chaff........

old bear
11-25-2007, 10:21 AM
I have a rural survival retreat. Today it is somewhat isolated, But it wasn't when I bought it over 30 years ago. Then there was a community and now it is mostly gone. We don't have the money, and not likely the time to start over some place else.
Here is my take on this. We do have a endless supply(In our life times and our grand children's lives) of wood for heating and cooking.
We have space to raise goats, chickens, pigs, horses etc.. We have a very large garden. We have grown fruit trees and a grape arbor. We have a good source of water. Wild game is abundant.
Once there were 6 families in our valley. Now there are only three counting us.
We are 30 miles from the nearest town of 3,000.
All of the talk about moving to Costa Rica is so much BS for most Americans. He could have just as well been talking about starting a colony on the moon.
Many people are going to be forced to do the best that they can, make do, or do without.
We are some of those.
Even if we wanted to start over some place else, Our place is not worth very much because it is so issolated. Secondly I don't think we have the time to start over.
Maybe take in some other people so we can get more done, and better defend the place. The problem is that most people who have the guts to do something, have a place of their own already.

moleman
11-25-2007, 11:12 AM
The author makes some good points, but as Traseal Ad says, he doesn't understand the magnitude of what's on the way. When Argentina was having it's difficulties the US dollar was still strong and respected as the worlds reserve currency. We're now looking at a situation like the 1970s stafgflation thing times 10. Or a hundred. We may have to start a whole new economy in the coming years based on small, regional entreprenaurship. If we make it through.

bobfall
11-25-2007, 01:45 PM
Survivalist fall into 2 main types:
1.Those that plan for everything. Job loss, rescession, terror attacks, end of the world, limited nuclear war, and retirement.
2. Those that pick their favorite fear. Usually it some end of the world thing. Sometimes it is something smaller, like job loss or snow storm or Tornado. WHatever it is it something they focus one, and often ignore other dangers.

I like to prepare for many events. ANd have many different levels of preps. So many different things are covered.
If is snows and we lose power, I lose my job, dollar devalues, terror attacks, Islamic uprising, limited nuclear war than my preps make sense.

I have known many people in the prep movement. Some who prepped in the 50's.

It was the cold war, than the oil crunch of 73, than inflation and the coming economic collapse, than Regan was going to start WW3, than the fall of the Soviet union and all their goodies going to the wind, than Y2K.

I have lived through a bunch of these.
We are still here.

It has not been the end of the world, yet.

Do I think regional war is comming, yes.
Do I think the Economy will go into the crapper, yes.
Will we see large scale terrorism on US soil, I think we will.
Maybe WMD's.

Or maybe we won't. I have been wrong before.
But I still prep.
And as a Good Prepper, I have many different preps for many different problems.
Including Retirement.

In reality, it does not matter what I think will happen. All of it could, some of it, or none of it could.

What matters is, what I am ready for.

My money is a tool, I protect it.

If someone wants to ignore the dollar collapse, or its devaluement.
That is your bussness.

The dollar may recover and we might have years more to prepare.
It might not.

I think it is wise to prepare for the end of the world. But that only happens once. People lose their jobs all the time.

Bob

doctor_fungcool
11-26-2007, 01:09 AM
http://www.survivalblog.com

IF THE GRID GOES DOWN

Beyond these "worst-case scenario" imaginings, let's consider something much more likely: extended power failures in North America, caused by severe weather, an oil embargo, or civil disruption. Given our current level of technological dependence, what would life be like in a "Grid Down" America? If the power grid goes down for a period of more than a week, all bets are off. Consider the following:

If “grid down” most towns and cities will be without municipal (utility) drinking water.
If “grid down” for more than a month there will likely be huge outflows of refugees from cities.
If “grid down” there will possibly be mass prison escapes.
If “grid down”, virtually all communications will go down. Telephone company central offices (COs) do have battery back-up. These are huge banks of 2-volt deep cycle floating batteries. But those batteries will only last about a week. Backup generators were not installed at most COs, because no situation that would take the power grid down for more than 72 hours was ever anticipated. (Bad planning, Ma Bell!) Thus, if and when the grid goes down then hard-wire phones, cell phones, and the Internet will all go down. When both the power grid and phone systems goes down, law and order will likely disintegrate. There will be no burglar alarms, no security lighting or cameras, and no reliable way to contact police or fire departments, and so forth.
If “grid down” for an extended period anyone with a chronic health problem may die. There will be no power for kidney dialysis machines or breathing machines for respiratory patients, no re-supply of oxygen bottles for people with chronic lung conditions, no re-supply of insulin for diabetics, et cetera.
If “grid down”, most heaters with fans won’t work, even if you can bypass the thermostat. And pellet stoves won’t work at all!
If “grid down”, then “seasonal affected disorder” will seem mild compared to the depressing effects of spending 13+ hours a day in the dark during winter months—especially at latitudes north of the 45th Parallel.
If “grid down”, there will be no 911 to call—no back-up—no “cavalry coming over the hill” in the nick of time. You, your family, and your contiguous neighbors will have to independently handle any lawlessness that comes your way.
If “grid down,” sanitation will be problematic in any large town or city. Virtually everyone will be forced to draw water from open sources, and meanwhile their neighbors will be inadvertently fouling those same sources. I heard one survivalist lecturer state that a grid down situation would “almost immediately reduce sanitation in the U.S. to Third World standards.” I think that he underestimated the impact of an extended power grid failure. At least in the Third World they are accustomed to living with poor water and sanitation. Here in the U.S., we don’t even have Third World facilities or folkways. With the grid down and city water disrupted, toilets won't flush and most urbanites and suburbanites will not dig outhouse or garbage pits! Furthermore, the long-standing Third World village norm of “Draw your drinking water upstream and wash your clothes downstream” will be ignored. A “grid down” condition could be a public health nightmare within a week in metropolitan regions.

Lastly, consider one implication that most people have never heard of: even residential piped (utility) natural gas service is dependent on the power grid. To push gas through the many miles of pipeline, gas companies depend on electrically-powered compressor stations to pressurize the distribution pipelines. It is important to distinguish between local (natural) compression versus long distance grid-powered compression. People living right near gas fields will benefit from the natural wellhead compression and thus will probably have continuing gas service in a long term grid-down situation, whereas those living farther away will not.

doctor_fungcool
11-26-2007, 05:15 AM
Consider This

Lastly, consider one implication that most people have never heard of: even residential piped (utility) natural gas service is dependent on the power grid. To push gas through the many miles of pipeline, gas companies depend on electrically-powered compressor stations to pressurize the distribution pipelines. It is important to distinguish between local (natural) compression versus long distance grid-powered compression. People living right near gas fields will benefit from the natural wellhead compression and thus will probably have continuing gas service in a long term grid-down situation, whereas those living farther away will not.

In the 1950s, a power failure was essentially an inconvenience for most businesses. They used manual adding machines, typewriters, and cash registers. They did their accounting in big bound paper books. But now, the majority of manufacturers, distributors, and retailers cannot function at all without grid power. I predict that they will send their employees home. If the grid stays down for more than 10 days, there will be either "unpaid holidays" declared, or good old-fashioned layoffs.

Commerce will grind almost to a halt, because cash registers won't work, and computerized "Just in Time" (JIT) inventory control systems will be offline. Some enterprising small businesses will keep their doors open, but they will be in the minority. Most of the major retailers will not be able to cope. Have you noticed that most of the big retail stores built since the 1980s are essentially windowless? Their corporate management succumbed to the promised "efficiency" and "economy" of the concrete slab tilt-up architecture that has become ubiquitous in the United States. Without power, these big windowless boxes won't even have enough light for anyone to see the shelves! Surely, most of them will have to lock their doors.

The bottom line? Be prepared. Avoid urban areas and the suburbs. That is where most of the trouble will be. To avoid the social upheaval, ideally, you should live year-round at a well-stocked retreat farm or ranch with plentiful water that is in a sparsely-populated region that is well-removed from major metropolitan areas. If the grid goes down for more than a week, expect riots and looting. If it is more than a month, you can expect total anarchy. Be prepared to live self-sufficiently. Get your food and fuel storage squared away. Fence a large garden plot and practice gardening and canning each summer.

Be prepared to defend your retreat. To be practical, this will necessitate doubling-up or tripling up with neighbor to provide round-the-clock security. (Much as I described in my novel "Patriots: Surviving the Coming Collapse."

http://www.survivalblog.com

old bear
11-26-2007, 06:46 AM
If the grid goes down gas stations won't be able to pump gas. No water, No food, No heat, and no gas to get to your retreat.

doctor_fungcool
11-26-2007, 07:26 AM
If the grid goes down gas stations won't be able to pump gas. No water, No food, No heat, and no gas to get to your retreat.

By the way, welcome old bear. Are you the same old bear that posted at that other place?

old bear
11-26-2007, 04:37 PM
The very same "old bear". Glad to be here, Doc.

Saul Mine
01-12-2008, 07:47 PM
Most people are not really stupid, just uninformed. Some can't afford to learn the truth, and you will never convince those people of anything they don't already know.

Most preppers are also uninformed, although they are open to new knowledge. Unfortunately, many preppers have a preconcieved notion about what things will be like when TSHTF, and it always seems to coincide with their hobbies. Shooters assume it will be a gunfight, campers assume it will involve living in the wilderness, gardeners assume they will have to grow everything they eat, and so forth. The hard part about getting informed is where to find information. Where is there any information about what to expect when a culture collapses? It's quite understandable that everyone gives up trying to guess what to prepare for. It makes your head hurt.

Here is the answer. It is a study of history, the collapse of every dominant culture in the history of the world. Cultural collapse is a cycle, and the entire world is in one or another phase of this cycle. Broadly, the four phases of the cycle are rise, decadence, collapse, and dark age. The characteristics are remarkably similar in all cultures, and they all collapse in pretty much the same ways for pretty much the same reasons, although details differ a lot.

Get the book. It's free and quite readable. http://darkage2007.blogspot.com/ ("Manuscript" link on the right side.) It will help you to understand just what to prepare for and how to cope when it happens.

bobpick
01-13-2008, 12:30 PM
Roll the dice and that's what you will wake upto one day. Or roll two and that will be disaster du'jour.

My perspective is prepare for the worse possible - nuclear weapon explosion about 20 miles a way and then the typical results, starvation and anarchy.

Whatever happens from there is just a continuation of a really bad day.

Southwind
01-13-2008, 04:04 PM
Realistically, scenarios 3 and 4 , being semi-mad Max and Martial Law in the big cities, are what I think we will see. Ferfal's advice is not so far off the mark, I think, although the ability to purchase real estate in France and Costa Rica are beyond the abilities of most average folk. I will be happy if I can afford to buy the 1 acre with mobile I am currently renting.
For most people, the garden with chickens/rabbits is the best insurance..along with ammo, of course.
But I think he is right about the money in some form, just make sure it is silver or gold.