wheeler_dealer wrote:Plan for the future, however live for today. There will always be another crisis. Nothing wrong with prepping just don't obsess or let it control you. Leading up to Y2K my wife and I prepped to provide for a short term disruption of normalcy. We went about normal activity and tried to balance life. Y2K was a non event. Our preps were well used and we maintained our peace of mind throughout. IMO balance prepping with living and you will be better off than most of society if things get tough.
68Camaro wrote:The math is inevitable. The timing is not.
68Camaro wrote:The math is inevitable. The timing is not.
beauanderos wrote:The quickest way to decimate a population, proven time and again throughout history... is disease. I have not the slightest doubt
that will occur again.
IdahoCopper wrote:beauanderos wrote:The quickest way to decimate a population, proven time and again throughout history... is disease. I have not the slightest doubt
that will occur again.
This is exactly why I will never get the annual flu shot.
One year the TPTB may introduce a 3 or 4 month "poison" of some kind that kills all who got the shot.
Its the most insidious way to cull the herd.
beauanderos wrote:The quickest way to decimate a population, proven time and again throughout history... is disease. I have not the slightest doubt
that will occur again.
coindood wrote:Just to be clear, I wasn't saying that anyone on this site was expecting doom and gloom. RC is a rare oasis of common sense, as the posts above me show. ...
johnbrickner wrote:I've seen so many doomsday predictions come and go in my life time, I no longer give any credence to those made to a specific date. But to the big picture, the Empire will fall, the ability of the planet to sustain the number of humanity growing will tip, a ball will drop, perhaps many.
So much wisdom in the above posts. It takes a long-term time frame to look at it all properly. Wheeler goes back to Y2K, 68Camaro to ''08 or thereabouts. The Native Americans (I like 1st Nation, as the describing words from Canada) are credited with saying you need to look at a situation with the next seven generations in mind. Add the entire planet to this concept and I believe such long term strategic planning should be humanitarian law. Part of our problem is most all people can't look beyond their next paycheck . . . that is if they are getting one.
Monitoring without obsessing. Staying aware or alert. Prepping but living. Hoping for the best while making allowances for the worst. All say the same thing. But God help us if we are using the Common Core to calculate it. I nor anyone else can tell you when the shat will hit the fan. It typically takes a couple to a few hundred years for an empire to fall. When a populations grow exponentially to the point of being more than their habitat can support, they tend to crash dramatically. No doubt there will be several water fall drops of humanities standard of living. Some short, some dramatic depending on the situation.
It is interesting to see how our govt. prepares for the civil unrest they expect to have to deal with when it happens. When it really gets bad, be rest assured they will be less concerned for the common folk than they will for maintaining as much of the status quo as can be salvaged. I mean, the corporate military political system we currently have (and the elite running it) will do all in it's (their) power to survive. Having worked in the offshore oil industry, I feel safe asking you for example, that if resources were stretched thin and it was a choice between saving say New Orleans or the Gulf Coast oil industry? You would know which it would be.
Communities becoming self-sufficient and self-reliant for human/planet sustaining needs, coming together and working together on a regional level is a good starting point for helping to assure they abide. And this is something that can be started and expanded regardless of the current economic or crisis situation.
How fortuitous it was to have stumbled across this just now so this is now edited to add this: http://uts.cc.utexas.edu/~varanus/Everybody.html
Sums up a lot of reading in five paragraphs. I am very familiar with three of the authors listed (Brown, Heinberg and Diamond) but have yet to read any of the suggested save the one page by Nee, just now.
68Camaro wrote:So... given that the likelihood of an individual re-directing the global train of doom is near zero, what specific positive steps can an individual take to improve the odds of their family surviving a pandemic? (Apart from creating a self-sufficient bunker in the mountains supplied with 30 years of staples and becoming a hermit.)
I'm fishing for things that I haven't thought of already.
IdahoCopper wrote:68Camaro wrote:So... given that the likelihood of an individual re-directing the global train of doom is near zero, what specific positive steps can an individual take to improve the odds of their family surviving a pandemic? (Apart from creating a self-sufficient bunker in the mountains supplied with 30 years of staples and becoming a hermit.)
I'm fishing for things that I haven't thought of already.
Walmart has boxes of surgical masks, they don't cost much. I bought 2 boxes, but I can't remember where I stored them.
68Camaro wrote:The math is inevitable. The timing is not.
johnbrickner wrote:I've seen so many doomsday predictions come and go in my life time, I no longer give any credence to those made to a specific date. But to the big picture, the Empire will fall, the ability of the planet to sustain the number of humanity growing will tip, a ball will drop, perhaps many.
So much wisdom in the above posts. It takes a long-term time frame to look at it all properly. Wheeler goes back to Y2K, 68Camaro to ''08 or thereabouts. The Native Americans (I like 1st Nation, as the describing words from Canada) are credited with saying you need to look at a situation with the next seven generations in mind. Add the entire planet to this concept and I believe such long term strategic planning should be humanitarian law. Part of our problem is most all people can't look beyond their next paycheck . . . that is if they are getting one.
Monitoring without obsessing. Staying aware or alert. Prepping but living. Hoping for the best while making allowances for the worst. All say the same thing. But God help us if we are using the Common Core to calculate it. I nor anyone else can tell you when the shat will hit the fan. It typically takes a couple to a few hundred years for an empire to fall. When a populations grow exponentially to the point of being more than their habitat can support, they tend to crash dramatically. No doubt there will be several water fall drops of humanities standard of living. Some short, some dramatic depending on the situation.
It is interesting to see how our govt. prepares for the civil unrest they expect to have to deal with when it happens. When it really gets bad, be rest assured they will be less concerned for the common folk than they will for maintaining as much of the status quo as can be salvaged. I mean, the corporate military political system we currently have (and the elite running it) will do all in it's (their) power to survive. Having worked in the offshore oil industry, I feel safe asking you for example, that if resources were stretched thin and it was a choice between saving say New Orleans or the Gulf Coast oil industry? You would know which it would be.
Communities becoming self-sufficient and self-reliant for human/planet sustaining needs, coming together and working together on a regional level is a good starting point for helping to assure they abide. And this is something that can be started and expanded regardless of the current economic or crisis situation.
How fortuitous it was to have stumbled across this just now so this is now edited to add this: http://uts.cc.utexas.edu/~varanus/Everybody.html
Sums up a lot of reading in five paragraphs. I am very familiar with three of the authors listed (Brown, Heinberg and Diamond) but have yet to read any of the suggested save the one page by Nee, just now.
68Camaro wrote:So... given that the likelihood of an individual re-directing the global train of doom is near zero, what specific positive steps can an individual take to improve the odds of their family surviving a pandemic? (Apart from creating a self-sufficient bunker in the mountains supplied with 30 years of staples and becoming a hermit.)
I'm fishing for things that I haven't thought of already.
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