He’s not entirely wrong.


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Notwithstanding the bogus election fraud canard (Dominion Voting Systems has sued Rudy Giuliani and Sidney Powell, so those two nutjobs are now free to present “evidence” in their defense), @cheah’s recent post lists some “What will you do if…” scenarios (find them in his post) and has some very good suggestions about steps to take:

Develop alternative and antifragile sources of income
Stock up on canned food, clean water, fuel, medicine, camping and essential supplies
Develop strength, virtue and good health
Identify local sources of food, water, and essential goods
Train yourself in martial arts, defensive abilities, survival skills, first aid, and other essential skills
Forge close bonds with sympathetic and friendly people
Create emergency plans for natural and manmade disasters

Let’s look at these in order.

Develop alternative and antifragile sources of income

The days of relying on just a paycheck from one employer, if not already gone, are fading fast. For far too many, the coronapocalypse meant a pink slip. One day you’re the family breadwinner, the next day you’re unemployed and nobody’s hiring. Unemployment insurance might be a bandaid, but it has limitations. It doesn’t last forever, and it’s demoralizing to be collecting it. So it makes sense to try to have more than just one form of income. Maybe a side hustle in the gig economy like Instacart deliveries or one-offs from writing or coding online. Maybe a few quatloos here and there from your part in building the Hive blockchain. Maybe “informal economy” bartering, trading your skills for things you need or vice versa.

Stock up on canned food, clean water, fuel, medicine, camping and essential supplies

We all experienced supply chain disruptions last spring, and things are not even back to what used to pass for normal. If you’ve ever read any Tom Sharpe, you know that things can always get worse. Having extra on hand of what your family consumes is an excellent insurance policy.

Develop strength, virtue and good health

Tough times can be draining, both mentally and physically. Physical and mental conditioning done before things head south can make all the difference if the waste hits the air circulation unit.

Identify local sources of food, water, and essential goods

Do you have several seasons of gardening experience under your belt? Do you know what edible plants grow wild in your area? If the tap runs dry, where will you obtain water and how will you purify it?

Train yourself in martial arts, defensive abilities, survival skills, first aid, and other essential skills

Your supplies might be restricted or unavailable, but your skills stay with you. Developing and practicing situational awareness can protect you from a plethora of bad outcomes. Avoid the conflict is almost always the smarter strategy than win the battle. An EDC folder knife has a bazillion uses. First aid skills are the gateway to being a useful person in an emergency situation.

Forge close bonds with sympathetic and friendly people

”No man is an iland, intire of it selfe; every man is a peece of the Continent, a part of the maine; if a clod bee washed away by the Sea, Europe is the lesse, as well as if a Promontorie were, as well as if a Mannor of thy friends or of thine owne were; any mans death diminishes me, because I am involved in Mankinde; And therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls; It tolls for thee....”
John Donne
Meditation 17
Devotions upon Emergent Occasions, 1624

No man is an island. In tough times, you’re going to need people. Watching your back and augmenting/complementing your skills.

Create emergency plans for natural and manmade disasters

It may be a bit of a cliché, but failing to plan is planning to fail. Making plans in advance of a disaster, and discussing them with your family, is time well worth spent. It’ll help with everything from a house fire to an earthquake or hurricane to a grid-down event.

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Badge thanks to @arcange

Pixabay image by johnhain



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8 comments
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Hard days are upon us.

Even though there was zero evidence of election fraud... if there was going to be fraud this was the election to do it. This happened back in 2000 as well with the Diebold machines. These voting machines are garbage. Our elections can't be trusted.

It's not hard, this day in age, to make the process of voting much more secure, but no one seems to have any incentive to upgrade the system. It's one of those things not allowed at The Children's Table of Politics. The whole issue never even comes up.

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I am not persuaded that elections are a legitimate process in the first place, whether there is fraud or not. I don't have the authority to govern you, and it is a crime if I steal your property, kidnap you, or murder you for failing to obey me. How can I legitimately delegate an authority I do not have to any third party by any means whatsoever? As for the utilitarian arguments for a territorial monopoly government, I fail to see how any carry the slightest weight on closer examination.

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Add to this the ease of which it is to hack elections "fair and square" just by pumping money into the system to manipulate public opinion. This is all a scaling issue. Centralization gets corrupted and eventually implodes.

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And then there's the psychologically destructive effects of power even on the most mentally healthy as demonstrated by the Milgram and Stanford Prison experiments, to say nothing of the kind of people who are most likely to seek political power over their neighbors in civilized society.

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I'd add one thing: expect to have to change your plans. At this point, understanding that there are always options available at any particular moment is a very useful skill to develop. For instance, and thinking out loud here: I am stocked up, but have already found some flaws in that "plan", such as all my drinking water is in glass, so if the heat goes off, I have no drinking water. If the tap runs dry, I have no water at all. I've moved the drinking water to a closet in the center of the house, the last place to freeze. Camping gear is all in there too. That will be my bunker I guess. I'm going to go clear enough space to accomodate two sleeping bags.

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(Edited)

Local conditions have to be factored in. For someone in an arid area, finding any water would be difficult. Where I live you can throw a rock from almost anywhere and stand a decent chance of having it land in a lake, pond, or marsh. So it’s just a matter of making it potable.

You might have a source of emergency water you hadn’t considered — your hot water heater. Unless it’s the newer “on demand” type.

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Oh yes good idea! I have a bunch of large totes ready to fill up if things get dangerous, and I could fill up the washing machine to store some in, but for these two I need some notice or prescience

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It's a slow process of preparedness, but I now have a water filter and a BioLite camp stove. Clean water, hot food, and a little electricity are all available now, and I've had occasion to use them all except the water filter in normal power outages over the past year. The thing about prepping is, you don't need to start preparing for the end of the world. Just having options to get you through a few days of disruption puts you ahead of the curve. I haven't had occasion to bug out, but hunkering down prep is pretty much in place now.

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