For the wealthy, it's all about asset protection. For many of us, it's about fighting the banksters, delaying foreclosure, learning to live without credit, and starting over. Surprisingly, both groups will use the same methods to improve their financial lives.
Every time Ron Paul is attacked for his views on the Fed or money, it turns out he had it right from the beginning. Congress will never learn. Ron Paul will never be elected because he does not promise to give taxpayer money to other taxpayers or corporations.
Hardcore survivalists differ from the rest of us. For survivalists, hope is not a strategy. Heck, hope might not even be an option.
The Free Dictionary defines a survivalist as:
“One who has personal or group survival as a primary goal in the face of difficulty, opposition, and especially the threat of natural catastrophe, nuclear war, or societal collapse.”
If we have true one percenters in the U.S., I say it’s practicing survivalists, not millionaires and billionaires. Why? Because when the SHTF, a stockpile of ammo and toilet paper will be more valuable than a stock portfolio.
Survivalists differ from preppers, mostly as a matter of degree. Preppers will hoard food and water, while survivalists will do the same but also have a backyard garden, fruit trees, and a dressed hindquarter of venison to make jerky. The wife and kids make regular visits to the gun range, and the bug out bags are always packed and ready to go.
Disasters come in 2 basic varieties:
1. natural
2. man-made
Natural disasters can sometimes be avoided but never prevented. Man-made disasters can be prevented but seldom avoided. Survivalists are prepared for both.
I lived in South Florida for years, and hurricanes don’t exite us much. In Broward County, before Hurricane Wilma hit in 2005 (soon after Katrina hit New Orleans), Ft. Lauderdale had not suffered a direct strike in over 50 years. Wilma grew to a Category 5 storm with winds of 185 mph, and the eye passed right over my house. We were without power for 15 days, food quickly went bad, and we were forced to leave.
Prepared? Not hardly. My brother-in-law and I drove to Jacksonville that night, dodging downed trees to get out of town. The whole county was pitch black – no stoplights, no lights, and no gas pumps working. Spooky dark. We borrowed a portable generator from my brother and headed back to Coral Springs. One generator for 4 homes. Frozen food got moved around, but much did not survive.
A few days later, gas was no where to be found, even to run the generator. We had enough to get out of town, return to Jacksonville, rent a 12 passenger van, and haul everyone up to Orlando for a week.
Had we respected Mother Nature, we would have been out of town and staying with relatives at least 24 hours in advance. Our bug out bags would have been thrown in the cars with all important papers, bank account info, and cash needed.
Note: During this time, someone in Eastern Europe hacked my bank account and made fake PayPal charges to empty my bank account. I was stuck with no money at the worst possible time. Fortunately, I had a small account at American Airlines Credit Union, and the CU made $1,000 interest free signature loans available. Saved my ass. Notice this was a private gesture by a private company, not government relief.
The point is, survivalists are proactive, not reactive. I learned my lesson.
Disasters we may have to face include:
1. hurricanes, tornadoes, earthquakes, and floods
2. nuclear power plant meltdowns (like in Japan)
3. nuclear, biological, or chemical terrorist attacks
4. software hacks that disrupt or bring down the power grid
5. labor unrest that disrupts food distribution
6. pandemics like flu that can still kill thousands
Is the Federal Emergency Management Agency the answer? Think Post Office armed with MREs and bottled water. And even that aid shows up a day late and a dollar short.
Note: If you believe conspiracy theories, FEMA is there to control the population, not rescue it. Are FEMA camps for refugees, or prisoners?
Without fresh water, you will die in a few days. Without food, you will soon look like those POWs in Bataan or Thailand during WWII. Your starved brain will play tricks on you, and your organs may shutdown as they cannibalize your muscles.
Here’s the sad part. If you buy and stockpile the wrong food items, you may as well not have bought any at all. Survivalists are more knowledgeable and skilled than most people realize.
Survival experts have put together a list of 37 crucial items to survive a disaster. The problem is, if you do not prepare in advance, don’t expect to find these items on the shelf. You need the right food, in the right packaging, in the right bug out bags and containers, if you are forced to flee your home.
You have to stock up before a panic. Once the SHTF, you must be on guard for unprepared people who will attempt to take your stuff by force.
Survivalism is by definition an individual or maybe family activity. However, in a life altering crisis – TEOTWAWKI – you may have to join with like-minded survivalists to protect each other from mobs and gangs. You will need to know these people prior to disaster and essentially form a new government, preferably in a rural area with fewer bandits.
If you think food is expensive now, imagine if the stores are shut down or looted, and farmers slaughter livestock for lack of feed. You need to buy essential items now, and rotate items in and out of storage to keep them fresh.
Some people refer to survivalists as ultra-patriots. Some think of them as individualist anarchists. I don’t find either term accurate. Ultra-patriot infers people are prepping for the good of the country, and individualist anarchist are doing it to spite the establishment. In my humble opinion, survivalists take on ancient, pre-history obligations not unlike cavemen. Survival is survival.
What I do recommend is to do whatever you can given your current financial situation and move toward survivalist readiness. If the disaster does not come, you have lost nothing. If it does come and you are not prepared, you can lose everything, including your life.
Preparing for disasters – natural or political – has created a group of individuals self-described as preppers. Preppers are not just frugal, and they don’t reach the dedication of survivalists, but they are more like survivalists lite or Boy Scouts on steroids.
Be Prepared
Many of us remember the Boy Scout motto. Somewhere along the line, we got computers, FEMA, and the nanny state, and we left the Scouts behind. Why should we get ready for the next hurricane, earthquake, or tornadoes when the potential destruction is too large to comprehend.
Even in 2010, 5 years after Hurricane Wilma struck the Ft. Lauderdale area, you could still see blue tarps covering roofs yet to be repaired or replaced. Insurance companies go out of business, and government safety nets are inadequate. Does anyone think FEMA did a bang up job in New Orleans that same year?
What comes to mind in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina was the total breakdown in social order. I remember our wonderful government actually preventing a truck full of water donated by Wal Mart from reaching people in need. Preppers are appalled by such acts and store bottled water in the basement. Survivalists expect the government agents to act badly, store water, carry a water filtration system, and lock and load in case jackboots or looters try to raid their supplies.
Preppers are more optimistic. They basically believe that the government and the currency will survive. Disasters can happen but are unpredictable as to when and how severe. Survivalists are preparing for TEOTWAWKI. It’s not a matter of if, but when.
How to Be Prepared
Preppers are big on food storage, stockpiling can goods and bottled water, and making sure there is some fuel for heating and cooking. Survivalists do the same, but they are better prepared to bug out on a moment’s notice.
On each side of that gray area that distinguishes preppers from survivalists, each individual and family has to determine what is absolutely needed in times of emergency, and what is needed to feel secure. If you are recently out of a job or short on funds, you want to start on the prepper side of the equation. Now is the time to simplify our lives, slash expenses, and restock the pantry.
You may be tempted to look at unconventional housing, homesteading, or living “off the grid”, but your first order of business is storing food and water for the everyday emergencies. After Hurricane Wilma, we went 15 days without power. Stores were closed, and FEMA eventually handed out some free MREs and bottled water. But the first thing we did was grill up the food that would spoil, and then we left for a week in Orlando (fuel up in advance). I admit I left the first day to travel to Jacksonville and borrow a generator from my brother.
Caveat: Freezers are great, but if disaster strikes, you want an ample supply of dried fruit, grains, rice, pasta, and canned goods.
Voluntary Simplicity
If the SHTF, and we are not out of the woods yet, the more self-reliant you become, the better your chances for survival. If the worst case does not happen, you improve your family’s finances by paring down expenses to the bare necessities and stockpiling food, water, propane, medical supplies, bug out gear, and a few guns and ammunition.
So many things we cling to could be eliminated. If you have a notebook or netbook computer, you can go wireless at McDonalds or Barnes and Noble, and get rid of your cell phone, cable, and HBO. Practising how to live without all the toys is a good prep in itself.
Preppers are regular people with homes and jobs and kids who are increasingly worried about the future. You see online links to groups and movements, but preppers are mostly reacting to our social changes rather than trying to change it. Hard-core survivalists will call you soft. Eventually the canned goods will run out, but you have given yourself time to adjust to any new world order.
I’m not big on groups, but if the SHTF, individuals and families may need more manpower that groups can provide.
You can start here: Prepper.org or the American Preppers Network
Groups can help shorten the learning curve and put you in touch with other local resources.
The growth of preppers is subject to debate. Any rise in prepper or survivalist organizations is usually seen as a barometer of social distress. Self-reliance in the form of survivalism is a return to a typical way of life for my grandparents during the early 1900s. Hunting. Gardening. Sewing. Wood burning stoves.
While I don’t have hard numbers – smart preppers and survivalists keep to themselves – I do speculate that the numbers are higher than any time after the Cuban Missile Crisis. You may be too young to remember Sputnik, bomb shelters, and crouching under our desks to protect us from nuclear attack. Russians were Soviets and Cubans had nukes. God those were simple times.
Now, you are more likely to suffer abuse from TSA morons at the airport than from guys named Castro. FEMA will tell you to prepare for upcoming natural disasters, but like Army generals, the head of FEMA is fighting the last war. I believe the next great threat is an attack against the electrical grid. Preppers will have an advantage.
Many of us never learned or have forgotten mechanical skills that could serve us well if the power goes out. Fortunately, with meetups and general search, you can find information and help on just about any topic.
According to Rand Paul, we are under threat from the National Defense Authorization Act. Anyone with a 7 day food supply and a couple of guns could be considered engaging in terrorist activity.
“If Obama does one thing for the remainder of his presidency let it be a veto of the National Defense Authorization Act – a law recently passed by the Senate currently which would place domestic terror investigations and interrogations into the hands of the military and which would open the door for trial-free, indefinite detention of anyone, including American citizens, so long as the government calls them terrorists.” ~ http://www.forbes.com/sites/erikkain/2011/12/05/the-national-defense-authorization-act-is-the-greatest-threat-to-civil-liberties-americans-face/
Preppers should look a little further out and also consider the political threat. Make sure your passport is active. Have a few ounces of gold. In your pocket. Even when I was a Foreign Service Officer (diplomat), we kept go bags ready in friendly and unfriendly countries.