Posted on 03/02/2009 3:17:56 PM PST by Jerrybob
I am not trying to be an alarmist, but I am worried about a lot of things. I just have to imagine what the chain reaction of the current downhill slide of the worlds economies can bring. Heres what I imagine can happen in years to come:
Pensions will go bankrupt or be a shadow of what they were before, causing millions of retirees to be broke and maybe even hungry, with no recourse. Stocks and gold will probably cross at about 3,000. Robberies of banks and citizens will increase many fold, and make the streets of big cities dangerous. The danger will cause movie theatres, night clubs and restaurants to do poor business because of citizen fears of venturing out at night. Cars not in garages or in some way protected, will be subject to theft, break ins or stolen tires and parts, especially in big cities.
------------
The big cities, with their large numbers of out of work minorities, will become extremely dangerous places to live, and there will be an exodus to safer, small towns, by those who are able, even if it means selling a big city home at a sacrifice price, just to be safe. The infrastructure and utility providers in big cities may become insolvent or fraught with vandalism. Out of work minorities wont be able to pay utility bills. Without electricity, gas, or water, even for a short time, life can be extremely difficult, and especially in a high-rise building or multi-storey apartment.
I have already used the link, thank you.
And the others?
Rural folks will be fine if they can fend off the pilferers, it’s the urban cities and suburbia that will suffer most.
Especially on foot. However, their pets... might be another story... feral packs.
I’m curious about the “out of work minorities” phrase being thrown around regaring mischief.
I’m out of work, but not a minority, at least I don’t really consider a white woman as one. I, myself am not likely to vandalize utilities or private property, however. The only class that should fear me should I become really desperate are elite politicians. They are fair game over this as far as I am concerned.
I think at this point that the pen is mightier than the sword. Perhaps if it comes to this kind of anarchy, archery would be a good fall back in the face of all the liberal banning of guns and ammo. I’d like to see them try to ban trees, stone, metal, leather and birds.
I don't think they'll make it very far past the suburbs. They're out of their element and out in the open.
This is why there will not be one currency....
“According to the New Jersey Department of Labor, during that nearly 4 year period, the private sector, which employs over 4 million workers, eliminated over 31 thousand jobs, while the state and local governments added over 48 thousand jobs with about one-half of that in education. This is just one minor example of the unjustifiable expansion of government while the constituents of the state were struggling to survive. Does government ever reduce the head count? I cannot remember one instance where Ive read about that circumstance.”
http://www.apatheticvoter.com/PrivateGovernmentEmployment.htm
Simply TOO much overhead associated with gov’mt employment...it bears so little relation to reality that a ruling class in hock to everyone basically is thew world’s last and greatest bubble. The Euro will probably subdivide over Ireland and Greece..
What do you mean? Your link is clearly posted, and they can go there. If you want to start a thread or blog that’s for survival then let’s do it.
I grew up in the rural south on a farm, and I have rode horses, milked cows, fed chickens, gathered eggs, helped garden and grown tobacco, cooked food, canned and dried food, built houses, buildings, drove a tractor, hunted deer, ate game meat, camped, and had an outhouse until I was eight. I slopped a hog at five, and plucked chickens for Sunday dinner, so if I can’t make it, noone can! My mother lives on the land that she and her family made it through the Great Depression on, while doing all those things she taught me ..she’s getting old, but we can still do it if necessary..even with disabilities and old age. It’s like riding a bicycle. Any questions?
This is an interesting excerpt...
“After all these years I learned that even though the person that lives out in the country is safer when it comes to small time robberies, that same person is more exposed to extremely violent home robberies. Criminals know that they are isolated and their feeling of invulnerability is boosted. When they assault a country home or farm, they will usually stay there for hours or days torturing the owners. I heard it all: women and children getting raped, people tied to the beds and tortured with electricity, beatings, burned with acetylene torches. “
http://www.powerswitch.org.uk/portal/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2079&Itemid=2
I apologize in advance if this scares folk...but it does come from the one area of the Western Hemisphere that’s already been through something like this this century...
“So if you have a place to live”
This is good only if your mortgage is paid off.
Tell that to Dillenger, Machine Gun Kelly, Ma Barker, Al Capone, Pretty Boy Floyd, Bonnie and Clyde, etc., etc., etc.
How many of them were active before 1929, and how many only afterward? How many were created by prohibition?
How long are wheatberries good when packed airtight (with bay leaves and chitin)?
The cities contain vital infrastructures that the gubmint will protect.
For the life of me, I will never understand the paranoia of rural folks concerning urban folks coming to “take their stuff.” Rural folks tend not to have a lot of stuff of value. Let’s face it, in most rural areas spending $20,000 on an engagement ring is a big deal. So, why would someone travel to a rural area when you can mug someone close to home in the city for a $60,000 cocktail ring or $80,000 watch?
somewhere around 1933 all the gold was confiscated, and it was a crime to have any of it....do you really think that is going to be worthwhile in a depression?
good answer.
In a chaotic depression it will be food that is worth more than diamonds...lol Priorities will be changed in hard times, and those who don’t think and plan ahead will be hardest hit. Those of us who were poor growing up will be able to adjust, since we have been there before. This article about what happened in Argentina during that collapse will help you see...rural isn’t always better, just different way of dealing with it. Building emotional support communities will be paramount, if people can rely on each other.
forgot the link:
http://www.powerswitch.org.uk/portal/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2079&Itemid=2
Here is a link to someone’s experience during Argentina’s financial collapse, although we may not follow exactly, human nature being corrupt, it may help us think it through beforehand:
http://www.powerswitch.org.uk/portal/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2079&Itemid=2
I’m glad I live in an under 30,000 city that is in Appalachia right now.
The U.S. isn’t Argentina...a better model might be the industrial revolution in england.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.