Posted on 02/12/2012 7:41:15 AM PST by blam
THREE MILLION PREPPERS IN AMERICA Are Getting Ready For The End of the World As We Know It
Mac Slavo
February 11th, 2012
In the autumn of 2008, as Presidential hopefuls sparred over whether we had entered a recession or not and well before the onset of the most serious global crisis since the 1930′s, trend forecaster Gerald Celente advised his Trends Journal subscribers to prepare for the worst and plan for the best. It will be, warned Celente, like nothing weve ever seen in our lifetime.
The aware and prepared those understanding just how out of control society would become, and those who had acquired the skills for survival would stand the best chance of navigating the chaos safely.
But Americans were not prepared. Not by a long shot
Very few had the foresight to predict that the economic system and social fabric of our nation would be threatened with upheaval and disarray. But some, whether through independent education or through intuition, deduced that there was a real possibility of a system shock so significant that life as we know it could be on the verge of a major paradigm shift perhaps even a complete collapse of our economy and resource infrastructure.
As natural disasters around the world took the lives of hundreds of thousands, space agencies warned of solar disruptions that threaten our power grid, the economies of the world slid further into depression, and tensions between the worlds financial and resource super powers grew, more and more people began to realize that the stability we have come to depend on to live our daily lives was nothing but illusion.
With very few places to turn for support, most headed for the internet, where communities had popped up to discuss possible disaster and collapse scenarios, and ways to minimize the impact on oneself and family. That it was happening or could happen was no longer the question.
The real question was how to survive it when it finally came to pass.
With none of us ever having experienced (or even imagined) such a possibility before, many turned to guidance from experts in their fields people like Gerald Celente or Marc Dr. Doom Faber, who had an uncanny ability to see developing trends, and authors like survival expert James Rawles who wrote the popular economic collapse and survival cult classic Patriots and William Forstchen who penned One Second After, a frighteningly realistic look at what life without the grid might look like. First it was thousands, then tens of thousands of concerned Americans who began learning the essentials of survival by learning from each other with resources offered at web destinations like the American Preppers Network, Doctor Prepper, Survival Mom, Off Grid Survival and Ready Nutrition.
Those who chose to insulate themselves against coming disaster were often vilified or dismissed as lunatics by friends and family alike. And while many chose to ignore the trend which had become quite apparent, those who had the willingness to consider a different reality than had been painted by the powers that be just kept on preppin.
As global malaise continued and the people began to lose confidence in political platitudes and corporatist solutions, the movement towards preparedness, survival and self reliance grew. After having seen what took place in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina, many came to the conclusion that if the worst were to happen there would be no government to help, no 9-1-1 to call, and no emergency management agency to distribute food or water.
Today, at the cusp of possibly the most trying times in human history, more Americans than ever before are preparing for the possibility of disaster.
As many as three million Americans now fall into the category dubbed preppers people who are making detailed plans for the end of the world as we know it.
The preppers are an ever-growing group of survivalists who take extreme measures to prepare for a major catastrophic event.
More than 300,000 people a month visit the movements website, survivalblog.com, which catalogues how people are preparing for the worst.
The website has been set up by James Rawles, a former US Army intelligence officer, who is one of the movements leading figures.
Speaking to The Times, he said: Should the worst happen, its become apparent that the Government cant provide for everybody. And now that realisation is becoming more widespread.
People invest so much money in life insurance, Mr Ralston told National Geographic. This is life assurance.
He is like some of the people featured on National Geographics new show Doomsday Preppers, which chronicles a new prepper each week, delving into their conceptions of the end and what theyre doing to prepare for it.
Its not a hobby, its a lifestyle, Gloria Haswell told National Geographic. She and her husband spend 50 hours a week getting ready for a climate shift in the poles.
These are not just a handful of people living in the mountains, National Geographic Channels executive vice president of programming Michael Cascio told the Wall Street Journal. Theyre everywhere.
The Journal notes that Nat Geo has begun appealing to a growing subculture that has seen the past disasters from last years tsunami and earthquake in Japan to riots to economic uncertainty and have wanted to prepare the best they can.
The last few years have probably exacerbated the doomsday fear, Mr Cascio told the Journal. The world is changing.
Source: UK Daily Mail
This week the National Geographic series Doomsday Preppers debuted to an audience of four million, a testament to the fact that preparing for disasters regardless of the kind is a growing trend, and one thats popular even among those that have been affectionately dubbed the sheeple. No doubt some of those watching the show, who never considered the possibility of far-from equilibrium events, will take to preparing right away.
Most seasoned preppers will agree that those first few weeks and months of preparedness are the most stressful, with emotions being described by newbies as anxiety and panic. For those just getting started, you should feel better knowing that its better late than never.
What you may be experiencing today isnt panic. Its a sense of urgency, and thats a positive motivator that can, with focus, drive you to quickly and effectively achieve your goals.
Panic is what well see from those remaining 99% of Americans who have failed to take measures to protect themselves from the coming devastation.
Yup. You don't care.
Well SPORT you showed your yapping, insignificant little ass up on this thread didn't you.
Why is everyone posting the same thing several times?
Sooner or later there will be a hurricane and you will be without power for several weeks.
If you don't have what you need you don't get it because there is nowhere to get it.
Get hungry, get in line and let the govt hand you a case of MRE’s and a case water.
Sooner or later there will be a hurricane and you will be without power for several weeks.
If you don't have what you need you don't get it because there is nowhere to get it.
Get hungry, get in line and let the govt hand you a case of MRE’s and a case water.
FR is having a meltdown this morning:) Need to double click to get it to response this morning. I tried withdrawing all my funds from FR and it just locked up:)
FR is having a meltdown this morning:) Need to double click to get it to response this morning. “Service Temporarily Unavailable” I tried withdrawing all my funds from FR and it just locked up:)
That’s not what this article if focused on. Yeah, a little hurricane or earthquake preparedness only makes common sense, but all of this “end of the world as we know it” garbage is just more of the same old survivalist garbage that goes around about once a decade.
Pat Frank, the author of Alas Babylon, also wrote a survival manual about a post-atomic world. The fallout shelter mania of fifty years back produced much discussion about how to survive but Frank’s manual contained the following advice:
“The day may come when a pound of tobacco is worth more than a pound of gold.”
BTW, sure is a lot of talk on FReepers about zombies and how to eliminate them. The two topics are somehow related /s.
Anyway, check out the Vincent Price horror classic “The Last Man on Earth”. Masses of zombie vampires versus the last uninfected human.
I thought you didn't like this stuff...SPORT!
You're an ill-mannered, low-class punk to address and ridicule fellow Freepers in this manner.
You're old enough to know better.
Just go away, you're dismissed SPORT!
I thought you didn't like this stuff...SPORT!
You're an ill-mannered, low-class punk to address and ridicule fellow Freepers in this manner.
You're old enough to know better.
Just go away, you're dismissed SPORT!
Prepper Ping!
‘The One Hour Meltdown’ is in my Updated Preparedness Manual Rev J:
http://tomeaker.com/kart/Preparedness1j.pdf
A number of years ago I found a very old can of “powered scrambled eggs” down in the cellar at my grandparents home. It had font like the old “western town” signs, lol. I asked my grandma what it was, and she told me about the depression. How even people that had jobs and small gardens were still short on food. And how many people had really suffered. So the government gave away some things to “help”, like those powdered eggs in a can. She also said how awful it had felt to take any kind of “welfare”.
She said she didn’t even know why she still had it down in the root cellar.
She also had a huge double deep-freeze chest down there. And shelves that were filled with home canned goods. Until they got into their seventies, she always canned a ton of stuff every year from the garden they grew. When she got older, she shopped the specials and sales, and kept her shelves LOADED even though there were only three of them living at the house then.
Her parents had been dairy farmers. It was simply a way of life to have a large pantry.
Over the years she had supplied her grown children, her grown grandchildren, and a great grandchild or two, with stuff from that pantry in the fruit cellar, and spare sheets, towels, pots and pans and dishes. We all shopped in Grammys root cellar. We all came on hard times, and she came to the rescue so we didn’t have to go get the “gubermint cheese”.
She also had a wood/coal cooking stove down there that they kept going in the winters. Things can get very unpredictable here in NY. There was no point in taking chances, and it kept the floors warm - which helped aching elderly joints. Such stoves are rare to find and expensive now.
We have a pantry. We use coupons. We were secure when the second massive flood happened in a four year period this past fall.
I remember how relieved I felt knowing that although all of the stores were closed, many roads closed, etc., we could get along perfectly well for at least several weeks. AND help the neighbors if they needed anything.
So many families here suffered for lack of foresight. They had to wait in lines for water and peanut butter.
It’s best to have a pantry like the old days, :). Sure beats the MRE stuff.
I’m always preaching the sailing lifestyle as the ideal survival platform...but you have to love the ocean. In this economy fixer-upper sailboats can be got really cheap if you’re a patient hunter.
That’s the problem with New Mexico, tons of beach, just NO WATER!
Then why did you show up on this thread?
You know, ours is probably the first generation this planet has seen where being prepared to be on your own is considered abnormal.
We don't live in earthquake, hurricane, or tornado country. We get snow and usually lots of it and some ice to boot.
Anyone who is not prepared to be several days at least without electricity or food is an idiot.
And for the record, if you live as far out in the country as some of us do, you WILL be prepared because it is simply not feasible to drive 20 miles to the nearest grocery store for every little thing.
So go ahead and be a good, little, dependent sheeple. Obama and his minions are counting on you to do your part by coming begging to them for food, water, and protection when TSHTF. You can sell them your soul for that if you want.
The rest of us will remain free.
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