
Surviving in the City
This article is from Christopher Parrett's book,
"The LDS Preparedness Manual" which is posted for free downloading to
any and all at
http://www.abysmal.com/LDS/Preparedness/ The author also has
a web site at
www.anothervoiceofwarning.org The article has been around
since Y2K days and is still relevant.
(See counterpoint below) And for a different
viewpoint from that, see Guest Submissions.
Introduction
While we all want to do our best to prepare for a coming crisis, and
many of us realize the city is perhaps the worst place to live, very
few people are really prepared to pack up the old Winnebago and head
for the hills. Most Americans, whether they're aware or not, are going
to stay in the cities.
This is not a hasty decision for most people. Most of us depend on the
city for our livelihood, and we can be better prepared by continuing
to live in the city, earn a good income, and make preparations for
exiting the city at the appropriate time or by staying in the city and
living off existing supplies.
This special report explains some of the most critical dangers of
living in a city and presents some solutions to surviving them. If you
are one of the people who has decided to stay in the city, you'll
benefit greatly from this information.
Cities are artificial
Every city is an artificial construct. Cities formed as people came
together to conduct business, participate in social interaction, and
benefit from efficiencies in public services (such as schools, sewers,
water, etc.) and a common defense. Yet cities cannot survive alone.
They need resources from the country; most notably, food, water and
electricity. While electricity and water can sometimes be created or
found within city limits, the acreage requirements of food dictate
that no city could possibly feed its own people.
Read that last phrase carefully: No city can feed its own people. Not
one. Cities are, by their very nature, dependent on the importation of
food. The advent of just-in-time delivery systems to our grocery
stores means that most cities would run out of food within a week if
supplies were for some reason disrupted.
Remember, cities are not self-sufficient. Although they may seem to be
in 2005, they have for a long time been entirely dependent on the
American farmer for their support, something almost all Americans take
for granted (except the farmer, of course.)
Risks in the City
The city presents some serious risks during a crisis. The four most
serious ones are:
1. the collapse of social order (riots),
2. the failure of the water treatment and delivery systems,
3. the depletion of food supplies and
4. the failure of the power grid.
While not every situation will
appear in every city, every situation will most certainly appear in
some cities. Will that include yours? We’ll tackle these one at a
time:
1. The Collapse of Social Order
“Social order” is a delicate thing, and it exists as a psychological
barrier that could easily collapse under the right conditions. We all
saw this during the L. A. Riots following the Rodney King trial
verdict as citizens of L. A. set fire to their own town, yanked people
from vehicles and beat them literally to death, and even fired guns at
firemen attempting to save their buildings! More recently we were all
witness to the looting, violence and total breakdown of society
following Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans.
What allowed this to happen? Simple: the simultaneous melting away of
the psychological barrier of “order.” Once people realized 911
couldn’t handle the load, or was offline, that the local police were
helpless or had simply abandoned their posts, “Law and Order” ceased
to exist in their minds. They then conducted their lives in the way
they always wanted to, but couldn’t because of the police. That is,
they ran out to the local stores and just took whatever they wanted
(looting). They took our their racial frustration on innocent victims
who happened to be driving through the area, and they let loose on a
path of destruction that only stopped when men with rifles (the
National Guard) were called in to settle things down. In other words,
only the threat of immediate death stopped the looting and violence.
Rifles work wonders.
Imagine store owners lying prone on the roofs of their stores with
AK-47's, firing at anyone who approached. This is exactly what
happened in Los Angeles. But worse, imagine the lawless horde firing
at the rescue copters trying to bring in supplies to the desperate
masses. The National Guard eventually got things
under control. This event was isolated, however, to one city. Imagine
a hundred cities experiencing the same thing. Will the National Guard
be able to handle the load? Not likely. What about local police? They
aren’t fools; if things look bad enough, they’ll grab their families
and head for the hills, just like they did in New Orleans. No pension
is worth getting killed for. A few U. S. cities could be transformed
into literal war zones overnight. It would require all-out martial law
and military force to have any chance whatsoever of bringing order to
these streets. And the reality is that there are not enough military
in the USA to secure all of the cities if this happens.
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This collapse of social order is perhaps the
greatest risk of staying in the city during a crisis.
What, exactly, would cause this collapse of social order? Lack of
three things: food, water, and money. When people run out
of food, some will begin ransacking their neighborhood, searching for
something to eat. (Remember that in a city, a “neighbor” does not mean
the same thing as a “neighbor” in the country. They are not
necessarily your friends.) It won’t take long, then, for violence to
take over in some cities. While certain regions will certainly manage
to keep things under control and people will form lines at the local
(depleted) Red Cross shelter, other cities will see an explosion of
violence. Imagine the gang-infested regions of L. A., Chicago, New
York, St. Louis & New Orleans. Do you think those people are going to
stand in line and wait? They already have guns; now they finally get
to use them. Pent-up racial tensions & hostilities will simply serve
as justification for shooting people of the same or other color in
order to get their food.
Even if the food somehow gets into the cities, lack
of money (due to the government not sending out checks) could cause
the same thing. Eventually, lack of money results in looting and mass
theft. As the stealing balloons, it also results in a collapse of
social order. Water; the same thing (but faster). The collapse of
social order is also very dangerous because it doesn’t require any
“actual” collapse of the power grid, telecommunications,
transportation or banking. Social order is a psychological artifact.
It is a frame of mind, and any global panic can quickly remove the
mental barrier that right now keeps people basically “lawful.”
The Failure of Water Treatment and Delivery Systems
Will the water treatment facilities fail during a crisis? Many will.
Some won’t. The problem lies in figuring out whether yours will.
Certainly, they depend on electricity, and testing conducted on some
plants has already revealed weaknesses in the system.
In one such test, the water treatment plant released a fatal dose of
fluoride into the water system when tested. The computers thought they
were 99 years behind in releasing minute doses of fluoride, so they
made up the difference. If you happened to be downstream, drinking
that water, you were dead. Fluoride, no matter what misinformed
dentists tell you, is actually a fatal poison. A major crisis likely
to demonstrate this fact in more than one city.
The most important question here, though, is about what will happen
when the water stops flowing (or if it is flowing, but it’s not
drinkable). As you are probably aware, while people can live without
food for long periods of time (2-3 weeks), water is needed on a daily
basis. You can go 2-3 days without it, at most, but beyond that,
you'll quickly turn to dust. [See
www.EndTimesReport.com/water.html ]
That means people will do anything to get water, because to not have
it means death. And guess where it’s going to be the most difficult to
actually get water? You guessed it: in the cities. During the first
day of the water crisis, many people still won't figure out what's
going on. They’ll figure it’s a temporary breakage of a water main and
the government will get it fixed within hours. As those hours stretch
into the next day, these people will get very worried.
By the second day, more and more people will realize the water isn't
coming. At that point, you could easily see a breakdown of social
order, as described in the previous section (as you can see, these
things all tend to cause each other.). People will begin their “search
for water,” and the first place they’re likely to go is where they
always go for liquids: the grocery store, the local Wal-Mart, the
7-11. The shelves will be cleaned out rather quickly.
Beyond that (because those liquids aren’t going to last long), you're
going to see people engaged in a mass-exodus from the cities. They’ll
take the gas they have left in their tanks and they'll leave the city
in search of water. Some will go to “Grandma’s house” out in the
country where they might at least find a pond or stream to drink from.
Others will simply go on an expanded looting mission, stopping at any
house they see and asking the residents (with a gun in their face,
likely) if they have any water to “donate.”
As a result of all this, if water stops flowing, here are the events
you can expect to see in some of the worse-off cities:
* Looting of all the grocery stores by the second or third day
(remember New Orleans?)
* Minor outbreaks of violence during the looting. Shop owners, for
example, may attempt to defend their shops with firearms (ala L. A.
Riots)
* Mass exodus of residents from the city in search of water
* Ransacking of any houses or farms within a gas-tank radius of the
city, presumably by desperate people with guns
* Mass traffic jams on the outbound highways as people run out of gas
and abandon their vehicles (if bad enough, this could actually block
the highways and trap people in the cities) (Remember Hurricane Rita?)
* Mass outbreak of water-borne diseases as people use streams and
rivers as both a water fountain and a bathroom. People crapping
upstream are going to infect the people drinking downstream. Very few
have any kind of water filtration device. That last point is really
critical. Once the water flow stops, disease is going to strike.
The Depletion of Food Supplies
The food supplies will likely dwindle quickly as we approach a
possible crisis due to people stocking up just in case. Once the
crisis actually hits, expect to see breakdowns in the transportation
sector that will result in major delays in food delivery. This means
food may arrive in sporadic fashion in some cities (if at all).
Once this happens, food suddenly becomes really valuable to people
(even though they take it for granted today). And that means any small
shipment of food that arrives will be quickly grabbed and eaten or
stored. It only takes one week without food to remind people how much
they actually need it, so expect the atmosphere to be that of a “near
panic” if food is delayed by as little as three days. The level of
panic will vary from city to city. Some cities or towns may experience
very little difficulty receiving food. Others may face near-starvation
circumstances.
Remember, the cities depend entirely on food shipped in from the farms
and food processing companies. Also, note that if there’s a water
problem as mentioned in the previous section, and the mass exodus
begins, the highways may be jammed up at critical locations, causing
gridlock for the trucking industry. If we're lucky, some trucks will
continue to roll. If we’re not, assume that nothing gets through. [See
www.EndTimesReport.com/food.html ]
A shortage of food ultimately results in the same behavior as a
shortage of water. First, people eat what’s in the pantry, then they
loot the grocery stores. After that, with all local supplies depleted
and no hope on the horizon, they leave the city and start ransacking
nearby homes. Some will hunt in nearby forests, but most city-dwellers
don’t know how to hunt. In any case, anyone with the means to leave
the city will likely do so soon after their food shortage begins.
The Failure of the Power Grid
Nothing is as suddenly obvious nor has such a gigantic psychological
impact as the failure of the power grid. When the electricity stops,
almost everybody knows it at the same instant (unless it happens at
night).
Naturally, during the first few hours of the power failure, if it
occurs, people will assume it’s a temporary situation. Maybe a tree
fell on some power lines, or perhaps a transformer blew up somewhere
nearby. They'll sit tight and wait for the power to come back on.
What if it doesn’t? Then the city faces a severe problem. Without
power, obviously, everything shuts down. Within hours, the looting
begins in the more crime-ridden cities (we saw this in New York a few
decades ago.). The longer the power stays off, the worse the social
disorder.
The loss of power will bring the entire city to a halt. While vehicles
may get around for a few more days (using whatever fuel they have
left), businesses obviously won't be operating. Houses that depend on
electricity for heat will quickly reach Winter temperatures, freezing
many occupants to death. [See
www.EndTimesReport.com/kerosene.html ] While
those that depend on electricity for Air Conditioning will just as
quickly reach Summer temperatures, resulting in death from heat
stroke. Hospitals and police stations may have generators on hand,
with a few days worth of fuel, but in short order, that will be
depleted, too.
But the water treatment plant will almost certainly be off-line
without power, causing all the events mentioned in the water section,
above. Let's face it, the power is the worst thing to be without in
the city. If you have power, you can survive a food shortage, perhaps
even a short water shortage. But without power, all bets are off. If
you have a “bug-out” vehicle stocked and ready to go (see below), this
might be the time to bail.
Solutions in the City
Okay, so you're stuck in the city. You’ve made the decision to stay.
You’ve read the problems above, you believe they make sense, and
you’re intelligently frightened. What now? You really have two
strategies. You can:
* Stay and defend your house
* Bug out (leave the city and head for the hills)
Important! This is not an either/or situation. You can begin by
staying in your house and assessing the situation. You'll want to have
a “bug-out” vehicle stocked and ready, just in case, if you can afford
one, but you may never actually choose to bug out. You’ll have to be
the ultimate judge of this. Just remember that when you bug out, you
face major risks and disadvantages. Among these:
1. You're severely limited in how much you can carry -
2. You have limited range due to fuel -
3. You expose yourself to social chaos, roadblocks, random violence,
etc. -
4. Your house will certainly be looted while you're gone -
5. You run the risk of mechanical breakdowns of your vehicle -
6. You must have a place to go that you know is in better shape than
where you currently are.
In general, unless you have a specific, known safe place as your final
destination, I don't advise people to bug out. Just “heading for the
hills” is a very poor plan. You might not make it. But heading for
Grandma’s house or some known, safe place could be a very good plan
indeed, depending on whether Grandma is ready, willing and able to
accept you! [This subject is covered in depth in my booklet,
"Evacuation and Relocation." ]
For these reasons (and more), staying and defending your house is
sometimes the only reasonable course of action, even if it seems
dangerous. For the most part, looters and people looking for food are
going to have plenty of easy victims, so if you show a little
willingness to use force to defend your property, you’ll likely send
people on to the next house. [See
www.EndTimesReport.com/homedefense.html ]
That is, until the next house is already empty and you appear to be
the last house on the block with any food and water left. If you're in
a bad enough area, your neighbors may “gang up” on you and demand your
supplies or your life. This is truly a worst-case scenario, and unless
you literally have a house full of battle rifles and people trained to
use them (and the willingness to shoot your neighbors), you’re sunk.
This is why the best situation by far is to keep your neighbors
informed and help them get prepared. Then you (both your member and
non-member neighbors) can act as a group, defending your neighborhood
and sharing the supplies you have with anyone willing to help defend
you.
When you have this kind of situation going, your neighbors realize you
are their lifeline. You supply them with food and water, and they will
help support you because they are, in effect, supporting their own
lives. The best situation is when your neighbors and other ward
members have their own food and water supplies. That way, they aren’t
depleting yours, and they have a strong motivation for getting
together with you defend your neighborhood. (More on this below.)
Storing (and Hiding) Your Food
Storing food is just as important in the city as in the country, but
hiding it is far more important. That’s because in the worst areas,
marauders will be going from house to house, demanding your food or
your life. If you're dumb enough to put everything you own in the
obvious places, you might as well not buy it in the first place. They
will find it. To count on having any amount of food left over after
the marauders break in, you'll need to hide your food.
One alternative is to plan on defending your home with force. If you
have enough gun-wise people in the house, and enough firearms and
ammo, you can probably pull this off. But most of us aren’t nearly as
experience with firearms as the gang members. A better alternative
might be to plan on bringing you supplies to your ward/stake building
where all of the Saints can both pool and defend their resources. This
of course will depend greatly on your local Bishop and Stake
President.
Back to hiding: the best way to hide your food is to bury it. You’ll
need airtight containers, long-term food that won't rot and you’ll
need to plan ahead. Bury your food at night so nobody will notice, and
make sure you don’t leave the map on the refrigerator door! (Better to
memorize it!) Try to get the ground to look normal after you're all
finished. You’ll want to bury your food as early as possible because
it gives the grass time to regroup over the spot. If you’re in an area
that snows, you’ll have a great concealment blanket! Most food
marauders won't go to the trouble to dig up food, especially if you
insist you don't have any.
Best plan: Have some smaller amount of food stashed around the house,
letting them find something. Better to give them something and send
them on their way. The art of hiding your food is an ancient one.
You've got to get creative. Use the walls, the floors, and the
structure of the house.
If hiding your food is simply not an available alternative, then try
not to advertise it. Keep it put away in your house or garage in as
discreet a manner as possible. Don’t make a point of telling people
that you have a years supply (or more). Word gets around fast that
Bro. Jones has a ton of food in his garage. Boxes of food fit nicely
under beds, behind furniture, in the attic, etc.. Be Creative!!
To sum up the food storage, you really have three strategies here:
* Store it all in your house and plan on defending it by force.
* Bury it in your yard in case you get overrun by looters.
* Store part of it in your house, and hide the bulk of it.
* Relocate all of it as soon as you recognize a major disaster is in
progress
One of the best ways to store food for burying, although it will only
last 2-3 years in high-humidity areas, is to purchase 55-gallon
good-grade steel drums. You can get them from: Memphis Drum Service,
3299 Tulane, Memphis, Tennessee 38116 (901) 396-6484; (800) 960-3786)
The drums are only $16.50, but shipping them is around $30 each. Once
you obtain the drums, dump in your grains or other food items. If you
purchase bags of food from Walton Feed, this is the perfect way to
store it. Don't leave it in the bags unless you're actively eating it.
[Note: Plastic barrels do not rust.]
Then sprinkle some diatomaceous earth into the drum. You'll need about
two cups to treat a 55-gallon drum, and it must be mixed in well.
Diatomaceous earth is made from ground up sea shells, and it kills
bugs by getting into their joints. You can get some from: Perma-Guard,
Inc. 115 Rio Bravo S. E. Albuquerque, New Mexico 87105 (505) 873-3061
This diatomaceous earth is food grade, and on the bag it says, “Fossil
Shell Flour.” Their prices are one pound, $4.90; 2 lb., $8.05; 5 lb.,
14.70, 10 lb., $18.00; 50 lb., $24.95.
Once you get these drums filled and sealed, you can then bury them in
your yard. This is actually a HUGE UNDERTAKING and is a LOT more
difficult than it sounds, since you’ll need to dig to a depth of
around 5 or 6 feet in order to sufficiently bury these drums. You’re
likely to attract a lot of attention unless you do it at night, and
you’ll definitely be removing a lot of dirt that you’ll need to find
some use for. Because the drums are steel, they will also deteriorate
unless you line the outside with plastic (a good idea) and treat the
drums with some kind of protectant or oil. (Don't use WD-40.) Even
Vaseline would work well, although you would definitely need a lot to
coat a 55-gallon drum.
When you’re all done, you should have your protected grains in
55-gallon drums, buried in your yard and protected against the
humidity of the surrounding earth. It’s a big effort, but then again,
the food inside may save your life. You’ll find it much more efficient
to bury several barrels at once; side by side.
In reality it would be faster and easier to simply build a false wall
in your garage and seal up your food behind the false wall. Sure, you
might loose 2-3 feet of useable space in your garage, but the tradeoff
is knowing everything is safe and sound.
Storing Extra Water
Water can be stored in exactly the same way, although you might want
to bury the barrel before you actually fill it with water. Make sure
you treat your storage water, rotate it or have filters on hand when
you get ready to use it.
If you don’t have a yard, or it's not practical to bury your water,
you’ll have to store water inside your house. This can get very tricky
because water takes up a lot of space and it's very difficult to
conceal. It’s best to get containers made for long-term storage, but
in a pinch, you can use almost any container: soda bottles, milk jugs
(although it's very difficult to rinse the milk out), and even rinsed
bleach bottles (in that case, you won’t need to add bleach). But a lot
of these containers will deteriorate quickly, and they may break
easily. Also, consider what happens if your water may be subjected to
freezing. Will your containers survive? Be sure to leave enough air
space to handle the expansion. [See
www.EndTimesReport.com/water.html ]
In order to prepare yourself for the water shortage, assuming you’re
going to stay in the city, stock at least six months of water at a
minimum two gallons a day per person. That’s nearly 400 gallons of
water if you have two people.
Of course, even with the best in-house preparations, you may find
yourself depleted of water supplies. In this situation, one of your
best defenses is to have a really good water filter (like the Katadyn
filter) that can remove parasites and bacteria from the water. You can
also treat your water in other ways (iodine, distillation, silver
solution, bleach, etc.). Armed with these items, you can safely use
stream or river water (or even pond water) for drinking.
WATER WELLS
By far, the best solution for obtaining long-term water supplies is to
drill a well. Buy the best-quality hand-pump available (cast-iron
pumps available from Lehman’s) and a good cylinder. They will last a
lifetime if installed properly. With this setup, you'll have a
near-unlimited supply of water.
The total cost of doing this, depending on where you live, ranges from
about $4000 - $6000. Is it worth it? If you’ve got the money, I think
so. However, many cities simply don’t allow the drilling of wells, so
you may not be able to get one drilled even if you want to.
The deeper your well, the more expensive it gets. Most well drilling
companies charge by the foot. When water is deeper, you also need a
bigger pump and a more powerful cylinder, so the costs tend to really
grow the deeper you go. If you can find water at 20', you’re very
lucky and it might not cost you even $2000. If you have to go down to
200', it might cost you $7500, and you’re at the depth limit of
hand-powered pumps anyway.
Defending Your Life and Property
Let’s talk about force. No doubt, there are plenty of nice people in
this country, and I think that in small towns and rural areas, people
are going to find ways to cooperate and get along. I also think,
however, that some cities will suffer complete social breakdown and
violence will rule. If you happen to be stuck in one of these cities,
you’re going to need to use force to defend your house. The section
that follows discusses what I consider to be extreme responses to
violence in the most dire situations. Hopefully, you won't find
yourself in these circumstances, but if you do, the information below
may be valuable.
Important: Do not use your lights at night. If you are stocking
propane-powered lanterns, solar-powered flashlights, or other unusual
supplies, using them at night will announce to everyone within line of
sight that you have more than the “usual” supplies. Expect them to
come knocking in your door. [See
www.EndTimesReport.com/lighting.html At most, let a fire burn in
the fireplace, but in general, avoid drawing attention to your house.
Defending your house is a crucial element on your stay-in-the-city
plan. Make your house your fortress, and hold drills to help other
family members practice some of the more common activities such as
hiding, defending, evacuating, etc. Some useful items for home defense
include:
* A guard dog
* Pepper spray
* Firearms
* Smoke bombs (military-grade)
* Trip wires
Let's go over these: The guard dog is certainly a welcome addition to
any family trying to defend their house. Although he probably eats a
lot of food, the investment is worth if. Dogs also tend to sleep
light, so let them sleep right next to the food storage areas, and
make sure you sleep within earshot. If the dog barks, don't consider
it an annoyance, consider it an INTRUSION.
Pepper spray is a great alternative to the firearm. It will
incapacitate people and certainly give them a painful experience to
remember. On the downside (potentially), it might just remind them
that next time they come back for food, they better kill you first. So
understand the limitations of pepper spray.
Firearms are useful for obvious reasons. In the worst-case scenario,
when looting is rampant, you may have to actually shoot someone to
protect yourself or your family. If you’re squeamish about pulling the
trigger under these circumstances, don't plan to stay in the city. Use
the “bug out” plan instead.
Smoke bombs can be useful for covering a planned escape from your
house. You can purchase high-volume smoke bombs that will quickly fill
up any house with an unbreathable cloud of military-grade white smoke.
Trip wires are great perimeter defenses. You can buy them from Cheaper
Than Dirt (they run a few hundred dollars). They will give you early
warning if someone is approaching. You can connect the tripwires to
flares, shotgun shells, light sticks or other warning devices. This
way, you can have an audible or visible alert, your choice.
In addition to these devices, you can make significant
fortification-style improvements to your home. While none of these are
very affordable, they certainly help defend your home:
* Replace glass windows with non-breakable Plexiglas
* Add steel bars to the windows
* Replace all outside door locks with heavy-duty deadbolts
* Replace all outside doors with steel doors, preferably without
windows
* Remove bushes and other shrubs where people might hide
* Black out the windows entirely to avoid light escaping at night
(similar to what residents of London did during the WWII bombing
raids)
* Build secret hiding places for food, coins, or even people
* Create escape hatches or passageways
* Rig pepper-spray booby traps
These aren’t as absurd as they might at first sound. Many people
living in rough cities already have steel bars covering their windows,
and removing extra bushes and shrubs is a well-known tactic for making
your home a safer place.
LIGHT
To light your home when there’s no electricity, try the following:
* Use LED flashlights and rechargeable solar-charged batteries. You
can buy all these items from the Real Goods catalog [Also see
www.EndTimesReport.com/survival_shop.html ]
* Use propane-powered lanterns. You can find these in the camping
section of your local Wal-Mart. Be sure to purchase extra mantles and
store lots of propane.
* Purchase quality oil lamps from Lehman’s and stock up on oil. You
can also purchase cheap kerosene lamps from the Sportsman's Guide or
Wal-Mart, then simply purchase and store extra kerosene.
* Buy extra candles.
* Purchase lots of olive oil. Not only can you cook with it (and
besides, it’s a lot healthier than corn or vegetable oil), olive oil
also burns as a clean candle fuel. You can float a wick in a jar
half-full of olive oil and light the wick. Viola, a home-made candle.
Olive oil is a fantastic item for your storage anyway because even if
you purchase all the grains in the world, you’ll still need cooking
oil, and you obviously can’t buy powdered cooking oil. Well-stored
olive oil can last for thousands of years.
STAYING WARM
Did you know that people won't steal giant logs? Although they may
easily steal wood you've already chopped, most people won't have any
way of stealing logs. They’re too heavy, and the vehicles won't have
any gas left. For this reason, your best bet in regards to stocking
fuel for your house is to stock up on UNCUT wood logs.
It takes a lot of extra research to find out how to get them (took me
a few weeks of asking around), but you can find a source if you look
hard enough. Or you can usually get a permit to go out and cut your
own. The effort is worth it, because this will give you a ready-to-go
source of heat and fuel that cannot be easily stolen.
The catch, of course, is that you'll need equipment to cut and chop
the wood. A chainsaw is REALLY nice in this way, but it requires fuel.
Fortunately, chain saws don’t use much fuel, so if you have a way to
store as little as 50 gallons or so, you've got enough to power your
chainsaw for a few years (at least!). You'll need fuel stabilizers,
too, which you can buy at your local Wal-Mart. (Be sure to buy extra
chains for your chainsaw, too.)
You’ll also need splitting hardware. You can buy log splitters or just
buy an axe, a wedge, and a sledgehammer. [This is too simplistic: See
www.EndTimesReport.com/woodcutting.html ] Better yet,
buy all four so you have a choice of what to use. And remember, wood
splits much better when it’s frozen, too, so you might just wait until
the cold hits in Winter to start splitting your wood. Only split a
little at a time, because you don’t want to end up with a big pile of
nicely-split wood sitting out in your yard. It will invite theft from
people who don't have any. If you already have trees on your property,
you're all set. Cut down about 4-5 cords right now, so they can start
drying out, then chop them as you need them.
A “cord” of wood, by the way, is a volume measurement. It’s 8' x 4' x
4', or 128 cubic feet of wood (stacked). Some people that sell wood
will try to rip you off, so make sure you know what you're buying. If
you purchase logs, it’s better to get a price per linear foot, based
on the diameter of the log. For example, you might ask for logs that
are an average of 10" in diameter, and you’ll ask how much the charge
per linear foot would be. Something in the range of $1 - $2 would be
great. [See
www.EndTimesReport.com/storing_firewood.html ]
Relations With Neighbors
I’ve already mentioned the importance of getting along with your
neighbors. It really is crucial to your city-based survival plan. The
best situation to be in, as mentioned before, is to have neighbors &
other church members who are aware of the issue and who are getting
ready for it by stocking their own food, water, and other supplies.
Every neighbor & member that becomes self-reliant is one less neighbor
or member you’ll have to support.
The range of neighbor situations, from best to worst, is as follows:
* Best case: your neighbor is current Recommend holder, is aware of
and both temporally & Spiritually prepared for an emergency with their
own supplies and training.
* Good case: your neighbor is aware of a potential crisis, and even
though they don't have their own supplies, they’re willing to help
defend yours as long as you share
* Bad case: your neighbor is a non-member that didn’t prepare for it,
figuring they would just steal from you if things got bad. They are
aware of YOUR supplies but don’t have their own.
* Worst case: your neighbor isn’t aware of anything, he is anti-mormon
and he’s a violent, angry neighbor just released from prison. He is
going to be caught off guard by the ensuing events and will likely
attempt to use violence to get what he needs or wants.
Your decision on whether to stay in the city may depend greatly on the
quality and quantity of your neighbors. If you do live in a bad
neighborhood, do what you can to relocate. If you live in a good
neighborhood, do the best you can to educate and inform your
neighbors. This might well be the most important missionary work you
ever do for your own temporal salvation!
Gun Control in the Cities
No matter how you felt or thought about gun control in the past,
it’s time to face disaster-induced reality. The gun-control
politicians (and the people who supported them) have placed Americans
in a situation where not only can the police not protect us in a
timely manner, but we cannot lawfully defend ourselves. Criminals
unlawfully have firearms; citizens lawfully don't. Intentionally or
otherwise, gun-control supporters have created a situation where an
unfortunate number of innocent men, women and children are going to be
in danger during a crisis simply because they could not obtain the
tools of self-defense.
It also happens that the cities where the rioting will likely be the
worst are precisely the cities where firearms are most likely to be
banned from lawful ownership (and where criminals may wield
near-absolute power for a while.). Perhaps when society recovers from
it, we can review the fallacy in the cause / effect logic that keeps
people voting for gun-control laws, but in the mean time, millions of
people are going to have to resort to breaking the law in order to
protect their families. And yes, you too will have to resort to
breaking the law if you are to acquire a firearm in an area where guns
are entirely banned from private citizens (like New York, Los Angeles,
etc.).
After the disaster hits, if the rioting gets really bad, we're going
to see local police begging law-abiding citizens for help. Your
firearm will be a welcome addition to the force of law and order,
believe me. No local cop is going to mind you having a handgun if
you're manning a roadblock protecting a neighborhood of families with
children. Act responsibly, tell them what you're doing, and they'll
probably give you a big thanks. But if you're carrying a gun while you
smash a window of the Wal-Mart and walk off with a stereo; well that's
a different story. Be prepare to get shot.
See, cops don't mind private ownership nearly as much as we've all
been led to believe. I know, I work with law enforcement officers in a
small town, and I ask them about topics like this. When the crisis
hits, they'll be more than happy to have your cooperation. We're all
going to need as many law-abiding gun-toting citizens as possible in
order to fend off the criminals and establish some degree of order.
One More Reason To Move Out
If you really feel you need a firearm to protect yourself and your
family, your best bet may be to move to a city or state where people
are a lot more accepting of firearms. You'd be surprised what a
difference the locale makes. Check the gun laws in any state you're
considering moving to. Obviously, “cowboy” states like Arizona, Texas
and Wyoming will have fewer restrictions on firearms (and,
interestingly, they have less of a problem with gun violence). States
where the population is more dense (like California & New York) tend
to have much greater restrictions on private ownership of firearms.
Bugging Out
Suppose it’s July 14, 2006, and you’ve changed your mind about this
city thing. You happened to be right smack in the middle of one of the
worst-hit cities in the country. The looting is getting worse, the
power has been out for two weeks, and your water supplies are running
low. You still have enough gas in your truck to make it out of town if
you can get past the gangs, that is. You’ve decided to BUG OUT!
Some basic pointers:
* Don’t try to bug out in a Chevy Geo. You will likely need a big
heavy 4x4 truck in order to go off-road and around stalled vehicles
* Get something that can carry at least 1000 pounds of supplies. A big
4x4 pickup will do nicely! Yes, it requires more fuel, but you can
carry the fuel as cargo.
* Don’t bug out unless you can have someone ride shotgun, literally.
You will need an armed passenger in case you run into not-so-nice
people
WHAT TO TAKE [Overly simplistic. See my booklet
Evacuation and Relocation.]
Ahh, the bug-out supply list. All this will fit in your truck. Here’s
what you should take if you’re preparing to bug out with two people:
* Your 96 hour kits for each person in the vehicle
* 20 gallons of water
* 40 gallons of extra fuel or more (and a full gas tank)
WHERE TO GO
As mentioned earlier, if you have a designated place of refuge
(Grandma’s house, a cabin in the woods, etc.), head straight for it.
If not, you’re basically driving anywhere you can go, so try to head
for an area that forested and near a creek or river where you can get
some water.
Conclusion
Choosing to remain in the city is a rational choice for many people in
many situations. However, as you have seen from the dangers described
here, the further away you can get from the population centers in
general, the better your chances of surviving.
Most people, perhaps yourself included, have a difficult time actually
accepting that a major disaster is going to be as bad as described in
this report. And after all, if you leave the city, sell out, quit your
job, move to the country, and then nothing bad happens? You will have
disrupted your life, and you may find yourself broke, jobless, and
homeless. You COULD assume it will be a mild event, which I suppose is
also a credible possibility. In that case, surviving in the city will
be quite feasible, especially if you have neighbors that can support
your efforts and you don¹t live in a dangerous city with high racial
tensions. However, the very nature of a major disaster means that if
only one or two major infrastructure components goes down, the ripple
effect will quickly create a much worse scenario. It seems there is
very little room for “mild” effects unless they are miniscule. The
most likely scenario at this point clearly points to massive
disruptions, severe shortages in food and water, loss of power in some
areas, and a breakdown of social order in certain areas where the
population density is high.
But you can survive anything
with good planning, an open mind, and plenty of practice. Why not
start now?
~~~~~~~~~~Return to top~~~~~~~~~~
[Note from Miles Stair. I have written virtually all of this web
site. I take full credit or blame for what I have written. I have posted
quite a few articles on this web site written by others and have always clearly identified
the author if known. I have not commented on a single article written by
others, assuming people are bright enough to have their own built-in
bilge filter for extraneous comments be or bias of an individual author.
Because I followed this policy with the above post, I was taken to task
by Rev. E. F. Khelama of Louisiana because the author of this
article mentioned incidents in New Orleans following Hurricane Katrina.
You may want to listen to the
"Battle of New Orleans" while reading.
Rev. Khelama had the following comments: "I happen to be
African-American minister and I live in Louisiana. I was here when
Katrina hit.... This author's statements are not only biased, no doubt
influenced by the media's distortion of the truth, but it hints of
racism.... For the record, the stories of violence and looting have
since been proven to be false or widely distorted.... There was no
"breakdown in society."... Believe me, if black people were as violent
as far too many white racists believe they are, America would be in
trouble....(Regarding the looting) That's a lie. They took what they
needed.... If black people were as violent as white racists try to make
them out to be, you'd have in America what you have in France today and
what you had in Ireland for decades. And you would've had it a long time
ago.... Are you even remotely aware that it must take an awful lot for
black people to react violently on a collective scale against whites who
have oppressed them for centuries, not years?... This is about the truth
as opposed to what was presented as "facts." Most of what was said were
lies. I was there. You weren't. Neither was the "author in Canada."
There were no "transgressions" there to forgive."
[Rev. Khelama is right - I wasn't there. So to offset any perceived
racial bias or inaccuracies in the article above, I give you Rev.
Khelama's own words as an eyewitness. And to counterbalance part of Rev.
Khelama's statement, I give you below the words of President Theodore
Roosevelt.]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"In the first place, we should insist that if the immigrant who comes
here in good faith becomes an American and assimilates himself to us, he
shall be treated on an exact equality with everyone else, for it is an
outrage to discriminate against any such man because of creed, or
birthplace, or origin. But this is predicated upon the person's becoming
in every facet an American, and nothing but an American... There can be
no divided allegiance here. Any man who says he is an American, but
something else also, isn't an American at all. We have room for but one
flag, the American flag... We have room for but one language here, and
that is the English language... and we have room for but one sole
loyalty and that is a loyalty to the American people."
Theodore Roosevelt 1907
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