We received the following comments from Phil: "I've been reading the archives on this site and since 2009 there have been dire warnings of imminent collapse and yet we still muddle on, better some days worse others. How do you (meaning all of us) justify constant preparations and increased vigilance when the threat level remains constant. Once conditions have remained the same for a period of time it becomes the "new normal" and as I am sure you are aware, once you train to a fine edge you either deploy or stand down and after a period of R&R, begin training once again for the next deployment. The military can do business that way but many "preppers" cannot. After all, life is what happens to you while you are making plans for the future. While I realize the need for being prepared,you can begin to sound like the boy who cried wolf and people around you begin to waiver and act as if the crisis has passed. What do you do to keep your family's motivation current? TTFN Phil"
UrbanMan's reply: Very good thought provoking question from Phil. And Phil is right - a razor sharp edge cannot be maintained. I think the answers in maintaining vigiliance are as different as is the different categories of preppers. For some people preparation for the collapse is a fulltime endeavor. For others it is a part time deal and yet others it is a spare time affair. The differences between part time and spare time in my book is the amount of committment (dedicating time and resources) to get measurably better in a given period.
The full time preppers probably don't need any outside motivation, which is usually in the form of dire warnings of the impending collapse.
The spare time and part time preppers are the ones who dedication wanes from time to time as the "new normal" as Phil calls it just becomes "normal".
I would consider myself a part time prepper. I suspect that for me and the vast majority of preppers, life just gets in the way. Add that to the basic human nature of having faith in things getting better or at least the possibility of things getting better and the likely trait of not dwelling on bad news all the time,......well, this all just provides a rationalization not to go into the full time prepper mode or otherwise dedicate a lot of resources towards this goal.
There will be some people out there who will argue that the collapse has already begun, albeit slowly. Others will argue that an economic collapse is only being postponed - the Fed's printing of fiat currency and floating that into the market is one of the factors keeping the collapse at bay - but that this postponement will only make the effects of the collapse stronger and just that much more difficult to rise out of.
But I don't think the threat has remained constant. I am of the mind that the collapse has begun, very slowly and the major effects or the tipping point, where the effects of the collapse pick up speed, are being postponed. Additionally, there are more threats streams we are facing, and to be sure some of them may not occur. As of these additional threats, I am thinking of the potential of a terrorist action such as a nuclear device detonated in the U.S. or a substantial attack on a nuclear or chemical plant that causing extensive contamination and undoubtably a severe US Government response with population controls and possible martial law; the possibility of natural disaster or the continuation of a historic drought being a catalyst or just perhaps adding to the economic burden and food shortage.
I think the whole essence of prepping is that we are preparing for a contingency. Just like when we carried long guns for a living, we also carried a handgun. Even though we may have never had a history of using that handgun and could rationalize not carrying it, but we realized that there were circumstances where it could save our lives. ..... remember the phrase: "I would rather have it and not need it, then need it and not have it"?
The bottom line on the way I maintain some focus on prepping, with really no credit to myself, is through the constant media barrage on indicators,...some mild and subtle, others big. Everything from the out of control spending of this government, to the drastic elimination of gun rights in many states and the bent of the Federal Government on gun control.....BTW President Obama was on television recently apologizing to the Mexicans that the U.S. is to blame for most of the violence in Mexico due the American export of guns across the border........and who can forget about inflation and taxation decreasing our standard of living. And then the facts of almost 50 million people on welfare with no end in sight and the possibility of concentrated small armies of hungry, pissed off people means civil chaos.....................Well, I have plenty of reasons to keep prepping.
Wednesday, May 15, 2013
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The signs are there. In fact it is so much more specific then that. We are in a collapse but the government is borrowing and printing money to bouy up the stock market, prevent banks from failing and to prevent hungry people from rioting in the street. In the 30's there were food lines in every city. Hundreds of people would line up everyday at public buildings where food was handed out. Today food stamps do this in a more or less secret way so you don't see it. But there are well over 50 million people getting food stamps today. Unemployment, the real unemployment is almost as high as it was in the 30's. "Almost", you say, meaning "then it isn't that bad, right?" Again, the government printing and borrowing of money is bouying up the jobs, certainly federal, state and local employees are all working and arguably many should have been let go to keep spending down. Many companies are getting massive subsidies to prop them up. If the government didn't have a couple of trillion from borrowing and printing to spend every year these jobs would have long since gone away. The point is we are indeed in a collapse but the massive borrowing and printing is covering it up. No one thinks this can go on forever. Sooner or later no one will lend to us and printing money will surely bring on massive inflation. Sooner or later the bubble WILL burst. So what, exactly are we trying to tell you when we give you these warnings? Simply this: the crash/crisis is eminent BUT right now the food stores are full, the other stores have plenty of the necessities of life. Don't wait until it all crashes down around you to buy some extra food and necessities so that you can survive the inevitable crash. What will it look like? Will it last for a decade or a year? Will people die by the millions or simply be inconvenienced for years? We don't know and we cannot know but any and all of these results are possible. If you are smart make some preparations, even minimal preparations will help you tremendously if/when it crashes. Don't spend all your money and time preparing and don't get complacent. If you bury your head in the sand or burn yourself out by over reaction then when it does crash you "may" be caught unprepared. No one can tell you when, exactly, the S will HTF. We can only state the obvious and for anyone with an IQ of three digits that should be enough. Be prepared for the worst but hope for the best. The storm is coming.
ReplyDeleteIf you live in tornado country you prepare because it will happen in your lifetime. And so with hurricanes, ice storms, and earthquakes. We live in a time when economic disruption will happen in our lifetime. So we do the same as our ancestors did - we do what we must and what we are able. It's that simple.
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