Prepare Thyself
by
William Buppert
by William Buppert
DIGG THIS
Why preparedness?
I don’t like to use the term survivalist because it has become freighted
with all kinds of negative images such as the armed survivors who
actually relished the coming of the end of civilization hunkered
down with cases of food and beer waiting to mow down bad guys and
refugees alike. I feel that, as husband and father, my obligation
to my family through thick and thin includes planning for all probable
contingencies. Meticulous planning is a critical component of good
luck.
What is the
reason to hunker down and prepare for doom and gloom? I have been
involved in preparedness since the early eighties during the peak
of the Soviet atomic threat to these united States. The Bulletin
of Atomic Scientists used to employ a clock that would dictate
how close to midnight we were for nuclear apocalypse or "The
End of the World as We Know It" (TEOTWAWKI). While I think
the organization is filled with lefty scientific illiterates, I
still agree that the clock is justifiably closer than at any time
since then for a variety of reasons.
I would suggest
that nuclear Armageddon is a distant possibility with the interlinking
nation-states rising now to challenge Earth’s singular superpower
but the more pressing and immediate threat is the planetary alignment
of economic catastrophe looming here and concomitantly, abroad.
The national debt,
enormous government spending,
deficit service of the debt, Treasury printing with no adult supervision,
regulatory overreach, aggregate tax burdens on all sectors and the
looming complex banking crisis all possess precursors that make
the Great Depression
seem like a subtle economic interruption under RedDR.
Y2K may have been an illusion but this a clear and present danger.
We are facing an economic abyss from which we cannot shrink or retreat;
we are committed to wandering through a valley for which Americans
have no contemporary experience nor preparation. The more affluent
the nation, the harder the fall and we are heading for a collapse.
I offer the
scenarios here with a broad brush but these are simply candidate
events and there may very well be dozens or hundreds of other variants
looming. Three events will directly affect the American population
in concert with an economic meltdown. There will be a grid-up collapse
that will be a hyperinflationary environment in which no major services
are disrupted but the downturn will lead to massive un(der)employment
or dislocation of services. The more severe will be a grid-down
scenario that embraces the worst of the latter in a collapse in
which basic services will diminish or cease to function at all such
as power, water and waste treatment complexes. The last and worst
scenario is a nuclear fallout event in which its initiation is independent
of or in concert with the first two scenarios. I cannot predict
which of these will come to pass nor if they will even become reality.
So how will we prepare for these rather anomalous scenarios?
There are
three levels of preparation. I would offer the caveat that no matter
how prepared you may think you are, you will always discover shortcomings
in training and matériel as your plans evolve. The ruralite will
have an instant advantage over the urbanite for two reasons – city
folk pride themselves on their lack of self-sufficiency and country
dwellers are positioned to advantage simply because of where they
live. If you have any doubt of this, consider what the big cities
will be like after the power has been off for more than three days
and the ambient temperatures in refrigerated/freezer containers
start to set food to rotting. I discussed guns and training in an
earlier essay and will not emphasize that in this one. While I think
the firearms battery is a cornerstone, it is simply a component
of a larger matrix of skills and materiel that make for a well-rounded
survival plan. Remember that you will never exceed your highest
level of training.
The beginner
will have completed the most difficult step in preparedness – acknowledgement
that a severe problem is emerging that will endanger both the individual
and his family. The inventory of skill sets and materiel shortcomings
will commence and an enormous task will now present itself for you
to get ready for the contingencies you are planning for. It is not
within the scope of this essay to provide the comprehensive means
to equip for the coming bad times but I will provide some link and
book recommendations to get started. The first stop for both the
novice and experienced preparedness family should be Jim Rawles’
outstanding site: www.survivalblog.com
. If there is one-stop shopping for both the beginner and the expert,
this is the place to be.
The intermediate
family will have already acknowledged the looming crisis and taken
steps to ameliorate some of the more unpleasant aspects of the disturbance
or cessation of goods and services. This family may have put in
a deep larder of foodstuffs either purchased at a big box store,
a specialty store, or canned
at home. They will have a generator set, the appropriate fuel storage
and the means to defend themselves. More importantly, they will
have mastered or dabbled in some skills such as welding, vehicle
repair or orienteering.
The advanced
preparedness family will have done all of the above, located themselves
so they live at their retreat 365 days a year, thoroughly trained
in all the essential elements from primitive skills to gun-fighting
courses, and have the deep larder to be self-sustaining for more
than one year.
So where to
start? Wherever you may be in the preparedness continuum, you will
discover that every new skill mastered or new widget purchased will
identify another potential shortcoming to be addressed. Make no
mistake; this is a lifestyle choice that will have benefits for
any family if a collapse never materializes. Some of the trademark
attributes in the movement is to get out of debt, get closer to
the business end of food delivery (such as growing gardens and raising
livestock), become proficient at fixing your own vehicles and learning
19th and early 20th century skill sets. Use
scroogle or metacrawler to find the endless variety of sites dedicated
to this subculture.
I recommend
that you purchase one book to get you started and this will in turn
through your own research lead to other areas of inquiry. Your bookshelves
will be groaning soon enough if you decide to get ready for the
coming bad times. The book is The
Encyclopedia of Country Living by Carla Emery and it is
worth every penny.
Next, go to
Lindsay’s Technical Books
and explore the amazing variety of offerings for books on everything
from steam engines to metalworking. You will also be amazed at the
advancement of technology in the days of old because we have this
cultural conceit that things now are always better than they ever
were.
There are
a variety of magazines out there and I tend to stay away from the
gun-centric-kill-’em-all scribblings that think preparation is all
about the largest and latest piece of firearms hardware. I would
recommend three to begin with: Backwoods
Home, Countryside,
and Backwoodsman
magazine. The editor of Backwoods Home, Dave Duffy, is a self-professed
libertarian whose editorials will bring a smile to any reader of
LRC.
This is simply
a primer to get you started on the path to self-sufficiency, and
come what may, you will be richer for it.
Gold, guns
and groceries.
March
1, 2008
William
Buppert [send him mail]
and his homeschooled family live in the high desert in the American
Southwest.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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Buppert Archives
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