More and More Americans Preparing for Social Unrest
From the outside,
Jerry Erwin's home in the northwestern US state of Oregon is a nondescript
house with a manicured front lawn and little to differentiate it
from those of his neighbors.
But tucked
away out of sight in his backyard are the signs of his preparations
for doomsday, a catastrophic societal collapse that Erwin, 45, now
believes is likely within his lifetime.
"I've
got, under an awning, stacks of firewood, rain catching in barrels,
I've got a shed with barbed concertina wire, like the military uses,"
he told AFP.
He and his
wife also have also stockpiled thousands of rounds of ammunition
and enough food for about six months.
"Several
years ago I worked on paying off the house, replacing all the windows,
and just very recently, I'm proud to say, we've replaced all our
exterior doors with more energy-efficient ones, with as much built-in
security features as I could get," he told AFP.
"Plus
I'm going to be adding some more structural improvements to the
door frames to make it hopefully virtually impossible to take a
battering ram to them."
Erwin and others
like him in the United States and elsewhere see political upheaval
and natural disasters as clear signs that civilization is doomed.
"We're
hitting on all cylinders as far as symptoms that have led other
great powers to decline or collapse: resource depletion, damage
to the environment, climate change, those are the same things that
affected other great societies," he said.
For Erwin,
the decline is irreversible and the best approach is to prepare
for the inevitable.
His pessimism
is shared by a wide range of people, from left-wing environmentalists
who believe climate change and capitalist greed will doom human
society to Christian fundamentalists who think sin will do the same.
They label
themselves "preppers," "doomers," and "survivalists,"
and take a variety of different approaches to the same question:
How best to prepare for the coming apocalypse?
Jim Rawles,
who Erwin describes as "the patron saint of survivalism,"
prefers an isolationist, Christian-influenced approach.
He homeschooled
his children, declines to say where he lives, and advises readers
of his website survivalblog.com to "relocate to a safe area
and live there year-round."
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the rest of the article
July
13, 2010
Copyright
© 2010 Agence France-Presse
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