Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Moving on.

Just wanted to let you all know that LoudPing is now live.

And look! Whadda surprise, someone put up a post about Ariel...

Some things on there will be rehashes from this blog. Currently, the website is going through some teething as we get things situated. Please note that I'll be going by Conan over there.

This blog may become stale now, FYI.

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Transition!

No, I have not forgotten about this blog, but I may soon...

I have taken the advise of a few of my dedicated readers here, and I am now working on putting together a website that will cater to politics, movie reviews, games, books and current news. True, that does sound like a bit much, but think of it as a Drudge Report meets American Thinker with Rotten Tomatoes and Reading for Sanity all mixed together in perfect harmony. Well, as perfect as we can get it.

The website is called loudping.com (You can click on that link, but the website is under construction with joomla web manager.)

Odd? Yeah, well, we spent a week trying to find a name that isn't taken. Don't think because you type "wiseguys" into a url, and nothing shows up, means it isn't taken. Nope. There is an internet registry with millions of squatters sitting on cool names, which you can buy or lease from them. For example, you can buy kari.com for $63,000, if you are so interested. Or, you could lease "wiseguys" for $79.00 for 3 years. So I went through a crapload of creative names, including 100 Latin words, some Greek, one Swahili, and anything else I could think of. No dice. I haphazardly mentioned "loudping" to my associates and it was unanimous. I was shocked! And it was free -- no cost for us.s

Right, I said "we." Considering how often I update my blog (which here after will be even less), I cannot command enough reason to have a website, unless like-minded people offer to help keep it fresh. So, essentially a bunch of friends of mine have come together with our common sense to address today's issues. Again, not specifically politics, but there will be a focus on that aspect especially by yours truly.

The website will be fully functional by the end of the month, and we'll continue to adjust it as we find our direction. I will be bringing in outside articles from my favorite sites -- typically the ones I site in my own articles -- for people to peruse. Again, I am trying to make a 'one stop shop' for politics because there are a lot of good articles out there, but no one source to find them. Of course, it'll be subject to my bias.

So, I hope you all can make the transition to loudping with me as this was basically your idea as some of you have expressed before on my blog. Rest assured, we are not just now coming together on this. Actually, we have very long debates on our 13 panel email exchange and after being chastised there as well as here, it became evident that we should be discussing these out in the open for others to opine on as well. We're not traditional experts, we won't pretend to be, but we do feel that more of this information needs to be public for the record. We'll have forums for discussing the topics, too. Most of you will already know some of the other contributors to this website, by the way.

And yes, I'll do a movie review on The Little Mermaid... filthy flighty fish.

Sunday, March 21, 2010

In Sickness or in Healthcare

Yeah, it's been a while. I was looking for my compass, or maybe trade winds, to continue to push me along as I was feeling just a tad burned out on politics, as you may have noted in my last post.

Well, after tonight, it would be sufficient to say that I am mad as hell at a congress and presidency that completely ignored the will of the majority in this country, and passed an unconstitutional law mandating that we buy health care coverage or face a seemingly massive penalty and/or up to 5 years in prison. There is so much more tripe in this bill of +2000 pages that I'm not even going to bother touching it any more, as I've already discussed it in other blog posts. But, mark your calendars accordingly: July 4th, Independence Day; March 21st, Dependence Day.

As promised by Obama, this will fundamentally change this country forever, when your freedoms were sold to politicians for back-door deals and illegal means.

***

I heard someone say the other day that Obama is alienating his voter base. I would argue that he is, in fact, not. He was never a "democrat" to begin with. When he first ran for political office in Chicago, for the state Senate, he ran on the "New Party" ticket, which is a Marxist platform, or in other words, Communism. It wasn't until his reelection that he switched to being a supposed democrat. He isn't alienating his party, he is alienating their party by pretending to be one of them.

I fear this all goes back to Bill Ayers, former member of the SDS and Weatherman Underground, wherein he stated that in order to change, fundamentally change, the US, between 25-30 million people would need to be eliminated. I feel Obama has gotten us one step closer to this realization. People are starting to be afraid now. They've seen what Washington can do, and I bet gun sales really start to take off starting tomorrow.

It's not all that hard to fathom, really. It happened in Russia, China, Vietnam, Cambodia and such government will continue to happen, even on our soil, as we saw tonight.

Immigration reform is next on the docket for Obama. Now that the major hurdle of Healthcare has been breached, really, what's to stop anything else?

Hopefully, the Tenthers.

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Nothing specific for Mr. Scatter-braindead

Well, I've let a bit of time pass since my last blog update, and in truth, it's because I haven't much to say these days. Yeah, odd. Apparently, considering the dearth of comments from the last 3 posts, no one else has had anything to say either. No, I don't live by the crumbs left on my blog -- otherwise I'd update this puppy daily. Just making a point that perhaps we're being a little more introspective these days.

I mean, sure, a lot more has come out about the falsified information on global warming, with even one of the head honchos stating there hasn't been significant warming since 1995 -- and he (Phil Jones) was a huge propagator to pushing AGW. Not much coverage in the US about this, huh? I wanted to post about all this, but more stuff keeps coming out. I guess the science isn't settled on the matter.

And then there's all the talk of Greece going under financially, which has been killing the Euro (but bolstering the dollar). Spain, Portugal and Ireland not far behind...

I honestly do not want to make another post about the US/global financial market (as my last post is seemingly spot-on still), but I did find this rather relevant post on AT as to why economists are stating that the US is financially "unsustainable" right now. And it came with graphs! I love graphs! [But not hockey-stick graphs...]

Anyway, I guess I am sorta taking a mental break from economics and even politics. There comes a point when your head starts spinning and you just can internalize everything being thrown at you. It's hard enough parsing through the "news" and trying to piece together the real truth. Every time I hear something out of Keith Olberman or Chris Matthews, I get angry rather quickly. Talking heads spewing hateful rhetoric, tearing down Palin at any opportunity, blaming Bush, calling people names or labeling them "worst person" in libelous fashion.

Going back to blaming Bush because Obama "inherited" this mess. Uhm, ya know what, this has been inherited by every president since LBJ who instituted MediCare, MediCaid & Welfare. [And technically, no president has inherited them more than the tax payer.] Sure, they are great programs (heh), but they are fiscally insolvent and will continue to be until the demise of the US, which is practically guaranteed with the current captain at the helm. Back to back trillion dollar deficits will break any bank, and China is selling off US Treasuries so where will these deficits get funding, besides the local money printing shoppes?

Moving on to more frivolous topics...

***

However, I have also been re-examining Ariel from the Little Mermaid. Yes, I still do not like her. But Snow White has been steadily climbing up in the depth chart of "stupid princess" ranks. This is due to the fact we got this movie for Christmas, and I've had to watch it a few times ... in one day. Several times over.

How could I attack her? Well, it is still marginally a free country, but also, Snow White just doesn't get it. How many warnings does she need and does she dye her hair often because there seems to be some obvious blond roots lurking constantly in the foreground (no offense to smart blonds much like myself). "Watch out for the queen, watch out for the queen!" Oops, she fell for it again. In the original story, she gets tricked 3 times. Disney thankfully shortened it to one encounter. Still, Snow White, since you cannot listen to an easy command that would save your life, I dub thee the dumbest princess in the book. Yet, that is better than my opinion of Ariel... Stupid sexually charged, disobedient, belligerent, statutory enabling, homicide provoking, red-headed, air-brained, animal deceiving, royalty brat! "Oh Prince Eric, you're so handsome ... blah, blah, blah, let me sell my soul so we can make out and have an underage marriage happily ever after!" Blech!

Sadly, my daughter likes the above two princesses the most, and I don't know which is worse: a hide-out blond with a fetish for 7 freakish men and an inability to 'just say no' or, the emotionally charged 'my way or highway' mermaid who falls in love by the mere visage of prince Eric.

I need more Cinderella or Belle around here. Classy, smart girls with good work ethic, a wholesome sense of fashion, and the patience to not jump into things without looking where they leap. Either of which I would recommend over getting into current economics or politics... Just sayin'.

Be prepared.

Thursday, January 21, 2010

"If" or "When?"

Well, I figure it is about time we talk about the economy. I mean, we've only been dealing with a declining economy since December of 2007, or so we were told. And it doesn't appear to be getting much better. Can we agree to that? Doesn't matter, your opinion is not valid here. My blog. MY BLOG!

Let's recap a few things I have already covered in previous posts. The Federal Reserve is neither Federal (government) nor does it have a "reserve" in the strictest of senses. Basically, in 1913, President Woodrow Wilson was convinced that the Federal Reserve was the answer to keeping the economy on track and avoid further depressions. Their track record ... is worse than drunken Mario Cart. They have failed to accomplish their original purpose. And despite having literal control over our money, they report to nobody as no audit has ever been conducted on their business deals. Yet, since its inception, the value of the US currency has dropped precipitously. You already know this; in the 1980s I could buy 4 candy bars for a dollar, today, I can buy one and have a little change left over for ... nothing.

There are some mitigating circumstances that need to be taken into consideration. First, during the Great Depression, in 1933 Congress passed a law stating private ownership of gold (besides collectibles) was thereby illegal. (It was confiscated at $20 an ounce, then resold at $35 an ounce shortly thereafter. Classic governmental price fixing.) In that era, you could still pay for and buy things with gold up until that law passed.

It should be pointed out that the US Constitution specifically states that our currency is to based/backed on Gold and Silver. In 1868 a Supreme Court decision allowed paper currency as long as it was backed by gold. (see previous link) No mention of non-gold backed paper currency whatsoever was permitted. As a matter of fact, our governments first paper currency, before the Constitution was even penned, failed under massive inflation. So I imagine they were leery about paper currencies.

Then came the Bretton Woods accords in 1944, which was put together to insure currencies by having their value relative to the value of gold. The argument was that due to economic discrimination and trade warfare, such calamities as World War 2 were inevitable. They would go on to form other entities of note; the IMF and World Bank. The Bretton Wood ideology finally failed when Nixon did two things; he legalized citizens' rights to own gold bullion again, but delinked the dollar to the gold standard completely. Now, last I heard, the US had 10,000 tons of gold as back-up (between Ft. Knox and the NY Federal Reserve, which doesn't own all its gold), but our money is not backed by gold, nor silver, nor anything for that matter. It's called fiat money, and I think this wiki description states it best: state-issued money which is neither legally convertible to any other thing, nor fixed in value in terms of any objective standard.

Does that instill a lot of confidence into the all-mighty dollar for you?

We pretty much know what happened after that, a recession happened in the 1970's were inflation was rampart. My parents told me they bought a Datsun 210 @ 24% interest during that saga. They took on a new job just to pay for the interest on that vehicle.

Here's what happened when the dollar was permenantly removed from the gold standard: the Federal Reserve became a credit card with an unlimited loan amount. All our gold in reserves were no longer associated with actual paper money -- they were independent of each other, and now whenever the government needed money, it could literally make more and not have to offset the costs with precious metal, or with anything for that matter. It's fiat money, baby! It's worth what the government says it's worth.

We've been paying off this national debt since before WW2. During WW2, the national debt soared to 119% of our total economic output. That was okay, because we were a good industrial nation with lots of potential and, coincidentally, the winners of the war. Innovation and business surged over the next few decades, and we pushed that debt down to 40% of our economic capabilities. Then, at the end of the 70's, it started to grow again. We would sell US Treasury notes to offset the yearly deficits because as a country we have a AAA debt rating.

As you know, it has been growing exponentially since then. I'm not going to point fingers, as every president since FDR has "inherited" a mountain of national debt. Oh, and yes, Clinton did balance the budget one year, but that excess wasn't put towards the national debt. And technically, he didn't balance anything, but had a surplus in taxation.

Okay, we are done with the recap. The above is a visceral explanation as the whole process is more complicated and time consuming. What is important to note is that where we are at right now took a few acts of power to achieve, and has not been good for our nation as a whole. Now lets talk about imminent failure.

The baby-boomers are setting to retire, huge throes of them. And over the last 40 years, politicians have been robbing them of this day. There is not enough money in Social Security nor MediCare to take care of them all. And FICA, that taxation removed from their check every payday since they first started working, was supposed to be putting that money away for their retirement. It doesn't exit. This is part of what people talk about when they say we owe this national debt to ourselves. Yep, we sure do. And guess what, that money is gone! Somewhere in the neighborhood of 9 trillion dollars of our total debt is missing that was supposed to support these boomers through retirement and to the grave. Where are we going to get that money?

Same goes for MediCare, this government agency will be completely bankrupt in a few short years already, with Social Security nipping at its heels. There is no remedy for this save for people will have to go without. Sorry, this huge scam is coming to a close and it will crush us unless the boomers continue working to their grave and buy personal insurance, unless they took the initiative to invest along the way.

Just a couple of days ago, there was a headline about raising the debt ceiling to almost 14 trillion. They raised the debt ceiling back in December as well. The reason they have to do this is that if we surpass our ceiling, it will raise the interest rates on our outstanding loans, which are about 12 trillion right now. Basically, we would lose our AAA rating. But buy raising it, we buy into the unlimited money supply ideology that Congress gets drunk off.

We all know the current administration put up a 1.4 trillion dollar deficit for `09. I hear it'll be close to the same for this year, with perhaps another stimulus on the way. If so, then this new debt ceiling may last to the end of the year. Even if it does, our GDP is about 14 trillion when not in a recession. Or in other words, it'll be like post WW2 with our debt being over 100% of our total economic output.

The difference, however, is that we are not the same nation as before. In fact, we export our jobs over seas, and we build less than 10% of what we used to at the end of the 1940s. And, our currency is worth less, and we have over 10% of the workforce drawing unemployment. Which means not only are they not paying taxes, they are taking money away from the government (no offense to anyone, I was unemployed a year ago as well).

Here's the next problem; the States of America are 77 billion dollars in the red, and California is over 20 billion behind on the budget. The "governator" just asked for a Federal Bailout and was rebuffed. The 8th largest economy in the world is in the tank. What happens if the Feds say 'yes' to the bailout? How many more states will ask for money as well? Where will this money come from? Less and less countries are interested in buying US Treasure bonds, and I don't blame them. In part, the rest of the world has less money to spend, but also, they just watched us sell 1.4 trillion in Treasury bonds, and less than 400 billion were bought. The rest of the money was printed off.

This time last year gas was $40 a barrel, under $2.00 a gallon at the pump. Global demand had taken a nose dive. One year later, and we have a 50% increase in price at the pump. For what? Save reason gold surged past $900, 1000 & 1100 dollars an ounce last year. The value of your dollar is dropping dramatically because of inflation so the price of gold rises accordingly. Inflation hasn't hit everywhere, and that is because the oil industry is always ahead of the game, and gold is nobody's fool. The reason you have not seen huge inflation increases elsewhere is because the banks are sitting on that excess money, unsure whether to loan it out, our wait for Obama's next Marxist move. (Of note, today Obama mentions tightening the grip on banks, and the Dow drops over 200 points.) Once that money does hit the streets, you will notice a lot more. And it is important to remember that inflation is the invisible tax that you never see. You earn 1.00, but by the end of the month when you get paid, it is worth .90 cents.

So going back to California, if the Federal government does not bail them out, they will be fiscally insolvent and bankruptcy will ensue. This will adversely affect the Federal government's pockets, because, again, 8th largest economy in the world supporting the largest economy in the world. It will create a nightmare, one that will exacerbate this frail economy. So bail them out. Then New York, proposing a $1 billion tax on their already excessively taxed populace, may want a bailout as well. Then Michigan. Then New Jersey, and so on and so forth. If that does happen, more money will need to be printed off. If we don't bail them out, states could declare bankruptcy which will affect the US government's bottom line, causing them to have less money overall as well, and increase the deficit. Either scenario is extremely risky.

What of external issues? Oh, you mean like the country Greece that is hedging toward financial disaster? Yep, same issue as California. Greece is at 113% of its GDP and heading to 120% soon. It is part of the European Union and therefore, allowed a bailout by the other Euro countries, but to do so would mean they have to assume Greece's debt, which would devalue the Euro (good for the dollar...). But if they don't, then Greece doesn't have to pay its debts through bankruptcy, and those other nations will be out of the money they invested. If that happens, then maybe Spain, another country is financial dire straights, will follow suit and absolve themselves from debt. What do you think will happen next? Another country declares bankruptcy? Why not. Fresh start!

The problem in part is that we are all inter-connected and even though Luxembourg is a small country, it has nearly 2 trillion in debt. And if tiny Luxembourg fell, then Greece, then Spain, and on down the line, this economic world is over. Undeveloped nations can get away with declaring bankruptcy (such as Mexico in the `80s and Argentina in `01), but well-established countries cannot, under any circumstances, be allowed to fail -- too big to fail! But only because the dominoes start to topple after that, but, as I stated above, to save them greatly devalues their respective currencies, causes inflation, and affects everyone regardless of whether you actually live in the country.

Some have argued that China will save us, but the guy who predicted the fall of Enron, and made money off it, has similarly predicted the same for China. But also, if the US fails, China will as well, since we are their money bags, besides holding over $1 trillion of our debt -- thank you China. But if China fails, this would have adverse effects as well. Oh, and Japan will probably fail as they are at 170% of their GDP.

What could save us from this? Bring back the gold standard for one. Balance the budget would be another. Caps on government spending, re-employment, voting conservatively... Just saying. Obama did announce he is putting forth a commission to help him cut spending. Like any of this will ever happen (not real pessimism, I do have hope).

So I've given to very real reasons that certain economic catastrophe is going to happen; either internally or externally, besides the inevitable inflation and baby-boomer demise. Do you go off and buy gold now? No. At +$1100 an ounce, it simply is not worth it because historically, silver has maintained a 1/16 price of gold, yet silver is around $18 an ounce, so there is a huge price disparity between the two precious metals which leads me to conclude that even gold is in its own bubble currently. That, or silver is way under priced and in that case, go buy some. I actually went to buy silver bars last Saturday, but strangely, they only accept cash!

Why buy precious metals when we should focus on survival? Because, in the event of total global meltdown, bartering will be paramount. And if you need medication, or a tank of gas, they may not be willing to trade two cans of pitted black olives for you. You can buy 1 ounce silver bars for under $20. That's a good start for bartering. If not, maybe you will not mind giving up that wedding band. But once that is gone, then what?

Fellow readers, I've waxed on a bit much. My point is this: I may be wrong which is totally acceptable to me, and we still have time to rectify this, but I exhort you to be prepared on three fronts. Food. Protection. Bartering. And it wouldn't hurt to say your prayers.

Saturday, January 16, 2010

And Now You Know...

My mom sends out an army of forwards every 3-4 days. Since she is relatively new to the web, most of it I have already seen. Typically there is about 1 in 10 that are noteworthy. Below is one such case.

This is a harsh, nigh-unpalatable piece of information, nevertheless, it posses difficult situations wherein you would have to respond and live with the consequences. Because it paralleled my goals for 2010, I thought it appropriate to post here. Reader beware, it is not an easy, nor short, read. I have made it better as the forward was corrupted with too many additions from other people, as well as terrible sentence structure and grammar errors. I have cleaned it up and edited it. I do not know the original author, but considering his expertise, it does have value worth learning.

***


COA Analysis of Common Survival Strategies,
by JIR

Having spent a lot of years on military planning staffs, I cannot overlook war-gaming scenarios. Course of Action (COA) development is a big part of Intelligence Preparation of the Battlefield (IPB) and is a fairly reliable way of looking at possibilities and choosing likely outcomes, given certain scenarios. In effect, it is a way of predicting war-gaming in the future.

There are a number of horror scenarios that seem to me to be fairly probable and they keep going around and around in my head as I try to sequence them and assign probabilities to each one. I am haunted by the possible future, an occupational hazard for a professional planner. I sincerely hope our civilization outlives me because it's failure could be truly horrible.

I agree completely with you on relocation to safer areas and stocking a remote retreat in the outer-boonies. That's the optimum solution and in worst case situations, it's really the only solution likely to work long term. Any of you readers stuck in less than optimum situations are going to make a valiant effort to survive, but their odds are not as good. I am one of these folks. I worry about the golden hoard more than anything else. I would like to pass on some thoughts on the subject of what the general populace will be doing after "the end of the world as we know it" (TEOTWAWKI).

I am only guessing, but my guesses are made using history as a template. If anyone disagrees with my analysis, I would love to hear about it.

What about those totally unprepared? What are they going to do? There are many survival strategies open to the unwashed masses other than sitting down and starving to death. We all need to compare our own plans with these other strategies because I guarantee some of these strategies will be used by the teeming masses. When the power grid drops and the food shipments end, the average citizen is going to get a huge shot of reality. Guessing what they are going to do when the (stuff) hits the fan is central to all other survival planning, especially in the Eastern US or Europe.

ASSUMPTIONS:

I am talking here about a total collapse situation, not a slow slide decline or regional disruption. You can pick your own favorite cause from an EMP event to a finance system failure. They all cause roughly the same sequence of events. The results of any catastrophic collapse could easily be worse than any fiction you have ever read. The worst case scenarios all result in disruption of services and quick spiral into anarchy, but leave most of the population alive and hungry. This is the stuff of nightmares.

To recap our unprecedented bad situation: The vast majority of people live in urban or suburban areas near large population centers. They are poorly prepared for any emergency and completely unable to live self-sufficiently. The food production systems that currently supply their food are fragile and subject to catastrophic failure. Most people's very lives depend on a fragile triad made up of the transportation network, power grid and finance system. All three of these systems depend on the other two and they are all three unbelievably fragile. (There are many dependencies, but I see these as the three key points of failure.)

Most people currently live shoulder to shoulder in unthinkable crowding. Once the triad of services breaks down, the vast majority of people will suddenly be living on a very limited amount of capital in the form the tiny amount of consumables on hand in each city. Once the Evian is gone and the toilets don't work, they will have no way to get drinking water or even dispose of their own sewage. They are literally less than a week away from serious acute hunger.

This situation will not get better unless the government is able to restore critical systems very quickly. The odds of restoring order get worse the longer the crisis lasts as the teeming masses start migrating and civil order disintegrates. Assuming the government fails, the countryside cannot feed the population of the USA without modern fuel, finance, power and distribution systems in place. Using 19th century techniques (where that is possible), the farmland in the USA cannot begin to feed everyone. (Europe has the same problem). In short, people are living where there will be no resources, and farmland (and farmers) will be overtaxed just to support locals with produce. We don't have the capital goods (horses, tack, hand plows, tools, seeds, etc. ) or skills to go back to old farming methods quickly. The math points to a die-off larger than anything recorded in history. Did I miss any main points?

People are not going to starve to death quietly. They never do unless there is a government to enforce it. Every last one of them is going to try something to survive or even just hang on one more day. Humans are survivors. They are intelligent, ruthless and deadly omnivores. We use the terms "sheeple", or "Joe Six-pack" pretty flippantly, but even the most stupid human is very dangerous and many of the "sheeple" are not stupid or incompetent. They are, in fact, the most dangerous predators on earth. You are much better off surrounded by hungry tigers than hungry humans.

On the other hand, these are real people that used to be your neighbors, mothers, fathers, daughters. When you look them in the face it's going to be very hard to pull a trigger.

AVAILABLE STRATEGIES:

This is not an all inclusive list. People are going to try all of these concurrently. I expect to see a general sequence of strategy choices, but it's not iron clad. While you would expect it much later
in the crisis, you might run into a professional army on day one! The interplay of each strategy with the others is also hard to predict. People are going to try other things too (that I haven't thought of). Local variables will effect how each strategy plays out and what events are likely to occur.

The interplay of all these activities is where my analysis breaks down in complexity. You have to evaluate them with local variables, so generalizations can only go so far. I believe people will try all of these strategies. Some of them will work, but most of them will fail. There are only so many resources.

1. Begging/bartering. This is probably the first strategy you will encounter. Begging will go on until the very end. This strategy is open to everyone. It will work better for weak individuals, but ultimately, charity is going to dry up as resources get tighter. The vast majority of people who depend solely on begging will ultimately starve to death. (Unfortunately, most people will beg, barter, steal and kill, in that order. Even a single mother may cut your throat to save her children.)

PLANNING NOTE: In a total meltdown, the numbers will crush you if you let them. You have stored a finite amount of food, but there is an almost infinite number of beggars out there. Can you turn away a family with children who only want a bite to eat? You better think this out carefully and steel yourself for whatever you decide to do. If you give too many of your supplies away you will starve. If you turn everyone away, you may feel really bad. Think about it. How are your wife and kids going to react to begging? Watching a die-off is going to be tragic.

a. Bartering services. This could be prostitution or offering to act as security guard. This is actually a viable strategy for anyone with end-of-the-world useful skills. Find someone (or preferably a community) with food and sell yourself. If you have military training and equipment or specific skills, this could work. I don't expect all the doctors to starve.

a. Bartering goods. Rich people may try to buy basic supplies at scalper's prices. You might get a great deal on a Rolex or Mercedes.

2. Stealing/looting. This is a no-brainer once law enforcement breaks down. Even while there is some order, people are going to steal anything they can get their hands on, even at the risk of being hurt or killed.

If we drop into anarchy, expect crowds of hungry people or "professional rioters" to sweep the city streets. As the public-access shops and warehouses begin to empty, crowds may move into residential areas for a while, but I don't expect this to last long. Big crowds will probably disband completely when resources become more scarce or they have to travel further to get to them. A warehouse of food or shopping center near the inner city may support this behavior, but a suburban neighborhood 10 miles away won't. Residential areas within cities may be in serious peril. The closer you are to densely populated areas and/or poor areas, the more peril you face.

Once the big flash-crowds disappear or people start to forage in the suburbs, small groups will splinter off and begin raiding (see item #5 below). There will also be a lot of solitary (or small groups) burglars and sneak-thieves. If you keep chickens in your yard, watch your neighbors closely. If you plan to go to work and leave your house empty, it may be looted while you are away. Gasoline tanks without locks will be prime targets for night visitors. Suburban gardens are prime targets. This applies to slow-slide declines too.

Beggars can turn into looters quickly if nobody is watching. If nobody answers a door, they may try to break a window. The suburbs may be swamped with beggars/looters. As they get more desperate, looters will get bolder and more dangerous. The further out of town you live the safer you will be from this group. Of course, the more isolated you are, the more vulnerable you are to raiders.

3. Some people will sit tight and wait for things to somehow return to normal. Most people who have food and other resources will try to live on them and wait it out. If they stay in small family groups, they will be easy prey for mobs or raiders. Still, I expect most urbanites will do this until they are almost out of resources...then they will join the beggars and looters. This group will grow smaller every day and swell the numbers of looters.

4. Banding. Almost all people will band together for mutual protection and support. How well this works depends on many factors, but ultimately the only safety anywhere will be provided by numbers. Single survivors will get swallowed up quickly.

a. Banding by family unit. This is the basic family group and will be the the first and most common grouping. These groups are small in size but very cohesive. Most families will quickly band with other families into larger groups. The ones who don't will be easy prey.

b. Banding by geography. Neighborhoods will try to form bands for mutual protection. Neighborhoods will try to do this, but historically, this is often not very effective, especially if the distance between neighbors is large. Sharing of resources within neighborhood bands is spotty and as individuals run low, they tend to leave. Rural neighborhood watches are doomed by small numbers, and urban neighborhood watches are doomed from having too many people.

Populations of small towns will band together to put up road-blocks and keep from being overwhelmed. This is the only way most small communities will be able to survive, even if they are capable of supporting themselves by farming. Unless they band effectively and very quickly, they are doomed to be overrun by refugees or raiders. Even the communities who quickly band together may get soft-hearted and let in too many people to support. I think pitiful refugees are more dangerous than raiders. It's a rare American who can watch genuine suffering and not try to help. This is especially dangerous if it looks as though the situation could improve and things go back to normal. If there is hope of getting help from outside the community, most people are inclined to save as many others as possible. I feel that this issue will doom many small communities.

PLANNING CONSIDERATION:

If your plans include banding with a farming community, you must take steps immediately to close off the flow of refugees into the area. Convincing others to take steps this drastic will be hard or even impossible, especially early in a crisis. Closing your community and isolating it may very well be impossible. If it is, you are at the mercy of fate and geography. You had better have a plan-b.

c. Banding by profession. Cops, medical workers, emergency workers, soldiers, and perhaps factory workers may band with co-workers. You will especially see this behavior with professional military groups. Beware of military installations in a total breakdown! You have a lot of very young, very scared and highly trained young men with no families there. It might get very dangerous to be near a military town if the government totally disappears. (In a slow slide disaster or regional disaster, Army Towns are perhaps the safest places to be. But once the chain of command disappears, watch out.)

d. Banding by religion. This is perhaps the easiest, most effective band to join, since the churches already congregate groups of like-minded people within a small area. Religious bands will probably be the basis for "small community group banding" and are usually the strongest bands possible to form on short notice. All the church groups in an area or a town will likely band together and put on the mantle of "local government". I anticipate local churches forming the backbone of most local governments. They will be equipped with arm bands and represent "legitimate" government when they come to loot your supplies. Joining one of these bands will be a good survival strategy for many people, but in a total collapse, they are very likely to keep as many people alive as possible until they run out of resources and then starve together.

Expect to see local polities formed from church groups going to war as resources get scarce. They will go after both looters and hoarders. Fascism in America will probably arrive carrying a cross.

e. Banding by racial or ethnic group. You will see racially or ethnically pure groups in some regions. This could be very important factor in places like Los Angeles or New York almost immediately and may take precedence over geography or religion. It's an ugly thought, but being the wrong color may be a death sentence some places. (Ironically, I don't expect any serious racial tension in the deep South.)

f. Banding by gang or club affiliation. Not only urban gangs and bikers, but also gun-clubs, country clubs, and survival groups fall into this category. Some clubs will obviously not band effectively in an emergency (like a yacht club for instance), but you can bet the Aryan Brotherhood will cleave together like real brothers. Your survival group can form a strong group if you have like minds and have clear plans for how to band, where to meet etc.

PLANNING NOTE: (Unfortunately, you are very unlikely to be able to form a survival group large enough to defend yourselves. You may have more success joining your survival group with a local church group or community group or some other band to increase your numbers. The only way you will be able to do that is to store enough food. Plan this out carefully. How big is your optimum band size and how will you feed everyone? Remember, you can use the same tactics other groups will use.... like confiscation of warehouses, if your numbers are large enough and you are quick enough. But, If your ultimate size gets too large it will become unwieldy and impossible to control or feed. This is a conundrum you need to give some thought to now.)

Consider this topic well because your group belief system will vary depending on how you form the group and who you let in. A church group will have to use different tactics than a biker club or a neighborhood watch. This will limit or shape your options and set the tone of everything you do. No church group is going to seriously consider cannibalism, for instance.

5. Raiding/Banditry. Raider bands are going to spring up everywhere. Some will start as low level looters and graduate into larger scale violence. Some, however will start out as systematic raiders. There are some very bad perpetrators out there and there will be even more once the prisons empty. In the short term, violence will be very lucrative. Raiders will take casualties over time. They will also replenish their numbers somewhat, but fortunately these are mostly anti-social types and may have trouble integrating new members. The further you are from them at the start, the safer you will be, but they can hit you anywhere, anytime. I don't see a good solution for this other than sheer numbers or good diplomatic tactics. They won't attack an obviously hard target and of course, they can't attack what they don't know about. They have to win to stay in business, so they won't attack unless they feel they can win.

Distance will spread out the number of groups and allow other survivors to thin their numbers in numerous gun battles. True raiders may not last long, but they are going to be a real problem in the short term. I expect raiding to take two main forms. The roadside ambush and the home invasion.

Home invasions are always dangerous and often brutal. If the raiders attack your home, they will try to take you by surprise and kill every combatant in the house before anyone can react. They will force every thing at a very fast pace to prevent you from reacting. They may use some kind of distraction or disguise to gain surprise. Home invasion, carried out with professionalism and gusto is fairly safe and easier than you would think. Expect to see some of them wearing body armor, dressed in police uniforms and carrying badges. (Some of them will have professional entry training...like SWAT and military). Failing at a stack entry, they may use CS gas to drive out the occupants. Failing that, they will use fire.

Waylaying travelers on the roads is very easy and safe. Cars are just too vulnerable to gunfire. The roads outside small communities could be very dangerous to travel. Don't ever underestimate the vile depravity of human beings. Anarchy is the dirtiest word in the English language. Rape and torture may be common. I believe as food gets harder to find, many people will turn to cannibalism to sustain themselves. (I wish this were not true, but historically, it's very common.) I am not advocating cannibalism in any way, but in all fairness, cannibalism can greatly extend a group's supply base. There are a whole lot of people out there and people are made of meat. While easy targets are available, some groups may prosper for some months eating human flesh. It could be a fairly successful strategy for some groups. Beware. History of other collapses warns us that this may be common.

A longer term problem you should watch for is what I call "part time raiders". Historically, most raids have been conducted by young men in one community raiding a nearby community. This phenomenon won't happen overnight in most places but it will probably happen eventually unless somebody forms a central authority within a year or two.

6. Extortion. Outlaw bands will give way to professional armies in some places. Possibly with a core of military trained personnel, a hundred or more killers traveling together can extort more than smaller groups can steal. These groups will get larger as time goes by but they are doomed unless they can take over someone else s farmland and extort "taxes". You may see groups like this move in to agricultural areas and set up shadow governments, taxing all the farmers nearby...or selling protection. Anyone who doesn't play ball will be burned out. Expect them to use classic tactics like assassination, kidnapping, and terrorism to cow the locals.

Local governments are going to probably hire many thugs and enforcers too. Telling the good guys from the bad guys might get difficult. Anyone trying to take your food is probably a bad guy, but it might be worth your while to pay him off.

7. Hiding. Some people are going to try to hide from the die-off. Hiding inside a city or suburbs (in my opinion) is not going to work. People are going to systematically search every building for food. You could conceivably scare off or outfight wave after wave of looters and finally be looted by a local government or burned out by a large gang or rioters. The fact that you are living there will be impossible to hide when they try to search your building. If you are there, you will eventually have to fight or surrender your supplies.

Hiding in the suburbs is just not possible and staying in an apartment building (even if you band with the other occupants for mutual protection) will eventually get you killed. Hiding in a rural area is possible, just because of the distances involved. The number of hungry mouths will be less in the country, but local citizens are still going to confiscate your "Hoarded" food if they need it. Your best hiding place is in an area that will be defended by well-fed people. (If you have a well-fed community defending you, you should really help them defend it, don't you think?)

The second best hiding place is a wilderness area with no roads or natural resources that someone will want. A wilderness hide site takes a lot of skills to pull off. Also, it is not sustainable without some planning and a lot of discipline. Essentially, this is hunkering down in a remote place and eating supplies you brought with you while you wait patiently for the teeming masses to die off. Living quietly in the wilderness, mostly underground is a hard way to live, especially in bad weather, but it could be your best chance to miss the die-off if you are healthy and have a solid set of outdoor tactical skills.

8. Bug out (presumably to a safe place). This is going to be very popular, even for people who have no place to go. Once the power is off and the sewage starts backing up, the cities are going to start losing people. The exodus may begin immediately or be delayed several days (depending on the scenario). Either way, the refugees will generally try to leave in family groups. They will mostly follow interstates, highways, state roads, and farm roads, in that order. Nobody (almost nobody) is going to just start walking in a random direction and go cross country. They will drive until they have to walk and try to re-supply along the way.

While there is order, the roads may be jammed with cars leaving the cities going nowhere. In practice, almost everyone is going to be driving out of the city with a definite destination in mind. Some relative, some small town they know of, etc. Most of these destinations are going to be just as bad as the ones they just left, but these will be desperate people.

Many of them are going to seriously overestimate their vehicle range. (Traffic jams eat a lot of fuel, probably more than most people will plan for). Most of those thousands of cars on the interstate are going to run out of gasoline in a matter of hours and wherever they finally run out, that's where the occupants are going to start walking. Of course most of them are going to pull off the highways and interstates just before they run out and mob every town along the highway. (This is a historic fact, proven by every hurricane evacuation we have ever attempted).

I expect people to turn very nasty when they run out of fuel. When they cannot buy fuel or food, the towns along America's highways will be filled with armed, hungry desperate people who may kill for a gallon of gas or a drink of water. Sound like fantasy? Don't bet on it. It's happened even during regional crisis with help on the way.

In a general meltdown, I expect lots of violence in small towns and strip communities along highways and especially interstates. There may be long columns of desperate refugees walking the interstates, but I don't foresee this. Most people will congregate in towns along the route. It's difficult to predict what desperate people will do without knowing local variables. If there is a hopeful destination within perceived walking distance, I would expect a lot of foot traffic. Of course, there will be a large number of breakdowns, but probably no mass migrations on foot unless they are being chased by something like a fire or chemical spill etc.

PLANNING NOTE: If you wait too long to get out of Dodge,you won't make it. I believe G.O.O.D. movement of any kind is going to be very dangerous. Moving vehicles are just too vulnerable, and there are going to be a lot of desperate, armed people stranded on the roads. This specifically includes law enforcement. They are not going to let you drive by with a load of gas cans in the back when their patrol car is sitting empty. Get out early or don't try it.

9. Going on with your life and ignoring the crisis. I think this will be a very popular early response. Some people will still try to make it to work, just like they always have. Until the crisis really gets bad, you will probably see shopkeepers, lawyers, bankers etc trying to commute to work. I really hope the police and firemen do this for as long as possible--and garbage collectors and power workers too! In fact, this is probably our best defense against a general melt-down. If everyone would stay calm and keep trying to make the system work, our society could survive almost anything. (I am betting on the exact opposite).

10. LaMOE (LAst Man On Earth) of the wilderness. Some people will grab their outdoors gear and head for the woods planning to live out of a rucksack and forage or hunt for their food. I include fishermen in this category. I expect the wilderness areas to be absolutely stiff with "sportsmen" who are going to try to camp their way out of trouble. Maybe not, but I have heard a lot of people talk about it. This is a losing proposition, but hat's not obvious to everyone.

PLANNING CONSIDERATION: If you attempt to hide in a wilderness location, you are going to have to avoid these knuckleheads. Choose your hide site well.

11. Throw yourself on the mercy of the government. Another VERY popular option. America has become the land of the entitlement. This generation seems to believe the government is there to take care of them from cradle to grave. I expect lots of folks to gather around anything even remotely resembling government. This will only last while government offices are open, but it might allow formation of groups or bands that will later loot and burn the city.

12. Go nuts and start burning everything in sight. It's happened before and will probably happen again. For some reason, arson seems to be some kind of release mechanism for unstable personalities. These folks are yet another reason to avoid urban areas. They won't last long, but they can cause a lot of damage in the short term.

13. Something else. This is only a partial list of all the possible strategies people will use. If you can think of something, expect someone to try it. Look at your local variables and think about it.

EXPECTED SEQUENCE:
Tricky, but in general terms, I expect urbanites to hang onto their city as long as supplies hold out and then attempt a bug-out. Some, of course, are going to bug out almost immediately. Some will never bug out. Most people are going to sit tight until they get hungry and then either attempt a bug-out or try to barter/beg/or loot food.

Looters will start looting as soon as they can get away with it. Their numbers will be fairly small in the beginning, but will grow as more people get hungry. They will continue until there is nothing to loot...then they will have to change strategies.

The next strategy up the scale is raiding. Most people will never make that transition to violence, but I estimate up to 5% of the total population will easily make that transition and another 10% are capable of doing it if they have more time to get used to the idea (and get hungry). These numbers are not really supportable historically, but I feel that they are very close to reality...just personal opinion. If I am right, that means even a city of 100,000 people could produce 5,000 potential murderers in a few days. That's a lot of bad guys. Raiders, bandits and bad guys are going to prey on the weak until somebody establishes order or they run out of easy targets. This order will probably be in the form of locally formed polities (local governments and committees, neighborhood watches, and church groups.) Once we reestablish real order, most remaining Raiders are going to try to change strategies. Some of them may join your church.

Unfortunately, the horrible die-off will encompass multiple years. It won't end until local communities reach equilibrium and produce as much food as they consume. That could easily take more than two years. (The first harvest after a major crisis is going to be a disappointing time for some communities.) Some of the starving polities (probably after the first harvest) may choose war over starvation and attack neighbors. Sounds really grim, but I call `em like I see `em.

Livestock mortality the first two years is going to be astronomical. People are going to have to literally allow other humans to die while they feed livestock. Also, they are going to be very valuable commodities and prone to theft. Wildlife and fish mortality will also be very high. Everybody who sees a deer will attempt to kill it. After a year or two, I expect deer, bear and wild hogs to be nearly extinct in the Eastern US. Small game will also suffer huge losses to poaching and so will fish.

SO, WHAT STRATEGY DO I PLAN TO USE?
I live in a nice suburban neighborhood of a small town within 45 minutes of a large urban area. The area surrounding us is a poor rural agricultural area in Southern Georgia. My town is near a secondary line of drift from Savannah. Not the worst place to live, but not good either. In a slow slide scenario, I will stay in place, participate in the neighborhood watch and go to work every day. I even have plans to set up a soup kitchen, field bakery and water purification plant at a local church if needed. My plan is to make myself valuable to the community. If things get really bad, I have the ability to arm up to 6 others. I have enough spare stored food, equipment and weapons to do this and still be postured for plan-B.

Plan-B. In the event of a "the end of the world as we know it," I intend to use several options. I intend to bug-out with a truck-load of supplies to a pre-selected wilderness area (within 15 minute ride of home), establish a hide site and wait out the carnage. (I have about seven months upplies for my family plus a couple of caches with extra food and weapons nearby for a total of roughly nine months of rough living. I believe our odds of remaining unnoticed for six or more months are very good while maintaining a fairly high standard of living. (Living this close to Savannah, this is the best plan I could come up with).

Why hide out? First, I have the skills, equipment and a good area. But mostly, I know myself. Having seen real hunger in Africa and the Balkans, I don't believe I have the emotional hardness to watch people suffer and die without joining them by trying to help. Hiding out and missing the die-off will be hard, but watching it happen (for me) is just impossible. I can't watch. When things cool down, I will scout the area and attempt to barter my skills to local farmers or whoever is in power. (I have acquired quite a few barterable skills over the years). So, if I show up at your retreat door six months after a collapse looking for work: don't shoot! It's just me! - JIR


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And now you know, and knowing is half the battle. The other half, obviously, is violence.

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Good goals go bang!

2010 is going to usher in a new batch of politics, and so I'll just sorta skip it for tonight. Sure, there are lots of things to be discussed, sometimes you just need a break from the monotony of it all, because it gets depressing really quick. As noted in the news, a few key democrats are throwing in the towel and not even bothering with the embarrassing defeat that is sure to come this November. But I think by then, it may be too late. Immigration reform is already in the works, and the craptacular Healthcare reform is almost a shew-in at this point. So really, let's not talk about it right now.

Well, it is that time of the year again, when we saddle up hopeless goals that quickly fall by the wayside and earnestly forgotten thereafter. And I mean that seriously, as I have no recollection of the goals I made this time last year. Maybe I did achieve them and thus forgot about them because of my perpetual awesomeness for attaining goals in a timely fashion. But most likely not.

Since it is highly unlikely that I completed my goals from last year, I figured this year I would write them down for whoever wanted to peruse them, and heckle me in 11 months. So here we go.

I'm no going to make illusions of losing weight or making more money. I am kinda working out as is, uh, kinda, meaning getting into heated online discussions about politics probably burns something out of my body; calories, brain cells, feces, whatever. I also have a habit of playing video games, so don't even think of challenging me at thumb wrestling -- I will cheat. And though I would like to earn more money, my wife prohibits me from selling my body, on the street or for science. Both vetoed. Lack of imagination on her part.

So I'm going with something more tangible, and taking my own advice for once (typically a bad idea).

Goal #1: I want my house to have a one year food supply, and it has to be stuff we will actually eat.

Goal #2: The means to protect the house, family, and food supply.

We have been doing a somewhat meager job of food storage thus far. And yes, that includes a 50# bag of raw wheat. I have no idea what to do with that. I don't even have the means to process wheat kernels. We don't eat them unless it's in bread, ground to bits, and tasty. So I am just gong to skip that crap because it has little value in our home. No, you can't have it. Go get your own hernia carrying 50# bags of wheat.

A week ago I went to the Dollar Tree and bought 12 cans of SPAM for 12 dollars. Spam is SPiced hAM. No, we don't eat it on a regular basis, but it is the first real attempt of having stored meat, even if it is mildly gross. But the point is we now have a little more variety with our otherwise Top Ramen fueled food storage. And I mean that seriously. Henceforth, every time we go shopping, I will be buying something additional that can be stored for our family. Even if I cap that cost at $10 for every 2 weeks (normal shopping periods for our house), then that is $260 towards having an emergency storage for whatever event. And you can easy buy 10 pounds of rice for less than $10 -- and have change left over for dried beans. That could feed a family for a few days. Rice and beans isn't luxury, but it beats eating dirt. The rice can even supplement our Top Ramen cache.

So my first goal is totally attainable and measurable as well. This leaves out any ambiguity about whether it was actually achieved. I'll add that I need to inventory what I have so I don't wind up with 100 pounds of rice and one loan bag of black beans. Still, I feel this is a good goal for the way things are shaping up around here. (Yeah, that's me being pessimistic about politics and the declining dollar.)

Goal #2 is the more fun one, because it's a man topic: guns! Now let's not be naive around here, Hero's house is not to be reckoned with. But, no self-respecting man should go without a shotgun, and that's my folly. Of course, a shotgun is just the tip of the manly iceberg. But, we'll limit it to that for the time being because I also want to be able to load my own shells to cut costs. And lucky me, a friend offered to give me his reloading kit if I get a shotgun.

I need to put this into a more contextual circumstance, however. My wife also has a goal this year, and of course it maligns mine (that's marriage, folks!). My wife has a goal of getting rid of debt. Apparently it is unconscionable to live like we're the federal government -- debt and deficit spending for years on end. True, with our newest addition to the family, we have some medical debt to deal with as well as credit card debt. Overall, we're not in bad shape, and things should be just peachy in a short while. Thus, there is a 90 day moratorium on spending for frivolous things of wantonness starting Jan. 1st.: We will only buy what we need. It'll be scary, because we need a shotgun. I can probably get away with goal #1 during this time, but #2 may have to wait. Probably wait until next fall, sadly.

So there you have it. You can follow along to see how we're doing. Most likely my wife will get her goal first, and then I'll put mine off until November. Fine, December. But still, I'll feel like a winner because I'll have the best collection of SPAM and a new shotgun to guard it. Trades welcome.