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I wanted to share and editorial Michael Posted in our newsletter..
Here is a link to our original article <broken link removed>
A man who was described in court documents as a self-trained survivalist was found dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound in a remote bunker in Washington state last week, several days after he murdered his wife anddaughter. (Full story here).
What are the lessons that we as preppers not survivalists can learn from this?
From our perspective as long-time advocates of being prepared for a wide range of possible catastrophes, we find it completely shocking that anyone can become so deranged that they would kill their own family, and then commit suicide.
Such incidents are always front page news, and this in turn tends to create the impression that survivalists, including perhaps those featured on the Doomsday Preppers TV series, are not only eccentric, theyre also dangerous nutters.
This in turn, wed suggest, can put readers and viewers off the idea of becoming prepared themselves, because they do not want to be ostracized by their families and peers. So they do nothing.
Clearly, those who approach the concept of preparedness from a level-headed point of view are never going to become the aggressor if and when a state of chaos occurs.
Yes, they are legitimately prepared in many ways to defend themselves and their loved ones. But they are not the sort of people who will go on the offensive, because that is not what preparedness is about.
Sadly, incidents such as that in Washington state suggest that there is a widespread feeling of unease, discontent and even fear that society is breaking down very rapidly. Genuine concern over the constant imposition of new laws designed to take away more and more freedoms seems to have driven some people into a state of paranoia.
How can we change this scenario? How can we proactively protect those freedoms that were considered sacrosanct by the Founding Fathers but seem of little concern to our legislators today?
Wed suggest that it has to start at the local level of politics and that means within ones own neighborhood. Team work is essential. Helping each other in an emergency is a natural response.
Therefore, if we see the erosion of liberties as an emergency in its own way, we should be countering such moves with moves of our own fair-minded, well thought out strategies that are totally within the law in order to ensure that new laws are not drafted and crafted in ways that take away longstanding rights and liberties.
Suggestions:
Attend your local council meetings. Write to your representatives. Sign petitions. Use every possible avenue to have your voice heard. You have that right, but the way things are going, ifyou dont use it, youll soon lose it.
Those who are featured on Doomsday Preppers are obviously sincere in their beliefs. Some are concerned about the Yellowstone volcano erupting. Others are worried about an economic collapse, a pandemic, the New Madrid Fault, an EMP from the sun wiping out the grid, or major earthquakes and tsunamis.
Hopefully, this series is inspiring many more people to make their own self-sufficiency preparations, because it must be obvious that no government agency will be able to assist the millions of people in total who will be in jeopardy when any one of those events occurs.
While we would never personally go on national television and reveal anything about our own preparedness plans, we should commend those who have done what they thought was right in helping others to reconsider what survival and preparedness are about.
Whether we live in cities or in rural areas, we should get to know our neighbors. We dont necessarily need to reveal everything about what we are doing, but when the time seems right, it would do no harm to ask how you would co-operate in the event of any emergency,
starting perhaps with the idea of finding ways to help each other in something as simple as a storm and power outage.
Why not join your local CERT or Neighborhood Emergency team.
And learn First Aid so you can help those in need when the time comes.
Quietly continue preparing to weather whatever sort of storm is coming and there will be quite a variety as 2012 continues to unfold.
We live on a dynamic earth that periodically goes through major upheavals. We are also seeing social and economic turmoil in many different countries which is why we suggest, very seriously, that this could well be the year of the Great Collapse. Not to mention the fact that the sun hasnt yet reached the peak of this particular cycle, so the electric grid remains a real source of concern.
Sure, the rest of 2012 might be a bumpy road so wed suggest you hold on to your tinfoil hat
Sincerely.
Michael Knight
Here is a link to our original article <broken link removed>
A man who was described in court documents as a self-trained survivalist was found dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound in a remote bunker in Washington state last week, several days after he murdered his wife anddaughter. (Full story here).
What are the lessons that we as preppers not survivalists can learn from this?
From our perspective as long-time advocates of being prepared for a wide range of possible catastrophes, we find it completely shocking that anyone can become so deranged that they would kill their own family, and then commit suicide.
Such incidents are always front page news, and this in turn tends to create the impression that survivalists, including perhaps those featured on the Doomsday Preppers TV series, are not only eccentric, theyre also dangerous nutters.
This in turn, wed suggest, can put readers and viewers off the idea of becoming prepared themselves, because they do not want to be ostracized by their families and peers. So they do nothing.
Clearly, those who approach the concept of preparedness from a level-headed point of view are never going to become the aggressor if and when a state of chaos occurs.
Yes, they are legitimately prepared in many ways to defend themselves and their loved ones. But they are not the sort of people who will go on the offensive, because that is not what preparedness is about.
Sadly, incidents such as that in Washington state suggest that there is a widespread feeling of unease, discontent and even fear that society is breaking down very rapidly. Genuine concern over the constant imposition of new laws designed to take away more and more freedoms seems to have driven some people into a state of paranoia.
How can we change this scenario? How can we proactively protect those freedoms that were considered sacrosanct by the Founding Fathers but seem of little concern to our legislators today?
Wed suggest that it has to start at the local level of politics and that means within ones own neighborhood. Team work is essential. Helping each other in an emergency is a natural response.
Therefore, if we see the erosion of liberties as an emergency in its own way, we should be countering such moves with moves of our own fair-minded, well thought out strategies that are totally within the law in order to ensure that new laws are not drafted and crafted in ways that take away longstanding rights and liberties.
Suggestions:
Attend your local council meetings. Write to your representatives. Sign petitions. Use every possible avenue to have your voice heard. You have that right, but the way things are going, ifyou dont use it, youll soon lose it.
Those who are featured on Doomsday Preppers are obviously sincere in their beliefs. Some are concerned about the Yellowstone volcano erupting. Others are worried about an economic collapse, a pandemic, the New Madrid Fault, an EMP from the sun wiping out the grid, or major earthquakes and tsunamis.
Hopefully, this series is inspiring many more people to make their own self-sufficiency preparations, because it must be obvious that no government agency will be able to assist the millions of people in total who will be in jeopardy when any one of those events occurs.
While we would never personally go on national television and reveal anything about our own preparedness plans, we should commend those who have done what they thought was right in helping others to reconsider what survival and preparedness are about.
Whether we live in cities or in rural areas, we should get to know our neighbors. We dont necessarily need to reveal everything about what we are doing, but when the time seems right, it would do no harm to ask how you would co-operate in the event of any emergency,
starting perhaps with the idea of finding ways to help each other in something as simple as a storm and power outage.
Why not join your local CERT or Neighborhood Emergency team.
And learn First Aid so you can help those in need when the time comes.
Quietly continue preparing to weather whatever sort of storm is coming and there will be quite a variety as 2012 continues to unfold.
We live on a dynamic earth that periodically goes through major upheavals. We are also seeing social and economic turmoil in many different countries which is why we suggest, very seriously, that this could well be the year of the Great Collapse. Not to mention the fact that the sun hasnt yet reached the peak of this particular cycle, so the electric grid remains a real source of concern.
Sure, the rest of 2012 might be a bumpy road so wed suggest you hold on to your tinfoil hat
Sincerely.
Michael Knight