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Re: SURV 

By: ribit in SURV | Recommend this post (1)
Wed, 18 May 16 6:29 AM | 65 view(s)
Boardmark this board | SURVIVAL
Msg. 00020 of 00575
(This msg. is a reply to 00010 by Decomposed)

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decomp
...anything from a world ending asteroid strike right on down to forgettin your wedding anniversary. Staying out of certain situations is as important, or more important, than getting out of them.

attempting to gain long-term self-sufficiency. 

IMHO, most folks should start off with short term self sufficiency and build on it. Lots of folks are killed in short term survival situations. A local fella had a power outage so he fired off his charcoal grill and brought it inside to keep the family warm. They all died from carbon monoxide. Others die because they don't know how to stop bleeding or prevent shock. A long term survival strategy isn't very good if ya kills yaself the first night.

I imagine you know as much or more than I do about this subject but there are folks out there who could not survive one night if their car broke down in a snowstorm.




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Liberals are like a "Slinky". Totally useless, but somehow ya can't help but smile when you see one tumble down a flight of stairs!


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The above is a reply to the following message:
Re: SURV
By: Decomposed
in SURV
Tue, 17 May 16 11:22 PM
Msg. 00010 of 00575

ribit,  

re:"SURV"

This board is a good idea. I'm glad you created it. Thanks.

For starters, I'm using Dragon naturally speaking right now, and that sometimes leads to bizarre mistakes. I'll try to proofread before I save, but I find that as I get older and my eyesight worsens, more and more get past me.

I think it would be a good idea to clarify what you mean by ' Survive'. Survive what? One board member might think that we're talking about surviving a hurricane or fire - where the priority is to get out of the danger area and back to safety and/or civilization. Another might think we're talking about survival when lost in a forest - where the goals might be to sit tight, forage for water and food, get fire and build a shelter.

Even the scenario I worry about, societal collapse, could come about in a lot of ways, each of which might require its own preparations.

There was a TV show, Doomsday Preppers, that aired on cable for a while. I recorded quite a few of the episodes. Even on this show, the subjects were focused on all kinds of different threats. The ones I remember included an electromagnetic pulse, supervolcano, climate change (believe it or not), global pandemic, nuclear war and my personal favorite, economic collapse. While there were some similarities in the steps that people were taking, there's a big difference between what you do if a nuclear war is coming and what you do if smallpox and yellow fever are the threat.

While I think that plague and all-out nuclear war are realistic possibilities during my life, I don't plan to start preparing for them. I not only don't know what to do about them, I'm not at all sure that they would be survivable if the area I lived in were contaminated with radiation or disease. I'd be happy to survive whatever might come up, but I'm not going to prepare for something as unpredictable as war.

The same is true for a pandemic. Which pandemic? Via which vector would it spread? Air, water, mosquitos, sex, ticks, surfaces? Again, while I would be happy to survive a pandemic, I'm not going to worry about it. Living in an isolated location, which is what I will be doing in a couple of years, is perhaps the most useful thing that could be done anyway.

To me, survival preparation means getting ready to survive without the benefit of society, and being able to deal with some of the problems that are likely to arise if society collapses. In other words, attempting to gain long-term self-sufficiency.

I'd be happy to discuss how to build a snow shelter or how to find edible plants in the woods, but neither strikes me as particularly important when the problem is long-term, not short-term.

Does anyone else care to weigh in on this?
 


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