Lore wrote:In finality, I'd rather lose my life then my mind.
True. Who was it who once said: Rather death standing up than life on your knees.
Lore wrote:In finality, I'd rather lose my life then my mind.

Fishman wrote:Pops, I'm in eastern NC. Your thread starts with Learn anything from disasters so far, so economy, weather, disasters, whatever, they interrelate. I even considered a job at Hatteras, and was supposed to be camping at Ocracoke but knew I would be evacuated. You prep with the resources you have, that community stuff, is very true. And for all the wrath here about people of faith, they respond quicker, work harder, and they are the very definition of a small community. So when that disaster hits your community, or peak oil does whatever, it won't be your atheist neighbor that comes over to help. It will far more likely be your neighbor who trodded off to church or synagogue every weekend, after they take care of their own. Hope you can wait.
Government/insurance can only blunt the pain

homeboy wrote:Drivel is on the loose.

americandream wrote:Lore wrote:In finality, I'd rather lose my life then my mind.
True. Who was it who once said: Rather death standing up than life on your knees.


Lore wrote:americandream wrote:Lore wrote:In finality, I'd rather lose my life then my mind.
True. Who was it who once said: Rather death standing up than life on your knees.
Or was that "give me liberty, or give me death". Even in their naiveness, the founding fathers in the US understood the dangers of the new republic falling pray to some extremist Jesus jokers.



roccman wrote:and this is what i think i have learned - that all i have done at the end of the day will mean squat if those around me have not and there is a near 100% chance this is the case.


papa moose wrote:roccman wrote:and this is what i think i have learned - that all i have done at the end of the day will mean squat if those around me have not and there is a near 100% chance this is the case.
are you referring to the mutant zombies eating your brain after you eventually run out of ammo or questioning why you would want to survive if all your nearest and dearest have starved to death?




And U.S. facilities are not ready for these stronger storms. In its most recent "report card" assessing the nation's infrastructure -- everything from the resilience of the power transmission and distribution systems to the integrity of crucial water and sewer networks -- the American Society for Civil Engineers was unequivocal: These critical facilities are often woefully underfunded, aging and in some cases nearing failure.
The organization gave the nation a grade of D overall and estimated that some $2.2 trillion over five years was needed to bring that up to a B.
Many water infrastructure assets, for example, have exceeded their service lives and need to be replaced, according to the Congressional Budget Office's 2010 water infrastructure report. Among them: cast-iron pipes from the late 1800s with a 120-year lifespan; post-World War II pipes with a 75-year lifespan; and treatment plants built in the 1970s and '80s that have useful lifespans of just 15 to 50 years.




Pops wrote:On the original topic of wealth and resilience:And U.S. facilities are not ready for these stronger storms. In its most recent "report card" assessing the nation's infrastructure -- everything from the resilience of the power transmission and distribution systems to the integrity of crucial water and sewer networks -- the American Society for Civil Engineers was unequivocal: These critical facilities are often woefully underfunded, aging and in some cases nearing failure.
The organization gave the nation a grade of D overall and estimated that some $2.2 trillion over five years was needed to bring that up to a B.
And this is particularly striking, much more infrastructure investment goest to cheap growth than goes to servicing the existing infrastructure - and the newer the infrastructure, the shorter the expected service life:Many water infrastructure assets, for example, have exceeded their service lives and need to be replaced, according to the Congressional Budget Office's 2010 water infrastructure report. Among them: cast-iron pipes from the late 1800s with a 120-year lifespan; post-World War II pipes with a 75-year lifespan; and treatment plants built in the 1970s and '80s that have useful lifespans of just 15 to 50 years.
Link



My question is not about politics or even so much about economics, we'll never agree about those, my question is about how you view your personal preparations for disasters in light of current political/economic climate?
Do you rely on the Ministries of Love & Plenty, or your insurance company... what do you do to protect yourself?
What do you see happening as available oil declines; do we become more willing to help each other or less?


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