August 23, 2010

Divide & Conquer, The Strategy Of The Ages

129 Views
Filed under: General, War, Terrorism, Tyranny — admin @ 9:17 am

I’m somewhat doubtful that very many people that read this blog are following the WikiLeaks story, but the reason why I think you should is it will set a very strong precedence for the future and who is willing to take on the war machine and other government corruption.

It is also a classic example of how character assassinations are being used to crush any dissent by those that would speak out.

The Pentagon is very angry that anybody would defy their murdering juggernaut and dare to publish any of their so-called “secret” machinations to encourage war.  Basically, officials have vowed to shut down WikiLeaks and serve a lesson to Assange.

Prosecutor Eyes WikiLeaks Charges

WikiLeaks Says Pentagon May Be Behind Rape Charges

Assange will not come out of this unscathed.  It is already too late for that.  Most likely, he will be forced to step down his profile quite a bit.  WikiLeaks will probably reduce their efforts at exposing government corruption, and effectively the thugs in charge of this planet will win again.

Because the rest of us did not support those who were trying.

The reason why this simple statement is true is it is simply not possible for the elite to stop everybody from speaking up.  It is not possible.

But because we refuse to speak up and out, and put a stop to the atrocities going on in our name, they continue to run amok, causing devastation and death all over the world.  They’ve got the rest of us kowtowed, afraid to do anything, and so we don’t.  And those that try are without our support.  We’re too busy living our lives, trying to stay alive, trying to keep our heads above water.

This is why the ongoing decline of our world continues, because the people cannot overcome their own disagreements and divisions and realize that we really are all in this together.  What they do to one country, they can do to ours.  What they do to one whistleblower, they can do to you.  Without support, everyone that steps up to the plate gets chopped down.

I think most people have given up, believing in the lies that we do not have the means to stop the grief being created.  To some degree, this is probably true — we don’t have the means, at least not through normal channels.  You have to realize  that these normal channels are the only “authorized” means of dissent.  They’re just as controlled and manipulated as everything else, rigged to ensure that your dissent can be effectively resisted and extinguished.

Wearing you out with years and years of legal blockades and wrangling behind bureaucratic bullshit, the methods permitted to the public to oppose government largess and malfeasance of all flavors and stripes are played directly into the hands of the elitists.  If WikiLeaks is not careful, they’ll find themselves ground up and spit out by the same system that is already rigged in favor of those who control it all.

Meanwhile, the war(s) will continue to be prosecuted with a vengeance and people will die.  Mothers, fathers, children, soldiers, civilians, innocents who did nothing wrong except live on the wrong soil, or be born to the wrong skin color or believe in the wrong religion.  They’re the real victims of this juggernaught, these agents of death and destruction and global domination.

Most of us don’t care about them, because we have our own lives to live, which are getting increasingly harder and harder.  What we don’t realize is that we still have incredibly cushy lives here compared to the rest of the world, thanks to the decades-long practice of economic exploitation and servitude demanded by the corpocracy, conducted through the U.S. military.  You don’t think it is any accident that we now occupy over 145 countries do you?  Or that this is really about the “fight for freedom and democracy”?

It’s about business, pure and simple, and exploitation and control, who owns what, who governs who, who calls the shots and makes sure that profits pour in as fast as humanly possible.  It’s about removing obstacles to global trade and finance, and exploiting raw resources and human labor as cheaply as possible.  This is why human life is actually cheap, the notion that human life is “valued” is a sick, sad joke in the rest of the world, and even here, depending on how far up the social ladder you live.

If you are poor, destitute and really down and out, you’re value is just barely above the value of a worm.  You can be crushed and extinguished with a simple misstep.

If you’re powerful and influential and make tons of money, society has been taught to value you as being important, essential and necessary.  But your life is no different then the poor in reality.  You’re the same, the only difference is how society has been brainwashed into deeming one over the other.

We worship money, power, control, influence and greed.  This is all part of the divide and conquer strategy deployed down through the ages. We’re oftentimes not bright enough to realize how easily manipulated we are.  The new American Tea Party “revolution” believes that they are different then all others before them, but they’re preaching the very same mantra every other group has tried before.

Does anyone really believe that this guy offers anything but more of the same?. This is the same dude caught funding anti-global warming campaigns too.  But what could you expect from Big Oil?. After you cut through the carefully crafted stories, you read about power, greed, corruption, abuse, a playboy lifestyle (realize that this article is designed to lay a trap upon your mind and lull you into acceptance for the man, and for that reason alone, cannot be trusted).
The Republicans .vs. the Democrats .vs. the Green Party .vs. the Libertarians .vs. the Constitution Party and on and on.  There isn’t a lick of difference in reality when you cut through the bullshit and rhetoric — they all want control so that they can be in charge, but the world won’t change one iota under their leadership.

And nobody asks why.

It should be obvious why.  The divisions that we embrace are what disempowers us.  It’s all part of the same script that keeps us blind and stupid, thinking that we can achieve what we cannot.  The script goes further to demonize our so-called “enemies”, manufactured boogie-men who have to be opposed by whatever costs, even if means wiping an entire country right off the map.  And I have only barely begun to mention the true script being played out.  The goal is to keep humanity divided against itself, playing both ends against the middle.

This is why you will find the wars funded by the same “side”, the same brokers and the same people, again and again.  They’re manipulating everything, profiting from the loss and the victories.  They don’t care who is ground up and spit out, or what children are being burned to death with white phosphorous or who’s houses are smashed to smithereens by tanks, or how agent-provocateurs betray the people they’ve befriended, or who’s economy is ruined.  Human lives and human freedoms to these people are like gnats flying in a hurricane.

And year after year, decade after decade, the human experiment in social structure continues on as before.  We remain divided, sworn “enemies” of each other, endless victims of their deception and deceit, their evil machinations and manipulations, staring down the barrel of a gun at each other.

We die by the hundreds of millions, ceaselessly ignorant of how we are throwing our lives away on their behalf, doing their bidding and blowing up the bridges, the towns, the homes, the lives of those whom they’ve declared on our behalf, “the enemy”.  We’re so fucking stupid we think we are doing ourselves a favor by these actions, spouting patriotic bullshit that declares only us as being valuable and important.

I hold very little hope for the human race, we’re not bright enough to wake the hell up and just say “No”.  Nobody can make you go, nobody can make you pull the trigger, nobody can make you believe their lies but you.  You have come to accept that what they preach is the divine truth of the world and the way it is “supposed to be”, marginalizing life itself, regulating the living, breathing, beating hearts of all others as being less deserving somehow then yourself.

You believe that we are different when we’re really not.  We all want the same things and we all have the same dreams, but many of us never get the chance, being born to the wrong skin color, the wrong religion or living in the wrong country, or being cursed with evil “leaders” or economic oppression of such magnitude that any dream you harbored is in daily reality, a living nightmare.

We’ve been told too, endlessly since birth, that this is the way the world is.  That may be true, but it is only true because we helped make it that way.  It does not have to be this way and never has.  There is enough resources to go around, enough food, land and shelter for all.  But because we insist on too much and so does every other government in the world, it ensures that there is not enough for everyone.  That’s the way it is designed to be, and the way it is.  Only through this manipulation of taking, and impoverishing some to improve others, do we even have an economy as we understand it today.

The world is deathly sick, ill with psychotic disorders and deadly beliefs.  But you do not have to go very far to find healthy individuals who are neither sick or diseased with greed and corruption.  They are bewildered at the apathy of the world, but they remain undiseased.

None of them are found in government or the halls of power, which corrupts men and women absolutely, warping them into evil caricatures of their former selves.  Whatever they once were, they no longer remain and giving themselves over to the darker side of evil, they lord over the rest with their positions of power and prestige and illusionary self-importance.

They’re no different then us in reality.  Giving the chance many of us will do the same in the workplace or by promotion, climbing over the backs of all others so that we can eat our slice of the creamed pie.  The healthy individuals don’t bother with such things, forsaking their “opportunities” to advance at the cost of others.  Most don’t work for anybody other them themselves, feeding their families by the sweat of their brow as it has been done since time immemorial.

The workplace is a structure designed to compete instead of serve.  Modeled after the rest of modern civilization, profits and economic control and market share are the main mantra’s each employee must serve.  Baal would be proud, as lordship over each little “kingdom” is practiced throughout the world.  Competition serves the powers-that-be quite well, creating oppression and division as we ruthlessly divide and conquer the world up again and again.

We believe that this is the way the world “works” and as it should be, giving us the standard of living which we have come to enjoy.  We ignore the trail of destruction we cause, the long chain of ruined and exploited lives reaching far over the horizon to foreign lands.  The hands of a small child, blistered and cracked from forced slavery are ours, as we buy exploited goods from big box stores promoting cheap goods.

There is a way out of this nightmare, but we’re not ready to hear it yet. It’s too foreign to our way of thinking, our way of life, how we live from day to day.  We cannot conceive of our own sovereignty and how we alone are truly the kings of our own lives.  We prefer servitude to the faceless masters of this Earth, the plantation owners that pull our strings and manipulate our world, even creating our beliefs.  We have become theirs, so thoroughly and so completely that concepts such as self-identity are trademarked with corporate logos.

There is a way out, but we’re not ready to hear it yet.

April 28, 2010

Issue 59

223 Views
Filed under: General, Newsletter — admin @ 8:41 pm

Tin Foil Hats On Sale Now!

There’s a really great deal going on right now for your very own tin foil hat!  Special pricing now includes fear mongering, fabrication and custom engraved ball point pen!

Hawkers and hucksters may want to make bulk volume purchases while inventory and public interest remains high.  Imminent attack from multiple EMP devices could negate all sale prices and product availability.

Liberals, conservatives and Republicans can take special advantage right now of the liberty fire sale going on right now.  Don’t delay, rights and privileges as connedsumer shoppers are at stake!  Be the first on your block to take advantage of ours special low, low pricing and fear mongering paranoia!

Al-Qa’ida recruits that were a part of the Noah’s Ark discovery in Turkey may be exempt from this offer.

Offer void where prohibited by law or by government decree, edict, fiat or instrument.

News

In other mundane news, a new fungus is killing some species, including humans.  Future crop productions must more then double to accomade our ongoing population explosion.

Since the Earth still hasn’t stopped shaking, we can expect more earthquakes with a real doozy coming up (again).


That’s a picture of Deep Water Horizon, or what was left of it, as it is now sunk.  This gigantic drilling platform exploded and sank into the Gulf of Mexico.

Thousands of barrels of crude oil are now leaking into the Gulf and threatening several wildlife preserves and thousands of miles of shorelineOil may spew for months, making this one of the largest environmental disasters in human history.  British Petroleum (BP) is now facing multiple lawsuits for the human deaths caused, negligence and environmental damage while reaping in mega-profits.

It’s also raining in the Arctic and ocean acidity up a whopping 30% in just 200 years.  Carbon capture is not going to work according to a new study. So much for a “technology fix”.

Time lapse proof of extreme Arctic ice loss (cool presentation). I’ve shared this before on the old blog. This fits in well with the Arctic Report Card from NOAA.

Predator drones will now patrol the U.S. / Mexico borders according to Fatherland Security Janet Napolitano.  I feel safer already.

Homesteading

My garden boxes are built, placed and soil has been added.  The recent deluge here however has prevented me from going further.  I did get my front lawn area graded, raked and seeded and already, some new grass is popping up. I pretty much hate lawns, or rather the sheer waste of what a lawn represents in water and labor to maintain it, but my front yard was in desperate need of something.  We’ve got a lot of mud when the water comes, either from snow melt or rain, so a lawn it is…. for now.  One day, it’ll be uprooted as space requires for more garden boxes.  For now, I picked the better locations for the garden.

I also have fifteen new chickens, all of them quite small and am having to watch the crows that are trying to catch one of these little guys.  I have no doubt the crows would kill them if they could, but so far, all fifteen are doing well.  We had a chicken house fire and lost all of the adults we had, so I’m starting over.

I lost an entire week of work-time due to something else I had to do, but that’s ok.  It has been a beautiful spring here all in all and I’m glad for the break in outside projects.  This is the time when I also cut most of my winter firewood and let it season for the rest of the summer months. By fall, it’s in good shape for the woodstove.

I was recently asked this:

if it is possible, we would sure love to see you do a blog on what are the most critical items people need to purchase and stock up on immediately.We have been stocking up on items, but are not sure its the items we will need the most. Another prospective on this would be awesome, and incredibly helpful to alot of people who want to do what they can to prepare at this late date.

I’ve seen lots of lists on things to buy, but don’t really believe in such things to be honest.  If you don’t know what you should be doing or the things you need, just do a quick Internet search and you’ll find plenty of experts who will provide such lists.  Here is what I wrote in return:

Make sure you have a place to “be” (get land).  Can’t believe how many people overlook that one.  I’m pretty outspoken against the “bug out into the woods” theme, it won’t work like people think, and around here, would get you dead. Pick a spot to do your thing and stay there.

Other important thing(s) to do is

a) create a portable income (ability to work or make money anywhere)
b) emphasis skills over “stuff”
c) stay debt free
d) drive as little as possible
e) homestead (raise food, animals, self-employment, the “works”)

Anybody can “buy stuff” and fill lists.  I don’t see this as the answer, it’s just a temporary remedy for a much bigger problem and creates a terrible dependency. You’ve got to develop the skills (and the time) to meet all your own needs, ie., financial, physical, etc.

One big overlooked area is to extract oneself from the ’system’ as much as possible, thereby learning how to reduce your own dependency and reliance (and stop feeding the beast).
I’ve really come to disbelieve in the “bug out” theme more and more, and in fact, think this is going to be exceedingly dangerous for people to try this.  It will get you dead pretty fast.  Either you will never make it “there”, or run out of things you need soon after you arrive, or decimate the local wildlife so quickly and so completely that you’ll starve anyway and then you’ll be competing with your fellow ’survivalists’.
Or you’ll get sick, injured or lonely or miss talk radio (or the Internet).  But there’s one other thing nobody talks about — the locals will hunt you down and kill you.
Think about it.  What would you do, or rather how would you feel about hundreds if not thousands of outsiders invading the countryside around you?  What are you going to do when things show up missing? Or crops or livestock are stolen?  Or if you get robbed?  Or squatters move onto your land?  Or people are assaulted?  Or beggers come knocking, again and again and again?  How long do you suppose any of this would be tolerated?
Bug out is basically a dumb idea all around.  Everybody needs someplace to be, but being a refugee is bad bad news for you and everyone else.  Refugees never fair well anywhere, and I’m sure they don’t call themselves “survivalists”, but that’s what they really are.  Survivalists usually include the current crop of self-prescribed experts in “living off the land”, which they will quickly overwhelm and then will fight each other for the remaining scraps of sustenance that can still be found.  And when that doesn’t work, or is too dangerous, they’ll come knockin…. or robbing… or join forces and raid… or worse.
Count on it.  You can prove this out pretty easily by looking at how war-torn countries and refugee populations have destabilized the regions and areas where they are found and what happens.  Nobody wants them and they only receive sufficient, if meager help from large and well-funded organizations.  That won’t exist for the “modern refugee” armed to the teeth who has decided to leave home and head to the woods.  You’ll be outlaws, unwanted and unappreciated by almost everyone.  You’ll also be highly demonized by media and government, which will turn the majority of the population against you.  This is what happens to any marginalized group.
There are examples, even modern day examples of fighters living in the jungles and woods, but they have the support of the people in sufficient numbers that they are permitted to exist there.  That’s is not something any collapse refugee can actually count on.  There are conditions and requirements outside of the scope of this article that existed for them to do this for periods of time (such as revolution).
The collapse that most people are preparing for is not what is probably going to happen.  This country remains extremely divided against itself and it won’t be any better when the collapse “event(s)” happen.  Outsiders won’t be trusted, tolerate or welcomed in most parts of the country and more then a few of them would be agent provacateurs — a technique already being widely used everywhere, making trusting outsiders doubley dangerous.
I’m well aware that this goes against the group-think that permeates survival circles today, but then so does a lot of what I write.  Don’t come here — the locals think that the deer belong to them. And there are a lot of locals that feel exactly like that, all over this country.
Don’t be a refugee — and don’t make yourself one either.  If you’ve not found a place to be, do so now.  And make your stand there.  You will be far more effective.  It takes time, effort, patience and practice to develop the skills and experience you need to become self-sufficient. But it also take a “place”, which is your home.  The notion that we will move our home off into the woods one day is pure fantasy and for the people that try this — a death trap for most of them.
To make sure I am not misunderstood, I still believe that a simple lifestyle is better, but the groups of people who think they’re going to leave their desk jobs or assembly lines or janitorial service and go off and live in the woods when “the collapse happens” are smokin’ something that is clouding their brain.
If you’re not in a good place now, a place where you can meet those points above — move.  Get your toes on some dirt where you can practice some self-reliant skills and raise some of your own food.
The other points I made above are just as valid.  Don’t get caught up in the “buy stuff” meme.  You don’t need everything.  I can’t believe the crap that I see for sale for “survivalists”.  Most of it is crap and you’ll never use it.  You need what will keep you alive:  water, food, clothing, shelter and the tools to do that.  You will also need a means to generate an income, whatever it is.  Barter, work or trade, but the need to make money is still going to exist (or whatever you’re using for money).
Make SURE you figure that one out (keep making your living).  I cannot begin to tell you how many Y2Ker’s screwed that one up as they waited upon their mountain of gear for society to collapse all around them.  They listened to those tin foil hucksters above and all their ilk — and they lost everything in the process (and these clowns are still shoveling the same old b.s. as always, hands out, grinnin’ all the way to the bank).  They had no plans for a future — even their own, except “survival” and it made no damned sense then and still doesn’t.
The best way to of think of collapse or the breakdown of society and what you should be doing about it is to start thinking a bit like the pioneers did and what they had to do in order to survive.  Land, water, food, shelter, a place to “be”, a place where you can dig in and survive.  You need to get to this place now,  (right now), not after some “trigger event” when the roads will be jammed packed and the gas stations bone dry.  Go live there now and learn exactly how – and make your life there.
The wanna-be wandering mountain men living off the land in the 21st century will probably exist for a time and in small numbers, but this probably won’t be any of you.  And if there are too many that try this (and there probably will be as they thunder down the highways and byways in their R.V.’s and 4×4 trucks, jockeying for space, guns bristling), they’ll quickly find themselves unwanted and almost with a 100% certainty, woefully underprepared.  A gigantic “reality check” will be waiting for them, and the bill will be very steep.  Most will forfeit their lives (and their belongings) far, far sooner then they might expect.
Dump Your Dependency
Our society is real quick to point you the way to happiness or entertainment or satisfaction or even survival by selling you something.  Everything is for sale, including news, stories, entertainment, education, self-help and of course, mountains and mountains of “stuff” — all of which you “need” if you’re going to be happy or be properly taken care of or some other such nonsense.
It seems that behind every message is the real message we’re all supposed to understand but complicitly go along with, and that message is “buy my stuff”.  Send me your money and I promise that: you’ll be young again, or you’ll feel better, or you’ll get your health back or you’ll lose weight or you’ll be sexier or you’ll be better looking or you’ll lose your worries, fears and anxieties, or you can find true happiness at last, and on and on and on.  You can’t got ten minutes watching the idiot box before being bombarded with glitzy advertising claiming to do all of these things — if you’d just buy something.
Why do we tolerate such nonsense?  Can’t anybody see what this is doing to us all?
A society that is so hell-bent on making you all into a connedsumers army mindlessly buying up every possible thing offered up is one seriously screwed up society.  You could rightly say that it is a pathological society, soley interested in one thing and one thing only above everything else.  A sick society, that must drug and drown itself with rivers of mind-inducing chemicals and alcohol in order to prevent the madness from becoming uncontrollable (which often backfires).
Unspoken is how this creates nation after nation of hundreds of millions of highly dependent people all over the world who are totally, 100% dependent upon the markets and production of society.  Their entire existence, even their very life is only possible because they buy everything that they need in order to live. In turn, they tirelessly feed the machine that keeps them alive by incessently working, working, working to pay their “bills”, which is just another euphanism for what is really going on here (”will work for food” and trinkets too).
It shouldn’t come as any surprise that this is not how it used to be.  The exchange of human labor (work and time) for the needs for existence is as old as humanity.  But not like this, oh no, it was nothing like what we have today.  Today every nuance of life, every requirement, every essential element and nutrient, every possible combination of essential needs comes at a price, which notably is established by total strangers who are quite adept at making sure it’s a profitable price (never mind fair or equitable), which you must pay through forced volunteerism to this system of fraud and abuse (this is called extortion).
You can only exist or even claim the right to exist through participation in this system of exploitation and corruption, a system which benefits nobody except a priviliged few (the “owners”) and exploits the many (the people) while laying waste to an entire planet.  This is why there is such a thing as a “price tag” upon everything you might possible need in order to live, even on the garbage you must take out.  This system of dependency is designed to keep you enslaved as a working slave for the rest of your life, forever addicted to the lifeline of sustenance and toys that this society “provides” for you — at a price of course.
But this is not how it used to be… and you can undue quite a bit of this forced servitude if you learn how.  It’s not that hard, but it will require you to put in at least as much effort as you do now at your “job”.
I already mentioned how — get on some land (by any means possible), create a portable income (you should always be able to make money anywhere, even if you’re traveling), emphasis skills over stuff (and practice them), stay debt free (or get there, asap), develop a homestead (wherever you are - just do it).
You will learn by doing — and by doing you will discover many other very valuable assets, such as hard work is rewarding, simple living can be very satisfying, living debt free is disabling to the voracious society and system that is so controlling, healthy living comes from raising healthy food, skills are fantastic “tools” to be used wherever you may find yourself, and homesteading is really a great way to live.
You will also learn frugality, competence, consciencious living, planning, patience and more then a bit of truth, and you will also unlearn the many dependencies that kept us chained to the slave-posts, rowing away all the days of our lives.
It’s late, I’m tired, so off to bed I go.  G’nite.

March 30, 2010

Issue 53

82 Views
Filed under: General, Newsletter — admin @ 8:35 pm

READY RESERVE CORPS

According to one (unverified) source, this looks like this got inserted into the new healthcare legislation:

SEC. 5210. ESTABLISHING A READY RESERVE CORPS.

Section 203 of the Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. 204) is amended to read as follows:

SEC. 203. COMMISSIONED CORPS AND READY RESERVE CORPS.

(a) ESTABLISHMENT–

(1) IN GENERAL.–here shall be in the Service a commissioned Regular Corps and a Ready Reserve Corps for service in time of national emergency.

(2) REQUIREMENT.–All commissioned officers shall be citizens of the United States and shall be appointed without regard to the civil-service laws and compensated without regard to the Classification Act 2 of 1923, as amended.

(3) APPOINTMENT.–Commissioned officers of the Ready Reserve Corps shall be appointed by the President and commissioned officers of the Regular Corps shall be appointed by the President with the advice and consent of the Senate.

(4) ACTIVE DUTY.–Commissioned officers of the Ready Reserve Corps shall at all times be subject to call to active duty by the Surgeon General, including active duty for the purpose of training.

(5) WARRANT OFFICERS.–Warrant officers may be appointed to the Service for the purpose of providing support to the health and delivery systems maintained by the Service and any warrant officer appointed to the Service shall be considered for purposes of this Act and title 37, United States Code, to be a commissioned officer within the Commissioned Corps of the Service.

(b) ASSIMILATING RESERVE CORP OFFICERS INTO THE REGULAR CORPS.—Effective on the date of enactment of the Affordable Health Choices Act, all individuals classified as officers in the Reserve Corps under this section (as such section existed on the day before the date of enactment of such Act) and serving on active duty shall be deemed to be commissioned officers of the Regular Corps.

[Note here that those personally appointed by BO — without advice and consent of the Senate — automatically become a part of the Regular Corps. Ed.]

(c) PURPOSE AND USE OF READY RESERVE.–

(1) PURPOSE.–The purpose of the Ready Reserve Corps is to fulfill the need to have additional Commissioned Corps personnel available on short notice (similar to the uniformed service’s reserve program) to assist regular Commissioned Corps personnel to meet both routine public health and emergency response missions.

(2) USES.–The Ready Reserve Corps shall–

(A) participate in routine training to meet the general and specific needs of the Commissioned Corps;

(B) be available and ready for involuntary calls to active duty during national emergencies and public health crises, similar to the uniformed service reserve personnel;

(C) be available for backfilling critical positions left vacant during deployment of active duty Commissioned Corps members, as well as for deployment to respond to public health emergencies, both foreign and domestic; and

(D) be available for service assignment in isolated, hardship, and medically underserved communities (as defined in section 399SS) to improve access to health services.

(d) FUNDING.—For the purpose of carrying out the duties and responsibilities of the Commissioned Corps under this section, there are authorized to be appropriated such sums as may be necessary to the Office of the Surgeon General for each of fiscal years 2010 through 2014. Funds appropriated under this subsection shall be used for recruitment and training of Commissioned Corps Officers.

This is exactly what Obama had told us he would do with a “national security force“.

What does this have to do with health care?  Anything?

Massive Federal Raids

By now, everyone has heard of the raids in Michigan, Ohio and Indiana. I’m not going to comment much except to say that most of these charges sound pretty bogus to me.  This looks like a “pre-crime” attack by law enforcement.

The timing of these things always coincides with other news. In this case, the growing dissent in this country and even reports that the “tea party” movement is domestic terrorism.  It should be patently clear that no resistance will be permitted in this new world order.

You should probably read Legislating Away Your Freedoms - One Homegrown Terrorist At A Time for a perspective on how this stuff has been happening and just how frequently much of this is pure “setup”.

The Moscow bombings will be an even stronger signal against civilians.  Everyone should notice that even though these events happened half a world away, the United States reacted with increased levels of “protection” here, despite “no specific threats”.

The attacks in Moscow coincidentally occurred on the same day that Metro and emergency responders simulated an explosion on a Metrobus Monday morning.

We’ve seen this before, several times including on 9/11 and the London bombings.

Noteworthy is how only certain nations react and most others do not. It’s not because they “hate us for our freedoms” either, it’s because the nations being attacked are the world’s leading oppressors.

I find the story of “female suicide bombers” very strange, it’s only early Monday and they “already know” this tidbit of information. Maybe it’s true, but there are other hints that there is much more to this then we are being told (as in another staged “terror” attack).

I found this over on Fire Earth:

STOP REPRODUCTION UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE!

Based on what assumption are you still reproducing?

That there’ll always be food and clean water, at least for you and your family?

How will you feed your family if there were no more food in your refrigerator, at supermarkets, in fast food joints and on the farms?

Familiar with the food production cycle?

Effects of drought, famine and starvation?

How long can you stay alive without food?

How long can you keep your kids alive in the face of starvation?

Would you opt for cannibalism?

Eat your kids, if you had no food?

Could you bear watching your neighbors eating your kids?

How would you stop them?

Would you bring yourself to eat your neighbors’ kids?

What will you feed your kids?

If you can answers to all but one of the above questions are satisfactorily, if you are convinced the food supply will never run out and there’ll always be enough for you/your family, if you find the above image disturbing, it’s time you stopped reproducing.

Scientist stumped as bee population continues to decline.

I also found this over on dot earth:

Life, Wild and Managed

wildlife

Earth’s veneer of millions of plant and animal species is a vital resource that will need careful tending as human populations and their demands for land, protein and fuels grow.

Still advocating more growth is a recipe for total disaster.

By 2050 or so, the world population is expected to reach nine billion, essentially adding two Chinas to the number of people alive today. Those billions will be seeking food, water and other resources on a planet where, scientists say, humans are already shaping climate and the web of life.

It would be absolutely disastrous to permit / allow / ignore human populations to reach 9 billion people. The damaged that 7 billion have done is already quite catastrophic.  We are already geoengineering most of the surface of the planet with terrifying effects.

The Psychosis Of Civilization - As If Humanity Actually Mattered

The Earth Blog has a great article on the psychosis of civilization.

As I have discussed on The Earth Blog previously, our values have become outrageously skewed in favour of whatever benefits the onward march of the global economy. We do not see the rise and fall of habitat viability on the television news, instead we see the rise and fall of the markets in the capital economy; we do not count specie extinctions in newspaper bar charts, but we urgently count companies going bust; we do not map the catastrophic breaks in the energy flows between different parts of an ecosystem, but we do acknowledge every time a budget airline discontinues a route, or whenever a main road has “severe” delays. As if it matters.

The psychosis of Industrial Civilization is endemic: every person that places his or her trust in the system of hierarchies, politics, markets and mass consumption, undergoes a fundamental readjustment in priorities. No longer does the fate of our species rest upon our increasingly precipitous position within the global ecology; we can all hold hands, actually or virtually, and celebrate the majesty of the global economic miracle, safe in the knowledge that it will take us forward into a glittering future of jobs, money and all the other civilised things we have been taught to desire.

How we have become so determined to destroy the continuum of life in search of something so utterly trivial, has its roots in the history of civilization. Every civilization has had its own goals, but ultimately they have all come down to one thing: the insatiable desire to progress in whatever way is dictated by the elite members at the very top. Such “progress” takes many forms, but whether it be exploration, scientific discovery, technological prowess, imperial power or simply the idea of being “the best”, civilizations have to feel they are progressing in some way; and so its subjects – the civilians – become part of that collective desire. For what are we if we don’t keep progressing? Failures. From our fear of failure, others above us draw their strength – just at the moment we seem to be reaching the end, and as we stretch out our fingertips, another line is drawn even further away. So we note the new goals and conform to the wishes of the system; continuing to do as we are told.

Through this psychotic behaviour, civilizations thrive…until they fail.

What Is Really Important

When I wrote the chapter called “Why Does It Matter?” in my book, Time’s Up! I felt rather uneasy; as though I hadn’t managed to explain myself properly. The problem was that, beyond the physical argument for the continuation of our DNA that I offered, there was also a complex and deeply-philosophical explanation that I also had which didn’t translate well into words. It was like a version of the argument that Descartes gave for the existence of God; to paraphrase: “I have within me a perfect and unequivocal representation of God; how could that be so if there were no God.” It’s a terrible argument, but it demonstrates well how a very good idea – which Descartes no doubt thought was perfect at the time – completely fails to work when written down.

I’m going to have another go.

So, how do you feel about your place in the world? Do you feel small, insignificant, worthless, just a tiny part of something far greater than yourself? This natural feeling of inferiority when you realise you are just a tiny part of a greater whole is the reason why medieval religious leaders were so resolute about our exulted position in the Great Chain of Being, just below the angels, but above all other forms of life – so long as you accepted that monarchs, priests and landowners were considerably more perfect than the rest of us.

It’s the same in the industrial economy: there is this global system that has enormous, if transient, power over the whole of existence; that governs every aspect of the lives of the civilised, but you don’t have to feel small, so long as you are told how important it is to go to school, get a job, go to the shopping mall or buy something online, follow the latest fashions, and cast your vote. You are empowered by your participation in these activities. It’s just that some people are more empowered than others.

But why on Earth do you need to be told how important you are? It speaks volumes about our state of mind when in order to feel worthwhile we have to, for instance, achieve good grades at school. We are all human beings, for goodness sake! Even more than that, we are what we are: our consciousness is bound up in our physical being, and everything we know and feel – everything we will ever be – is determined by our personal interaction with what is around us. We are at the centre of our personal universe; not in any selfish way, but simply because we can never truly perceive anything outside of our point of view.

Thomas Nagel, the American philosopher, summed this up beautifully in his essay, “What Is It Like To Be A Bat?”:

After all, what would be left of what it was like to be a bat if one removed the viewpoint of the bat?

Substitute “human” for “bat” and it is obvious that human experience has to be a unique thing for humans and, by extension, for each individual human. That is why we are important; not because humans are essential to the global ecology or even because we are essential to the absurd construct we call Civilization, but because what matters, is what matters to us.

How could it be any other way?

Think about this for a short while and it becomes clear that the civilised world’s destruction of the natural environment cannot under any circumstances be acceptable, for it will endanger the one thing which matters above all else: ourselves.

Decision Time

You have to make a choice. Are you going to continue supporting and extending the global reign of Industrial Civilization; or are you going to once again learn to value yourself as the centre of your universe, and the thing that matters above all else?

To me that choice is remarkably easy, but you might take some persuading, not only because of the insidious hold that the civilised world has upon everything we do, but because you are possibly thinking that I have left something out – the other things that also matter dearly to you. Fear not; this is what I wrote in Time’s Up!

More than just our natural tendency to survive, though, is the manifestation of that survival instinct in the way we think. Consider the question: What would you risk your life to save? My initial instinct is to say ‘my family’, then ‘me’, then, with a little more thought, ‘the Earth in general’ and ‘my friends’. Remove the Earth from the equation and you have the kind of answer that most people give.

In fact, all three typical responses are directly related to the natural instinct for survival. We instinctively want to protect our families in order to secure the continuation of our DNA through blood relatives and the people they depend upon to survive. We want to protect ourselves in order to protect our own DNA, and the opportunity for that to be further replicated. We want to protect our friends because they too are human beings, but not only that, we have consciously chosen our closest friends because of what they have in common with us – they are almost like family.

I have said that I was not entirely happy with the strength of reasoning I gave in the book, but with the addition of the philosophical argument to the obvious need to replicate our DNA – the survival imperative – then we can all be justified in wanting not only to protect ourselves, but also our families and those other people we really care about and need: the community.

Community is the antithesis of civilization for civilization thrives on the division of humanity into tiny, atomised, competing parts; but community is the form in which humans have always survived best. The choice is simple now: Civilization or Community; Progress or Humanity; Death or Life.

Also read The Problem With Civilization

An important read: Chris Hedges’ – War Is A Force That Gives Us Meaning

This is one of those essays that should be required reading of every man, woman and child on the entire planet.

I have, as you heard, spent most of my adult life in war. I began two decades ago covering wars in Central America, I spent five years in the Middle East, I spent seven in the Balkans, where as Mary Ellen mentioned, I covered the wars in Bosnia and Kosovo. My life has been marred, let me say deformed, by the organized industrial violence that year after year was an intimate part of my existence. I have watched young men bleed to death on lonely Central American dirt roads and cobble stone squares in Sarajevo. I have looked into the eyes of mothers keening over the lifeless and mutilated bodies of their children and I have stood in warehouses with rows of corpses, including children and breathed death into my lungs. I carry within me the ghosts of those I worked with my comrades now gone.

War has found me, found us out again. We have blundered into nations we know little about, caught between bitter rivalry as between competing ethnic and religious groups and we have embarked on an occupation in Iraq that is as damaging to our souls as it is to our prestige and power and security. We have become tyrants to others weaker than ourselves and we believe falsely that because we have the capacity to wage war we have the right to wage war. Once you master a people by force you depend on force for control. Isolation always impairs judgment and we are very isolated now.

In Antigone, the king imposes his will without listening to those he rules and dooms himself. Thucydides wrote of Athens’ expanding empire and how this empire led it to become a tyrant abroad and then a tyrant at home. The tyranny Athens imposed on others, it finally imposed on itself. The lust for war, the desire for profits led the Athenians to lose sight of democratic ideals, ideals that are their legacy to us and should be our legacy to others. We are fed images and slogans that perpetuate fantasies about our own invulnerability, our own might, our own goodness, and these illusions blind us. We cannot see ourselves as others see us. We have fed the heart on fantasies. William Butler Yeates wrote, “The heart’s grown brutal from the fare.”

It is 1967 in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip and we have become Israel. Our empire has expanded and in this we have become piranhas. We are propelled forward, not by logic or compassion or understanding, but by fear. We have created and live in a world where violence is the primary form of communication and we have built an alliance against terror with Ariel Sharon and Vladimir Putin, two men who do not shrink from gratuitous and senseless killing in the Israeli occupied territories and Chechnya. And those who are not with us, and few are with us now, we ridicule and belittle and condemn. We have become the company we keep. Much of the world, certainly the Muslim world, one fifth of the world’s population, most of whom I remind you are not Arab, see us through the prism of Iraq, Palestine, and Chechnya. And this prism is one that is igniting the dispossessed and deteriorating by the hour our security and safety.

The attacks on the World Trade Center illustrate that those who oppose us, rather than coming from another moral universe have been schooled well in modern warfare. The dramatic explosions, the fireballs, the victims plummeting to their deaths, the collapse of the Towers in Manhattan, were straight out of Hollywood. Where else, but from the industrialized world, did the suicide bombers learn that huge explosions and death above a city skyline are a peculiar and effective form of communication? They have mastered the language we taught them. They understand that the use of indiscriminate violence against innocence is a way to make a statement.

We leave the same calling cards. We delivered such incendiary messages in Vietnam, Serbia, Afghanistan, and now Iraq. It was Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara, who in the summer of 1965 defined the bombing raids that would kill hundreds of thousands of civilians north of Saigon as a means of communication to the Communist regime in Hanoi.

The seduction of war is insidious. It appears to be a way to eradicate our enemies, to banish from the world of the living those who would do us harm. At a time when we are afraid it gives us a false sense of power and security. Of course, we do not see the war in Iraq.

The press always masks the essence of war and death from public view. The coverage is presented as a game, as entertainment. Commentators on the cable news channels rival in the power and might of our weaponry and by extension, our own power. We watch neatly packaged video clips fed to the press by the war makers and we are spared the pools of blood, the agony of the dying on the other end. It is clean, and neat, and tidy, and wildly out of context.

There is the technological capacity to show us war. We could have watched live footage of a young Iraqi soldier with his legs blown off with an anti-tank mine dying in the sand, something I saw in the Persian Gulf War. But such coverage would hardly boost ratings, hardly make us to want to wage war and so we are fed the myth. The myth the press almost always feeds us in war time and (the reality we are) kept from seeing.

There is no more candor in Iraq or Afghanistan than there was in Vietnam, but in the age of live satellite feeds the military has perfected the appearance of candor. For the myth of war, the myth of glory and honor, sells newspapers and boosts ratings real war reporting does not. Look at CNN, FOX, and MSNBC. Nearly every embedded correspondent sees his or her mission as sustaining civilian and army morale. The identification of reporters with the units they cover is insipid, and dangerous, but also usual, for in war the press is always part of the problem.

In war time, as Senator Hiram Johnson reminded us in 1917, “truth is the first casualty.” We have lost touch with the essence of war. After our defeat in Vietnam, we became a better nation. We were humbled, even humiliated. We asked questions about ourselves we had not asked before. We were forced to see ourselves as others saw us and the sight was not an attractive one. We were forced to confront our own capacity for atrocity, for evil, and in this we understood not only war, but ourselves.

But this humility is gone. The good name of war has been resurrected. It began under President Reagan in Grenada and Panama, and culminated in the Persian Gulf War. We have been led to believe, in the same way the doomed empires of the late 19th century believed, that our technology makes us invulnerable. A lie sadly unmasked, as I speak today, in the streets of Fallujah.

War is the pornography of violence. It has a dark beauty, filled with the monstrous and the grotesque. The Bible calls it “the lust of the eye” and warns believers against it. War gives us a distorted sense of self. It gives us meaning. It creates a feeling of comradeship that obliterates our alienation and makes us feel, for perhaps the first time in our lives, that we belong. War allows us to rise above our small stations in life, to find nobility in the cause, feelings of selflessness, even bliss.

Once in a conflict, the shallowness of much of our lives becomes apparent; the fruitless search to find fulfillment in the acquisition of things and wealth and power is laid bare. The trivia that dominates our airwaves is exposed as empty chatter. War allows us to engage in lusts and passions we keep hidden in the deepest, most private interiors of our fantasy life. It allows us to destroy not only things but human beings, and in that moment of wholesale destruction, we wield the power of the divine, the power to revoke another person’s charter to live on this earth.

The frenzy of this destruction – and when unit discipline breaks down or there was no unit discipline to begin with, frenzy is the right word – sees armed bands crazed by the poisonous elixir our power to bring about the obliteration of others delivers. All things, including human beings, become objects, objects to either gratify or destroy or both. Almost no one is immune. The contagion of the crowd sees to that.

“Force,” Simone Weil writes, “is as pitiless to the man who possesses it, or thinks he does, as it is to its victims; the second it crushes, the first it intoxicates.” And those who have the least meaning in their lives – the impoverished Palestinian refugees in Gaza, the disenfranchised North African immigrants in France, even the legions of youth in the splendid indolence and safety of the industrialized world – are all susceptible to war’s appeal.

I do not miss war, but I miss what it brought. I could never say I was happy in the fighting in El Salvador or Bosnia or Kosova, but I had a sense of purpose. This is a quality war shares with love, for we are also able to choose fealty and self-sacrifice over security for those we love. This is why war, at its inception, always looks and feels like love, the chief emotion war destroys. We are tempted, maybe even encouraged, to reduce life to a simple search for happiness. Happiness, however, withers if there is no meaning.

The other temptation is to disavow the search for happiness in order to be faithful to that which provides meaning. But to live only for meaning, indifferent to all happiness, makes us fanatic, self-righteous, and cold. It leaves us cut off from our own humanity and the humanity of others.

The ancient Greeks understood the perverse attraction between love and death in war time. When Achilles killed Penthesilea, the queen of the Amazons, in the Trojan War, he fell in love with her as she expired on the battlefield. He murdered love, and once he murdered love, he himself was doomed. He courted death. Aphrodite, the goddess of love, had an illicit affair with Aries, the god of war, who was hated by all the other gods with the exception of the god of the underworld, to whom he steadily brought new souls.

We feel, in war time, comradeship. We confuse this with friendship, with love. There are those who will insist that the comradeship of war is love, the ecstatic glow that makes us, in war, feel as one people, one entity, is real. But this is part of war’s intoxication. Think back on the days after the attacks of 9/11. Suddenly, we no longer felt alone. We connected with strangers, even with people we did not like. We felt we belonged, that we were somehow wrapped in the embrace of the nation, the community. In short, we no longer felt alienated. As this feeling dissipated in the weeks after the attack, there was a nostalgia for its warm glow. War time always brings with it this comradeship, which is the opposite of friendship.

Friends, as J. Glenn Gray points out in his book “The Warriors: Reflections on Men in Battle,” are predetermined. Friendship takes place between men and women who possess an intellectual and emotional affinity for each other. And many of us will admit that we never really had a friend, and even the most fortunate of us have very few.

But comradeship, that ecstatic bliss that comes with belonging to the crowd in war time, is within our reach. We can all have comrades. The danger, the external threat that comes when we have an enemy, does not create friendship, it creates comradeship. And those in war time are deceived about what they are undergoing. This is why once the war ends these comrades again become strangers to us. This is why, after war, we fall into despair.

In friendship, there is a deepening of our sense of self. We become, through the friend, more aware of who we are and what we are about. We find ourselves in the eyes of the friend. Friends probe and question and challenge each other to make each more complete. They draw the secrets out of us and know our inner core of being. For we reach and change others, and we ourselves are changed when we plunge to the depths of our inner life, the depths that expose our insecurities, our incompleteness, those depths that often lie beyond articulation.

In comradeship, the kind that comes to us in patriotic fervor, there is a suppression of self-awareness, self-knowledge, self-possession. Comrades lose their identities in war time for the collective rush of a common cause, a common purpose. In comradeship, life is ecstatic and corporate, as opposed to friendship, where life is singular and individual.

In comradeship, Gray reminds us, there are no demands on the self. This is part of its appeal and one of the reasons we miss it and seek to recreate it. This is why once the war is over, once the danger that linked us together is past, these feelings are instantly extinguished.

Sebastian Haffner, who was a lawyer in Nazi Germany, wrote of this comradeship in his book “Defying Hitler.” He noted that comradeship destroys the sense of responsibility for oneself, be it civilian or, worse still, the religious sense. Comradeship always sets the cultural tone at the lowest possible level accessible to everyone, he wrote. It cannot tolerate discussion. In the chemical solution of comradeship, discussion immediately takes on the color of whining and grumbling. It becomes a mortal sin. Comradeship admits no thoughts, just mass feelings of the most primitive sort. These, on the other hand, are inescapable. To try and evade them is to put oneself beyond the pale. In war time, when we feel threatened, we no longer face death alone, but as a group. And this makes death easier to bear. We ennoble and self sacrifice for the other, for the comrade. In short, we begin to worship death, and this is what the god of war demands from us.

Think, finally, of what it means to die for a friend. It is deliberate and painful. There is no ecstasy. For friends, dying is hard and bitter. The dialogue they have and cherish will perhaps never be recreated. Friends do not, the way comrades do, love death and sacrifice. To friends, the prospect of death is frightening and this is why friendship – or let me say, love – is the most potent enemy of war.

We do not see war in the images of war presented to us in films and novels, nor in the mythic narratives the government and the press spins out for us. We do not see war in the televised images from Iraq. The war is carefully packaged, the way tobacco or liquor companies package their own poisons. The titillation is there, but always in doses we can digest. The reports give us war that has a coherency and logic it never has in battle. We taste a bit of war’s exhilaration, but are safe.

War from Iraq is seen through the prism of the U.S. military, and it comes complete with manufactured heroes, feel-good stories about our own, and an enemy that is always painted as barbaric and uncivilized. We can thrill in the perversity of war even as we watch films or read books that are meant to denounce war. It is almost impossible to produce antiwar films or documentaries that also present images of battle. It is like trying to condemn pornography while showing erotic love scenes. The prurient fascination with violent death always overpowers the message. War has become part of the modern industrial landscape. Indeed, its tools are often the cutting edge of technology.

By World War I, we had created ways in which thousands of people, who never saw their attackers, could die in an instant. And weapons that carry out this impersonal mass slaughter are beautiful. They are crafted, sleek, and harbor within them awesome power. The machines of war – the planes, the tanks, the heavy machine guns, the huge, hulking howitzers and the helicopters – are pieces of art. I have seen them at work. They are angels of death, streaking through the sky. I was with a unit of guerrillas in El Salvador when some Huey helicopters raced in over a lake to hunt us down. We hid in the ruins of an abandoned village, darting from wall to wall, standing with our backs to the shattered bricks, so our hunters could not see us as they passed low overhead. As I looked up at these machines that were trying to kill me, I found them seductive.

Once in a conflict, once we live in the midst of fighting, we are moved from the abstract to the real, from the mythic to the sensory. No soldier, after a few seconds of combat, believes in the myth of war anymore. And this is why wounded marines jeered John Wayne when he visited them in a hospital in World War II. When this move takes place, we have nothing to do with a world not at war. The world, when we return to it, is viewed from the end of a very long tunnel. There, they still believe. There, they do not understand. We feel different, wiser, greater. This experience is so overpowering that, if we can control our fear, we go back to seek it out again. War is addictive. Indeed, it is the most potent narcotic invented by humankind.

The first time I was in an ambush was in the Salvadoran town of Suchitoto. It was a dreary peasant outpost made up of stucco and mud and wattle huts off the main road. The town was surrounded by the Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front rebels, who, when I arrived in El Salvador, were winning the war. The government forces kept a small garrison in the town, although its relief columns were frequently ambushed as they ambled down the small strip of asphalt, surrounded by high grass. It was one of the most dangerous spots in the country.

The rebels launched an attack to take the town. A convoy of reporters in cars marked with “TV” in masking tape on the windshields high-tailed it to the small bridge that led to the lonely stretch of road into Suchitoto. Then we moved slowly down the road, the odd round fired ahead or behind us. We made it to the edge of town, where we ran into rebel units, now accustomed to the follies of the press. On foot we moved through the deserted streets. The firing from the garrison became louder as we weaved our way with rebel units to the siege that had been set up. Then, as I rounded a corner, several full bursts of automatic fire rent the air. Bullets hit the mud wall behind me. We dove onto the dirt. Rebels began to fire noisy rounds from their M-16 assault rifles. The scent of cordite filled the air. Rebels around me were wounded and crying out in pain. One died yelling, in a sad cadence for his mother. His desperate and final plea cutting through the absurd posturing of soldiering. At first, his cries haunted me. Soon, I just wished he would be quiet.

The firefight seemed to go on for an eternity. I cannot say how long I lay there. It could have been a few minutes. It could have been an hour. Here was war, real war, sensory war, not the war of the movies and novels I had consumed in my youth. It was horrifying, confusing, numbing, and nothing like the myth I had been peddled. I realized at once that it controlled me. I would never control it. In a lull, I made a dash across an empty square to find shelter behind a house. My heart was racing. Adrenaline coursed through my bloodstream. I was safe.

I made it back to the capital. And, like most war correspondents, soon considered the experience a great cosmic joke. I drank away the fear in a seedy bar in downtown San Salvador that night. Most people, after such an experience, would learn to stay away. I was hooked. Drawn into the world of war, it becomes hard to escape. It perverts and destroys you. It pushes you closer and closer to your own annihilation – spiritual, emotional and, finally, physical.

I covered the war in El Salvador from 1983 to 1988. By the end, I had a nervous twitch in my face. I was evacuated three times by the U.S. embassy because of tips that the death squads planned to kill me. Yet, each time, I came back. I accepted with a grim fatalism that I would be killed in El Salvador. I could not articulate why I accepted my own destruction and cannot now. There came to be a part of me, maybe it is a part of all of us, which decided I would rather die like this than go back to the dull routine.

During the war in El Salvador, I worked with a photographer who covered the war, had a slew of close calls, and then called it quits. He moved to Miami and took pictures for one of the newsweeklies. But life in Florida was flat, dull, uninteresting. He could not adjust and soon came back. From the moment he stepped off the plane it was clear: He had returned to die. Just as there are some soldiers or war correspondents that seem to us immortal and whose loss comes as a sobering reminder that death has no favorites, there are also those in war who are locked in a grim embrace with death from which they cannot escape. He was frightening to behold, a walking corpse. He was shot through the back in a firefight and died in less than a minute.

Sigmund Freud divided the forces in human nature between the Eros instinct, the impulse within us that propels us to become close to others, to preserve and conserve, and the Thanatos, or death instinct, the impulse that works toward the annihilation of all living things, including ourselves. For Freud, these forces were in eternal conflict. He was, therefore, pessimistic about eradicating war. All human history, he argued, and civilization and its discontents, is a tug-of-war between these two instincts.

Taste enough of war and you come to believe the stoics were right. We will, in the end, all consume ourselves in a vast conflagration.

There is a constant search in war to find new perversities, new forms of death when the initial flush fades a rear guard and finally a futile effort to ward off the boredom of routine death. This is way we would drive into towns in Bosnia and find bodies crucified on the sides of barns, or decapitated and mutilated. This is way those slain in combat are treated as trophies belonging to the killers turned into grotesque pieces of performance art. I know soldiers that to this day carry in their wallets the identity cards of men they know they killed. They take them everywhere. They show them to you with the imploring look of a lost child. They will never understand. The job of killing allows our senses to command our bodies. The killing with spiders into greater orgies of destruction, hedonism, and perversion spirals out of control. The comradeship of war, actively works to stomp out all feelings, of love, of tenderness, for love alone shields us. The most important part of the individual life which cannot be subsumed in communal life is love, Haffner wrote. So comradeship has its special weapon against love, smut.

Every evening in bed, after the last patrol round, there was the ritual reciting of lurid song and jokes. This is hard and fast rule of neocomradship and nothing is more mistaken than the widely held opinion that this is a safety valve for frustrated erotic or sexually feelings. These songs and jokes do not have an erotic arousing effect. On the contrary, they make the act of love appear as unappetizing as possible. They treat it like digestion and defecation and make it an object of ridicule. The men who recite three lurid songs and use coarse words for female body parts were in effect denying that they ever had tender feelings or had been in love. That they had ever made themselves attractive, behaved gently, and used sweet words for these same parts. They were rough, tough, and above such civilized tenderness.

In war we deform ourselves, our essence. We give up individual conscious, maybe even consciousness for the contagion of the crowd, the rush of patriotism, the belief that we must stand together as a nation in moments of extremity. The normal order is turned upside down. Better to give yourself up to the lust of war, to make a moral choice, to defy war’s enticement; to defend love can be self-destructive. In the rise to power we always become smaller.

Power absorbs us and once power is obtained we are its pawn. As in Shakespeare’s Richard III the all powerful prince who molded the world, we fall prey to the forces we thought we had harnessed. Love may not always triumph but it keeps us human. It offers the only chance to escape from the contagion of war. Perhaps it is the only antidote and there are times when remaining human is the only victory possible. When the mask of war slips away and the rot and corruption is uncovered, when it turns sour and rank, when the myth is exposed as a fraud, we feel soiled and spent, it is then that we sink into despair.

In the Arab/Israeli 1973 War, almost a third of all Israeli casualties were due to psychiatric causes and the war lasted only a few days. A World War II study determined that after sixty days of continuous combat, 98% of all surviving soldiers will have become psychiatric casualties. The study found that a common trait among the 2 percent who were able to endure a sustained combat was a predisposition towards “aggressive psychopathic personalities.” During the war in El Salvador soldiers could serve in the army for three or four years or longer, virtually until they psychologically or physically collapsed. In garrison towns commanders banned the sale of sedatives because of the abuse by troops.

In this war, the emotionally maimed were common. I once interviewed a nineteen year old Salvadoran army sergeant who had spent five years fighting and suddenly lost his vision after his unit walked into a rebel ambush. The rebels killed 11 soldiers in the fire fight including his closest friend. A couple dozen soldiers were wounded. He was unable to see again until he was placed in the army hospital. “I have these horrible headaches,” he told me, sitting on the edge of his bed. “There is shrapnel in my head. I keep telling the doctors to take it out.”

But the doctors told me he had no head wounds. I saw other soldiers in other conflicts go deaf or stop speaking or simply shake without being able to stop.

War is necrophilia. This necrophilia is central to soldiering just as it is central to the makeup of suicide bombers and terrorists. The necrophilia is hidden under platitudes about duty or comradeship. It waits, especially in moments when we seem to have little to live for and no hope, or in moments when the intoxication of war is at its pitch, to be unleashed. When we spend long enough in war it comes to us as a kind of release, a fatal and seductive embrace that can consummate the long flirtation with our own destruction.

In Milovan Djilas’s memoir of the partisan war in Yugoslavia, he wrote of the enticement death held for the combatants. He stood over the body of his comrade, the Commander Sava Kovaèeviæ, and found

“Dying did not seem terrible or unjust. This was the most extraordinary, the most exultant moment of my life: Death did not seem strange or undesirable. That I restrained myself from charging blindly into the fray and death, was perhaps due to my sense of obligation to the troops, or to some comrade’s reminder concerning the tasks at hand. In my memory I return to those moments many times, with the same feeling of intimacy with death and desire for it, while I was in prison, especially during my first incarceration.”

War ascendant wipes out Eros. It wipes out delicacy and tenderness. And this is why those in war swing from rank sentimentality to perversion, with little in between.

A year after the war in Sarajevo, I sat with Bosnian friends who had suffered horribly. A young woman, Ljiljana, had lost her father, a Serb, who refused to join the besieging Serb forces around the city. She had been forced a few days earlier to identify his corpse. The body was lifted, the water running out of the sides of a rotting coffin, from a small park for reburial in the central cemetery. She was emigrating to Australia soon – where she told me, “I will marry a man who has never heard of this war and raise children that will be told nothing about it, nothing about the country I am from.”

Ljiljana was young, but the war had exacted a toll. Her cheeks were hollow, her hair dry and brittle. Her teeth were decayed; some had broken into jagged bits. She had no money for a dentist. She hoped to fix them in Australia. Yet, all she and her friends did that afternoon was lament the days when they lived in fear and hunger, emaciated, targeted by Serb gunners on the heights above. They did not wish back the suffering and yet, they admitted, these may have been the fullest days of their lives. They looked at me in despair.

I knew them when they were being pounded by hundreds of shells a day, when they had no water to bathe in or wash their clothes, when they huddled in unheated apartments, as sniper bullets hit the walls outside. But what they expressed was real. It was the disillusionment with a sterile, futile, and empty present. Peace had again peeled back the void that the rush of war of battle had filled. Once again they were, as perhaps we all are, alone, no longer bound by that common sense of struggle, no longer given the opportunity to be noble, heroic, no longer sure of what life was about or what it meant.

The old comradeship, however false, that allowed them to love men and women they hardly knew, had vanished with the last shot. Moreover, they had seen that all the sacrifice had been for naught. They had been, as we all are in war, betrayed. The corrupt old Communist Party bosses, who became nationalists overnight and got them into the mess in the first place, had grown rich off their suffering, and were still in power. There was a 70% unemployment rate. They depended on handouts from the international community. They understood that their cause, once as fashionable in certain intellectual circles as they were themselves, lay forgotten. No longer did actors, politicians, and artists scramble to visit during the cease fires, acts that were almost always ones of gross self-promotion. They knew the lie of war, the mockery of their idealism and struggled with their shattered illusions. And yet, they wished it all back, and I did too.

A year later I received a Christmas card. It was signed “Ljiljana from Australia.” It had no return address. I never heard from her again.

But many of those I worked with as war correspondents during the past two decades did not escape. They could not break free from the dance with death. They wandered from conflict to conflict, seeking always one more hit. By then I was back in Gaza and found myself pinned down in another ambush. A young Palestinian 15 feet away was shot through the chest and killed. I had been lured back but now felt none of the old rush, just fear. It was time to break free, to let go, to accept that none of this would or could or should return. I knew then that it was over. I was lucky to get out alive.

Kurt Schork, brilliant, courageous and driven, could not let go. He died in an ambush in Sierra Leone, along with another friend, Miguel Gil Morano. His entrapment, his embrace of Thanatos of the death instinct was never mentioned in the sterile and antiseptic memorial service staged for him in Washington. Everyone tiptoed around it, but for those of us who knew him we understood that he had been consumed. I had worked with Kurt for ten years, starting in northern Iraq. Literate, funny – it seems the brave are often funny – he and I passed books back and forth in our struggle to make sense of the madness around us. His loss is a hole that will never be filled. His ashes were placed in Lion’s Cemetery in Sarajevo for the victims of the war.

I flew to Sarajevo and met the British documentary filmmaker Dan Reed. It was an overcast November day. We stood over the grave and downed a pint of whiskey. Dan lit a candle. I recited a poem the Roman lyric poet Catullus had written to honor his dead brother.

By strangers’ coasts and waters, many days at sea,
I come here for the rites of your unworlding,
Bringing for you, the dead, these last gifts of the living
And my words – vain sounds for the man of dust.
Alas, my brother,
You have been taken from me. You have been taken from me,
By cold chance turned a shadow, and my pain.
Here are the foods of the old ceremony, appointed
Long ago for the starvelings under the earth:
Take them: your brother’s tears have made them wet; and take
Into eternity my hail and my farewell.

It was there, among a few thousand war dead, that Kurt belonged. He died because he could not free himself from war. He was trying to replicate what he had found in Sarajevo. But he could not. War could never be new again. Kurt had been in East Timor and Chechnya. Sierra Leone, I was sure, meant nothing to him. Kurt and Miguel could not let go. They would be the first to admit it. Spend long enough at war and you cannot fit in anywhere else. It finally kills you. It is not a new story. It starts out like love, but it is death.

War is the beautiful young nymph in the fairy tale that when kissed exhales the vapors of the underworld. The ancient Greeks had a word for such a fate – ekpyrosis. It means, “to be consumed by a ball of fire.” And they used it to describe heroes.

Thank you.

Donations

Kevin - thank you!

December 7, 2009

Issue 34

19 Views
Filed under: General, Newsletter — admin @ 8:30 am

A nicely humorous expose on the rantings of the anti-climate change crowd (video), found over on Greenfyre’s.

I agree by the way — the science is not disproven in the least.  The only thing going on here is a bunch of  idiots ranting about what is actually happening outside their own doors.

Last year, there was a TON of snow here (over four feet).  This year - nothing. It’s dry out there.  One year doesn’t prove the case of climate change (at all), but it is worth noting how fast things do change.

Here’s a review of the issue:

To these denialists, the scientists’ scathing remarks about certain controversial palaeoclimate reconstructions qualify as the proverbial ’smoking gun’: proof that mainstream climate researchers have systematically conspired to suppress evidence contradicting their doctrine that humans are warming the globe.

This paranoid interpretation would be laughable were it not for the fact that obstructionist politicians in the US Senate will probably use it next year as an excuse to stiffen their opposition to the country’s much needed climate bill. Nothing in the e-mails undermines the scientific case that global warming is real — or that human activities are almost certainly the cause. That case is supported by multiple, robust lines of evidence, including several that are completely independent of the climate reconstructions debated in the e-mails.

First, Earth’s cryosphere is changing as one would expect in a warming climate. These changes include glacier retreat, thinning and areal reduction of Arctic sea ice, reductions in permafrost and accelerated loss of mass from the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets. Second, the global sea level is rising. The rise is caused in part by water pouring in from melting glaciers and ice sheets, but also by thermal expansion as the oceans warm. Third, decades of biological data on blooming dates and the like suggest that spring is arriving earlier each year.

Denialists often maintain that these changes are just a symptom of natural climate variability. But when climate modellers test this assertion by running their simulations with greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide held fixed, the results bear little resemblance to the observed warming. The strong implication is that increased greenhouse-gas emissions have played an important part in recent warming, meaning that curbing the world’s voracious appetite for carbon is essential (see pages 568 and 570).  Climatologists Under Pressure

A lot of damage has been done on both sides of the fence, but as I’ve shared several times before, the real world is indifferent to our “beliefs”, opinions and attitudes towards climate change.  Humans are going to have to live with the results of their indecision and disinformation campaigns.

Those who keep promoting their denialists beliefs (despite the ever-mounting physical evidence, i.e., people are now dying in droves because of a warming world) are asking us to believe them and ignore the actual evidence.

I have a working theory on denialists. They are very much afraid that the gravy train is going to stop. Everything that they’ve ever known is going to radically change and it is totally out of their / our control now.  They’re scared — very scared.

I suspect that they are “self-irresponsible” types too, the ones who won’t recognize that they are now in peril and will not take any action to ensure their own survival.  This is the same crowd that bitches about lost rights and stolen (s)elections, but doesn’t do a damned thing about it except crack another beer and pound away on keyboards some more.

I think they’re pathetic. They’re so far gone from reality and what is happening in the real world and why that it’d take a 2×4 upside their head to skull-shock them back to planet earth.

Politicians on the other hand, aren’t very bright people, and are easily swayed by big business and money.  They’re spouting things like carbon dioxide and a warming world are “good” for us as long as their pockets stay full. They have sold their souls and humanity for a pocketful of silver.

I still find it very odd, despite all the things I’ve read and studied, that facts are often simply discounted or ignored.  Theories are more important then facts, and conspiracies are better yet.  If there isn’t a conspiracy, well I guess we’ll just have to make one up. It is soooo damned easy too.

The facts are readily available: humans have created huge impacts upon the surface of the earth; their activities are measurable and quantifiable, it’s simply impossible to keep on believing that billions of tons of human caused emissions pumped into the atmosphere isn’t going to have some effect on the weather.  And this is really just the tip of the proverbial iceberg (landfill) of what humans have done.

EDRO has a interesting summary of what’s just ahead:

The World Is Rapidly Collapsing

To realize the reason for the world’s rapid collapse, the following premises should first be understood:

  • The sum total of human activities on the planet is exponentially INCREASING.
  • Humans consumptions of energy and resources continue to increase in parallel to its activities.
  • Pollution including  greenhouse gas emissions resulting from increased energy consumption is accumulating.
  • The increase in the consumption of energy and resources is enlarging humans ecological footprint.
  • The impacts of pollution and humans’ ever-enlarging footprint has driven most of the planetary-scale ecosystems to the verge of collapse.
  • In the absence of any intervention by the forces of nature, the large-scale ecosystem such as the atmosphere, climate, oceans, soil … will completely collapse, removing the planet’s ability to support life.
  • We can say with the maximum degree of certainty that in the absence of any remedial action by natural forces the state of our planet would progressively worsen with time.
  • Based on the evidence, including enhanced seismic and volcanic activity, WE BELIEVE, the earth is trying to maintain planetary “homeostatis.”
  • However, there is a high price to pay for the nature’s balancing act functions.
  • Planet earth is effectively becoming “smaller,” less hospitable; the quality of nature’s services are generally deteriorating, and becoming more rudimentary
  • The effect of Nature’s balancing act functions, as harsh as they may be, should be viewed as desperate last measures: Survival of some, or extinction of all.

EDRO Moderators believe that the impact of global climate change, including extreme rain events, storm tides, and rising sea levels caused by both the melting ice and slowing down [or disappearance ] of Gulf Stream could flood large swaths of eastern United States, especially the coastal areas of Florida .

Cities and population centers both on the Atlantic and Gulf coasts could experience complete or partial inundation for some of the year, most of the year, or permanently.

About 40 percent of Florida’s inhabited areas, home to more than 65 percent of the population, could be impacted by the climatic events, rendering most of the existing cities uninhabitable and affecting up to 90 percent of Florida’s popultion.

Be sure to view the original article with the United States map showing.

Desmonda Despair (always) has several pertinent articles on related weather phenomena:

Jeddah Flood Recede

Exodus Of Dairy Farmers - Certain parts of the world are having a terrible time with climate right now. Some areas are down to less the 5% of their normal water supplies.  Dairy farmers are all but gone.

Americans in large numbers continue to exhibit a severe case of ethnocentric behavior. Our assumed immunity to disaster is absolutely baseless.   The American media is doing an absolutely terrible job on keeping people properly informed.

Market Skeptics has a new article out that reveals this: Strategically Placed USDA Disaster Declarations

A clear manipulation of how bad it really is (in just one state in this example) is revealed in the article. I’ve already shared Market Skeptics dismal 2009 food production report from around the nation.

By now you should be well versed that these disaster areas are all weather related.  The denialist crowd continues to disbelieve that there is any real peril going on, but the actual news reveals exactly the opposite.  But don’t overlook the media complicity either in downplaying the true impacts of what is happening on the earth.  It’s bad and it’s getting worse.

Let me make a final point here: there is NO reason to think it’s going to get better either.   Why should it?  Human impacts are not just going to suddenly go away or even diminish.  Serious and severe shifts in climate are well underway, all over the world and they are now being widely documented.  The future promises, no — assures us that it will continue and that it will worsen.

The regions we’ve settled were picked in part, because of their hospitable climate, and their geography, soil types and natural resources.  But the wild card now is climate and how it is swingly wildly out of the norm.  This is going to continue to have huge impacts upon human habitation and survival.

The other “known” is how much we have impacted the regions in which we live (and even where we don’t actually live). Resources are in huge declines all over the world, “renewables” are being cut down and harvested far, far faster then they’re capable of being replaced.  The future in this regard looks no better.  Combined, the changes in weather and resource depletion promises a deadly combination of devastating impacts on human survival.

Alas, we’re too busy with other more important details to really notice or care.  We bitch and moan about truly mundane things.  I found this on Dmitry’s site:

Over the course of the past year, it has become clear that Obama is just the next political fraud-in-chief, that national bankruptcy is unavoidable, that economic recovery is a pipe dream, that Washington and Wall Street have congealed into a single kleptocratic monolyth impervious to popular influences, that Pax Americana is at an end throughout the world, and that if you aren’t absolutely certain that you are high-class, then you must be low-class like the rest of us, because the middle class ain’t no more. Funny, isn’t it, the difference just one year makes?  Cracking Jokes

Of course people are scared and their lashing out in a reactive but unthinking response.  And none of this is funny, although some humor is definitely called for.  But after the giggles die down, what do we have?  Um yeah, back to reality again.

A few days ago I stumbled across the rant and rave section of Craigslist, but for the life of me, I could not figure out where these were being posted from.  Being that this doesn’t really matter anyway, the general tone was one of anger and rebellion, and it was all aimed at the federal government.

This is nothing new.  Many groups and organizations have formed over the years ostentiously to focus this discontent into meaningful actions.  Alas, none of them have actually worked, not in my opinion.  None of them have sucessfully changed anything.  They’ve all fallen prey to what Dmitry said so nicely, they’re impervious to “popular influence”.

Hah!  Well, of course they are!  Mainstream group think is useless.  Walking the same well-worn roads to “change public opinion” is a waste of time, effort and money.  That’s like asking the status quo to change the status quo — what results can you really expect from that?

The only things that could possibly work is to change the game — and the rules.

Here’s one example:  The Coconut Revolution - Cool video on a native people struggling against colonialism (and winning).

These people were being left with a giant dumping ground by a major mining company.  They didn’t like it, and were ignored (and mistreated).  They finally said enough is enough and blew up some of the critical infrastructure to the mine.  Now, they’re fighting for their lives — but in reality, they already were.  They were smart enough to realize that early on.

Why do so many Americans still think that this same situation is really any different here?  Becasue we have this sham of “democracy”.  Suuuurre we do.

There are many other examples like the one above, but they always involve a wholesale rejection of the status quo.  Recognizing that the system that is destroying us all is not fixable, nor does it lend itself to any meaningful repair is important.

But this point is only important if you’re going to do anything at all and expect real results.  Otherwise – go ahead and send in your membership fees and we’ll send you a free patch so that you can feel good about your “participation and support“.  Attend all of the meetings and incessently complain to each other about what changes you want.  Hold up those nifty signs and witty slogans and march in all those protests, clamoring for attention you never get.  Start yet another letter writing campaign and let your Senators and Congressman know that “you’re not going to take it anymore“.  Keep pounding away on that keyboard until doomsday comes — because it will.

And convince yourself in all of this that yes, you really did make a difference when it all comes crashing down. Start thinking now about how you’re going to explain all this to your kids too in the future too.

Where did Americans learn the ridiculous notion that a real protest is a sign holding march?

If you do what has always been done — why do you expect different results? The people who are doing all of this are indifferent to our pathetic complaints.  Isn’t it clear by now that our every effort to effect meaningful change has miserably failed?

Every generation is sold the same pack of lies as the proceeding generation, except the opposing force is getting a lot better at selling the lies (and dividing the people).  Schemes like this one will do nothing to deter the real criminals in our midst, but will continue to divide us.

We’ve got to stop assisting the prison guards to build tighter prisons.  It’s more then just boycotting their products — it’s a wholesale rejection and outright refusal to support them or even allow them to continue to exist.

They’re trying to make us believe that we are each other’s enemy and create suspicion and distrust between us.  They spew forth piles and piles of disinformation and misinformation to make us think that we can have it all without any impacts. But the sad truth is they’re the ones who are arrayed against us and always have been. They deem (their) riches more important then life, any life on planet earth, and you are their economic unit, a cog in their machine, as long as you continue to turn the wheels for them.

Either you get with the program and learn what resistance really means and what it’s going to take, or just go right on pretending that you’re really making a difference.

This is Jonathan Richards — if you are reading this, then you are the resistance.

Now for some lighter reading - The Barefoot Bandit

May 20, 2009

Open Thread

649 Views
Filed under: General — admin @ 10:06 am

I’ve been too busy these last few days to post. I’ve some major construction underway here and have to push through on these projects and get them done. A new roof has now been installed, but the trim work to finish this out remains. High winds have been a problem for this project, as was several days of rain. But the majority of the work is now done.

This is the time of year when I prefer to get these kinds of projects knocked out of the way, the summer heat is coming, and it’s easier to do this now then later. I uncovered roof damage on the old roof, so it’s a very good thing that I got to this now before the next winter.

Check out these desertification maps, this one is for desertification vulnerability and this one is for biomes (thanks to Lonewolf, he’s been keeping me updated while I’m swinging hammers). Forested regions in the West are the most vulnerable to climate change, which is of course expected.

I’ve made a few changes on the website, new $100 order minimums were enabled about a week ago to accomodate for the economic downturn. New mixes are coming soon, these will be bread, pancake, muffin, scone and even cake mixes. They’re not available just yet, the cannery is testing them out right now. We’ve had a hard time getting some of these products for months, as global food doom news continues to make headlines. Winter wheat harvest in the U.S. is down 20%, this will undoubtedly mean higher prices and future shortages.

TEOTWAWKI is now fact, the economic meltdown will ensure this for literally ‘everyone’. Hardest hit as always is the poor, and the number of impoverished will continue to increase as the abyss slides closer and closer. Desperation by the States will be the “name of the game” and the ‘electorate’ (yeah, right) get angry at the malfeasance and mismanagement of the (s)Elected.

What should be a nationwide rebellion by now of the public to our officials and the trillions upon trillions of misspent funds, mismanagement and total lack of accountability, well — isn’t. Claims of an angry public is mostly just hot air. If it were actually something to be concerned about, you’d be reading about a lot more outbursts and signs of (real) rebellion, including dead officials. But it’s still strangely missing.

It’s somewhat of a wonder to me, I mean, what exactly is it going to take to wake up the sheep? But I’m not even suggesting that we wake them up anymore, as this won’t help and it won’t change anything anyway. Saving or reforming the system isn’t worth doing. Eventually a stampede will start, I’ve no doubt about that, even sheep can react in self-defense. But summer draws nigh and it’s not here yet. Maybe this fall as the depression we’re in becomes more acute.

The (s)Elected are indeed concerned themselves, because they’re out of control even in their own ranks. But this will only breed more desperation throughout all the rank and file.  The response that I expect is more militarization. Fascist empires can only head in one direction and it’s never backwards. This is why the returning to freedom movement is such a myth.  It can only happen after a total collapse.

If you’ve got some news or views to share, you can post them here in the comments.

March 28, 2009

Future Prep Alert!

905 Views
Filed under: General — admin @ 9:52 pm

Current predictions by the world scientific community (most of them anyway) are that the world will experience increasing temperatures for the next several centuries.

I do not know if anyone has done any work beyond 1,000 years, but of immediate and global concern is the temperature increases that are expected this century and what this is going to mean for all life on Earth.

We live in a very narrow ‘tolerance’ band of temperature variations. Where it is (already) too hot or too cold are places that are not much inhabited by humans. Or plant life. We can only live in places that sustain sufficient levels of biodiversity. Areas and regions that do not are ‘hardscrabble living’ for the humans that do try to exist there.

The uninhabited places of the planet are generally unlived in simply because there is nothing there that will keep humans alive very long without massive amounts of inputs from someplace else.

It is extremely doubtful that most people even have an inkling of what is going to happen when we hear about 6C temperature increases. The scientific reports of 4C - 6C (centigrade) temperature do not convey the stark reality of how terribly serious this is. And this is the low estimates!

Here are a few numbers to chew on (contributed by Lonewolf):

Current Temperature
2 Degrees Centigrade Increase
4 Degrees Centigrade Increase
6 Degrees Centigrade Increase
8 Degrees Centigrade Increase
30
34
38
42
46
40
45
51
56
61
50
57
63
70
77
60
68
76
84
93
70
79
89
98
107
80
91
101
112
123
90
102
114
126
138
100
113
127
140
153
110
125
139
154
169

Table is based on current global mean temperature of 15C.

Current locations experiencing 60 degree temperatures will under a 4C scenario experience 16 degree temperature increase (60 degrees now becomes 76 degrees). This is a huge variation from current temperatures and will dramatically affect wildlife and fauna.

Examining this table, we see that many areas presently inhabited by humans and those with large agricultural productions will become totally uninhabitable. If we start using the average expected temperature increases, it’s not hard to see that life on Earth is going to be nearly impossible for most regions inhabited today.

Humans can live in 114 degree heat, but they can’t grow enough food of sufficient scale to keep our present population levels alive. Many crops will simply fail as temperatures increase — forever. Other areas will also experience massive depletion or exhaustion of fresh water supplies.
There is some thought that a mild temperature increase can improve crop production, however, this has a greater number of negative effects then positive:

Average temperature increase: An increase in average temperature can 1) lengthen the growing season in regions with a relatively cool spring and fall; 2) adversely affect crops in regions where summer heat already limits production; 3) increase soil evaporation rates, and 4) increase the chances of severe droughts. Agriculture and Food Supply

The above report suggests that we may see a slight improvement for a short while, but the danger is found here:

  • Food production is projected to benefit from a warmer climate, but there probably will be strong regional effects, with some areas in North America suffering significant loss of comparative advantage to other regions.
  • The U.S. Great Plains/Canadian Prairies are expected to be particularly vulnerable.
  • Crops that are currently near climate thresholds (e.g., wine grapes in California) are likely to suffer decreases in yields, quality, or both.
  • Climate change is expected to improve growing conditions for some crops that are limited by length of growing season and temperature. (e.g. fruit production in the Great Lakes region and eastern Canada).

These predictions are going to affect the most productive regions within the United States. California droughts are already taking their toll on an area that was producing 20% of the nations crops.

There is also a very real problem of suitable soils, which were totally ignored in this report. As planet heats up, humans are going to be seeking agricultural lands further north to escape the heat. Guess what? They do not exist. Not on the scale we are presently using or going to be demanding.

Terms like ‘climate chaos’ and ‘climate thresholds’ start taking on new meaning when you realize that the narrow temperature band that supports nearly 7 billion humans is about to be permanently inflamed.

And do you want to know what’s worse? There is nothing we can do about it. One example of climate modification testing just recently backfired, “Hungry shrimp eat climate change experiment“.

Essentially, this is one more foolish idea that has gone down in flames, and it demonstrates our complete lack of control and understanding how monkeying around with nature often doesn’t turn out like we hope. Apparently, our ravenous consumption and planet-altering behavior still has not taught us that destroying the natural environment on a planetary scale is just a bad idea all around.

This is a Future Prep Alert — if you live in one of these regions that will no longer tolerate human habitation, you might want to think about moving, sooner rather then later (as the crush of humanity gobbles up all the available land and food resources).

February 21, 2009

Climate Change Means Global Famine

1,137 Views
Filed under: General, Collapse — admin @ 9:18 pm

Greenfyre has a good write-up on why climate change means global famine.

Anyone who imagines that with climate change we will simply shift agriculture towards the poles probably does not even have house plants, much less a garden, and certainly knows little or nothing about agriculture or climate change.

Global Soil Fertility Map

Put simply, these soils are total crap for food production. The entire region where the delusional are hoping to grow all of our food is not good for food production based on soil alone, never mind other factors.

You can clearly see that we are supposedly talking about moving agriculture from the good to excellent soils to poor and very poor.

Even if there were no other challenges (and there are plenty, as have been and will be discussed) we would have to massively expand the area under cultivation since the land would simply not be as productive.

Such expansion means the cost per unit of production and distribution (ie food price) goes way up, the environmental impact goes way up, and there still isn’t enough land to match current levels of production. Climate Change and Famine

Greenfyre has a nice write up on why this whole idea of moving our farm lands north is self-defeating. I suspect that the fall-back position that many secretly harbor about climate change just got nuked.

See also Understanding Why Climate Change Means Global Famine

February 2, 2008

Natural Living - Revisited

491 Views
Filed under: General, Collapse — admin @ 8:10 pm

I’ve recently been contacted by a representative of the media, inquiring about my thoughts on natural living, and how future cyborgs might impact life on planet Earth. Apparently, this group is doing some research for a major television channel which I do not feel at liberty to name.

The scenario is a three part series on a hypothetical “peek” into the future 200 years hence, with 3 possible scenarios. Here is how they were presented to me:

* Technologically enhanced (“the cyborgs” — humans with computer chips in the brain to store memories/ assist with mental processing / counteract health problems, etc).

* Biologically enhanced (humans that have been biologically engineered before birth to eliminate diseases and exhibit selected personality traits and appearances).

* Naturally evolved (humans that have gone down the natural path, by opting out of the bio/tech enhancements), what they will look like, how they will benefit or be at a disadvantage.

A set of preliminary questions was posted about natural lifestyle and natural evolution that they would want to cover in the series, which would be something to the effect of:

* In the future, when humans are using technology to enhance themselves (such as implanting chips in the brain) or using genetic engineering to modify their health, appearance, and personalities, how might a human benefit from avoiding said enhancements and continuing on their natural course?

* Describe the ideal future for human beings.

* What kind of physical and personality traits and characteristics might a human who chose the natural route of evolution exhibit in 200 years? (i.e. describe the ideal “natural human” in 200 years).

* How might the earth be impacted if the majority of humans decide to use technological and biogenetic enhancement?

* How might the earth be impacted if humans not only decide to evolve naturally, but also to move toward a more natural lifestyle?

* From this point in time, what are your predictions for the future of mankind in the next 100 years and in the next 200 years?

* What measures should humans take now to prolong their lives and to ensure healthy futures for their children?

* What might the negative consequences be for people who have either chosen to or can’t afford to have biological/ technical enhancements?

The following is my semi-detailed reply:

Thank you for sending your follow up response. I’ve tried to respond to everything you asked, but I’m afraid it’s a bit lengthy. Hopefully this may help.

I see a gigantic problem with the premises that technologically enabled humans will even exist in 200 years. We are presently on the eve of civilization (and destruction), due to the over-exploitation of our environment which has created severe feedback loops with devastating consequences.

In two hundred years, it is very doubtful that humans will exist in significant numbers. Those that might, will be drastically reduced in their capabilities and technological dependencies.

This will occur because technology is dependent upon several factors - energy, resources and an accompanying civilization that supports and uses technology.

All three are actually in serious decline worldwide, although we are presently at the very apex of the downward decline and thus, it is not yet widely recognized. No advancement of any significance has yet been discovered to replace petroleum for example. Each barrel of petroleum represents 400,000 years of sunshine - nothing else even comes close.

Effectively, entropy is now set in motion as far as humans are concerned. Our ability to “lift ourselves up” via technology was a one-shot deal, dependent upon cheap energy sources, now which are nearly gone (and what is left, is certainly not cheap). Scientific efforts and advancements to find a replacement have actually failed, despite the hype and propaganda that is promoted.

Human technological effort (such as the Mars Mission) is being curtailed as a result. Our ability to make further advancements will be limited to the available resources and costs associated, which are already astronomical. Fewer efforts at research and development will be the norm, as costs and available resources dwindle.

The assumption that our world will be a highly advanced civilization in 200 years is deeply flawed in my opinion. Just the opposite is true, we will revert back to low-tech solutions among those that survive.

Humans have effectively reached the apex of their technologically dependent civilization. What resources remains in the next 200 years (using your numbers, because civilization will not last that long in reality) will be consumed with minor developments and entrenching positions as civilization collapses in upon itself.

The remaining humans will horde whatever tangible goods and especially resources that are still available. It’s quite possible that there will be a gigantic gulf of separation between technologically enabled humans and those who have voluntarily or forcibly reverted back to the natural methods of living.

Now, none of this is really an answer to some of your questions, so I’ll attempt to take them in the order you presented them.

Ours is a 3 part series, in which we’ll take a hypothetical “peek” 200 years into the future to explore 3 different scenarios for what our future selves might be:

1. Technologically enhanced (“the cyborgs”–humans with computer chips in the brain to store memories/ assist with mental processing/ counteract health problems, etc).

Such technology exist today and is being utilized by the US military and “defense” research branches of the government. Medical bio-mechanical enhancements have been experimented with in humans and chimpanzees. It is quite possible given a clear path with little restraint, that humans could be enhanced with biomechanical and computerized technology similar to what we can read today in science fiction novels.

Electrical and biochemical stimulation of the brain is being experimented on to help Alzheimer patients for example. It remains certainly possible that future humans would be part human / part machine / part software. This is effectively the desire of most futurists and technologist, believing that such “improvements” over naturally evolved humans would benefit mankind.

However, I take different approach, believing that we would become too dependent upon technology as a result. Human civilization based upon “improved” humans with biomechancial devices and implanted computer chips would not be a place where naturally evolved humans could live. They simply couldn’t cope.

Furthermore, such a world would further the destructive tendencies of humans towards our environment, as more and more resources were exploited for further gain, profit and control. It is already self-evident that humans have not learned to live in cooperation with their environment and the world, despite the failed promises of technology that claims otherwise.

Human development itself would be stunted, since the natural evolutionary cycle would be seriously interrupted. We must remember that over the last several millennia, humans did not evolve with technology and thus, are not a product of technology; technology is a product of human invention. The difference is very important, because our own biological development has occurred without technology. In other words, we are not Gods of our own biological development, we are only the (dubious) beneficiaries of our technology which has come at a exceedingly high price to the rest of the planet.

2. Biologically enhanced (humans that have been biologically engineered before birth to eliminate diseases and exhibit selected personality traits and appearances).

Genetic engineering is being performed all over the world by many institutions, and not only on humans. Mapping the human genome was considered essential in this effort to pioneer the way to “enhanced humans”. Gene therapy and genetic manipulation has some certain medical benefits, which are being discovered all the time. However, your question poses a moral dilemma - do we “breed out” through genetics undesirable traits and behavior?

This question undoubtedly leads to many others. Where do we stop? Infantcide? Who decides what is “right” and “desirable”? Who decides on who decides? Parents? Government? Politicians?

This is a very dangerous road, because it presumes several things, such as we can choose “rightly” with no long term ill-effects to the human race. However, we do not know that to be true. Our biological makeup is the result of a ten thousand generations of development and evolution. Monkeying around with it with the assumption that we know the long term consequences could have some fatal results for the entire human race. Self-extinction is a definite possibility. One single misstep in genetic manipulation could make us vulnerable to something that was long since bred out of us. Is it really worth the risk? I don’t think so.

Yet I doubt that my objections will carry much weight. Science and medicine are advancing their capabilities today at breathtaking rates. It is likely that they will continue to do so as long as the resources and funding last. Future humans under your 200 year scenario could well be disease free. But it is just as likely that we could manipulate out our humanity and be heartless, cold, unfeeling “beautiful healthy people”.

3. Naturally evolved (humans that have gone down the natural path, by opting out of the bio/tech enhancements), what they will look like, how they will benefit or be at a disadvantage.

This is an interesting question, because it touches on so many other areas also. It’s illegal in many parts of the world to choose a natural life, including here in the United States. Opting out of medical care, vaccinations or even having a television in your home can have you arrested and jailed. “Natural living” isn’t widely understood and is a near-forgotten lifestyle. Those who do this legally or illegally will in 200 years, look very much the same as they are today. Physical characteristics that took ten thousand generations to develop won’t change in only 200 years.

What would be more important and much more pertinent is whether or not humans would even be allowed to live natural lifestyles and what this would entail.

Basically, the questions about natural lifestyle and natural evolution that we would want to cover in our series would be something to the effect of:

1. In the future, when humans are using technology to enhance themselves (such as implanting chips in the brain) or using genetic engineering to modify their health, appearance, and personalities, how might a human benefit from avoiding said enhancements and continuing on their natural course?

Anyone interested in understand the benefits of technology, should also do some serious investigation in the restrictions of technology too. Technology is not the “enabler” that it is proposed to be, but in reality, is the ball and chain of the human race. We are certainly no more free with technology, actually the opposite is true. We are more enslaved then ever.

The more humans depend upon technology, the more enslaved they will be. It’s a self-fulfilling prophecy in effect; technological dependence creates more and more dependency. For example, how many people today can live without their cell phones, even though a landline phone may still be available to them?

Now imagine how much of an imbalance it would be to a human who had microchip implants in their brain in order to function on a daily basis. An EMP (electromagnetic pulse), microwave burst or even a solar flare could disable this person, effectively turning them into a non-functioning vegetable (potentially).

The benefits of avoiding such technology are obvious. Humans are already born with all the mechanisms and abilities (which are learned) they need to survive. This too is the result of ten thousand generations of natural selection and evolution. Can we really improve on this? Do we even want to? And if we did, what would we have? We would have humans that were co-dependent upon the maintenance and development of other humans who’s job would be to develop these technological toys.

This in effect, would create a huge division in humankind, the “creators” and the “dependents”. It is easy to see where this would go, since history is actually replete with such examples. A slave population of “enhanced” and dependent humans would forever pay homage to the “master” race that provided (or dictated) these things and their terms to them.

The safer way for the entire human race is to avoid such things, since they will undoubtedly lead like all technology, to abuse. But choosing to do this early on will be very important - and quite difficult, since it counteracts our existing culture and profit motives.

2. Describe the ideal future for human beings.

We would have to start of course, by cleaning up this one, since all future humans are going to inherit the mess we have created. We would abolish governments, capitalism and the exploitation of people, resources and animals. Instead, we would choose to live locally in harmony with our environment and each other, emphasizing sharing, caring and fairness to all. War would be abolished and debt a thing of the past. Sound practices such as permaculture and forest gardening would supercede destructive practices such as agriculture. Conservation and simple living would be the norm. We don’t need technology to do any of these things.

None of these things are actually possible with technology, since technology breeds destruction, environmental devastation, exploitation, greed, profits and human abuse.

3. What kind of physical and personality traits and characteristics might a human who chose the natural route of evolution exhibit in 200 years? (i.e. describe the ideal “natural human” in 200 years).

We do not have to look far to find such examples. As shared earlier on, 200 years is not enough time in the greater scheme of things to change humans. But humans exist today that already have characteristics of what humans in 200 years without technology would be like. Examples are the Kogi Indians. They would be kind, considerate, caring and non-violent except when provoked. Their daily lives would be to their villages and families. The “outside world” would be effectively meaningless to them, since their focus would be localized on events and activities that affected them.

A celebration of life, festival and harmony would characterize their lives, a fine replacement for the misery and war that so many endure today.

4. How might the earth be impacted if the majority of humans decide to use technological and biogenetic enhancement?

In a terrifying and horrible way. There can be absolutely no doubt about this at all, since technology does not enable humans, it only enslaves them and make them more and more dependent. Additionally, the environmental destruction this would cause would guarantee our planet’s destruction as a habitable place to live.

The air would be even further polluted then it already is, the soil destroyed and forests razed to the ground in the quest for more resources to create such a world. This is definitely not the way we should go.

Futuristic science fiction movies portraying a robotized, biologically enhanced human world will actually never exist because of this fact. Our quest to exploit every known resource, including humans, will be the reason for our collapse as a civilization. We are already well on our way there right now.

5. How might the earth be impacted if humans not only decide to evolve naturally, but also to move toward a more natural lifestyle?

In a highly beneficial way. Along with human evolution, we also have the evolution of the biosphere. Human behavior in the last 200 years in particular has been absolutely devastating to the environment. Natural living humans would have a far lesser impact on the environment then our present and past course has shown.

In time, the oceans, forests and atmosphere would largely recover - if we left them alone. We must remember, the Earth doesn’t need humans, but we need the Earth. We cannot survive on an uninhabitable planet anymore then we could survive on the surface of the Moon.

Moreover, the Earth doesn’t “need” our help as many still seem to profess. It simply needs for humans to leave it alone - it can and will heal itself without our dubious “assistance”. Whether we survive this process at all is highly questionable. There is growing indications that a gigantic proportion of mankind is facing a severe die-off as we run out of resources and the climate changes make their impact. This is a event now being called the Anthropocene Era, human caused environmental changes that have circumvented the Holocene Era. Scientists are campaigning right now to have this recognized.

6. From this point in time, what are your predictions for the future of mankind in the next 100 years and in the next 200 years?

As I’ve already indicated, we won’t last another 200 years. Within 50 years, die-off of 4 - 5 billion humans will occur. Our inability to exploit more resources, produce adequate food or depend upon collapsing ocean fisheries are in part, the reason why this is happening. The other big factor is climate change, which is far worse then scientists have been willing to admit, although this is now rapidly changing.

So within 100 years, the Earth will be a very different place, populated by less then 1 billion humans and quite probably, a number significantly below this. Estimates vary, from 30,000 humans living north of the Arctic Circle to 500,000,000 scattered in habitable bio-regions around the globe.

The growing global shortage of fresh water alone will dictate where and if any humans survive.

7. What measures should humans take now to prolong their lives and to ensure healthy futures for their children?

Stop having children for at least ten years. Not quite the question you asked, but it applies because if we intend to ensure a healthy future, we must first stop overpopulating the planet. Stop eating store-processed food, start eating local, organic and sustainable food from farmers nearby. Grow your own. Avoid the medical establishment and practice homeopathic medicine at home. Exercise daily, eat right and stay at a healthy weight for your age. Avoid dangerous technologies like cell phones, microwaves, automobiles and airplanes. Live simpler, more fulfilling lives around family, celebration and harvests.

8. What might the negative consequences be for people who have either chosen to or can’t afford to have biological/ technical enhancements?

None whatsoever. Nobody “needs” technology of any type. Becoming “enhanced” would only increase your dependency and take away more of your freedom and make you beholden to someone else, including an entire industry which would effectively keep you enslaved. I cannot see any negative side effects of saying “No” to all of this.

~Survival Acres~

January 6, 2008

Seeds Of Destruction, The Hidden Agenda of Genetic Manipulation

1,071 Views
Filed under: General, Environment — admin @ 7:13 pm

This is an important 3 part series on what is happening with our global food supply. Posted here in it’s entirely for your reading pleasure and doom outlook (fair warning, this is a disturbing report) - Admin (special thanks to Lonewolf for his tireless dredging).

Reviewing F. William Engdahl’s “Seeds of Destruction” - by Stephen Lendman (Part I).

Today, we’re all lab rats in an uncontrolled, unregulated mass human experiment the results of which are unknown. Once GM seeds are introduced to an area, the genie is out of the bottle for keeps.

Bill Engdahl is a leading researcher, economist and analyst of the New World Order who’s written on issues of energy, politics and economics for over 30 years. He contributes regularly to publications like Japan’s Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Foresight magazine, Grant’s Investor.com, European Banker and Business Banker International. He’s also a frequent speaker at geopolitical, economic and energy related international conferences and is a distinguished Research Associate of the Centre for Research on Globalization where he’s a regular contributor. (more…)

November 13, 2007

Collapse Survival On A Budget - Part III

6,155 Views
Filed under: General, Collapse — admin @ 2:55 pm

Please review Part I and Part II to this ongoing series of collapse preparations. Part III contains practical preparation and suggestions.

[As long as this blog entry is, it’s woefully short and incomplete. I know that, but it’s a blog, after all, and not a book. These are further comments, ideas and extensions on subjects mentioned before in the Collapse Survival series. - Admin]

Water, Food & Personal Health

You should be in good shape already, if not, do not wait another moment to start exercising and shedding excess pounds. Stretching and daily exercise routines should be undertaken to increase your stamina, strength and flexibility. Recent reports predicts over 75% of Americans will be obese by 2015 is shocking (but true). Current figures are already over 50%. This is staggering, in a lumbering sort of way. Poor diet, poor workplace habits and poor levels of exercise are contributing to this problem. Do something about it and take charge of your life.

Start walking instead of driving. Ride a bicycle. Run. Go outside — a lot more then you ever have, you’re going to need to get used to this. If you don’t have a good pair of shoes, get some. Get several. Boots are best for durability and work, but add extra weight. I own about a dozen pairs of real boots now, they’ll last about 12 years altogether, so you can’t really have too many good shoes. Don’t bother with designer boots and split-leather boots, they’re junk. Buy quality footwear, this is one area where scrimping will get you killed.

Eat right. Stop the junk food consumption now. Cravings will cause a lot of problems in the future as junk food becomes scarce or expensive. It will be in high demand, but don’t be allured by it’s sweetness or profits. It’s also bad for you in too many ways to bother to list here. Natural foods such as fruit can satisfy your cravings for sweets. Some dried fruits store pretty well too.

Healthy living really means healthy eating. What goes in sometimes stays in far too long in the form of excess fat and can cause long term disease such as heart disease. Whole grains, fruits, vegetables should be a major portion of your diet. If you’re living off the land directly, you’ll discover foods you’ve never eaten before. Learn to try these out and recognize the wild edible foods in your area, this will become more and more important as the collapse deepens you and you can’t resupply your food stores.

Food preparation will need to be done in sanitary conditions, meaning don’t use what you know is dirty or possibly contaminated. Boiling, roasting or cooking pots and utensils under high heat will kill most germs that will make you sick, so if you have to, simply cook the cooking utensils before you use them, otherwise, wash them first (water might be limited).

Wild foods like rosehips for example, contain a lot of vitamin C and can be eaten year round, they’re not that hard to find even in the dead of winter. Other foods are better in the spring, summer or fall. Learn which wild foods you can expect to find in your area, the best time to harvest them and where they can be found. Good books to get on the subject are readily available, such as Edible and Medicinal Plants of the Northwest. Some essential books can be found here.

Personal sanitation will be critical. You will need to keep yourself clean to stay healthy. Wash your hands often to avoid transmitting germs to your face and eyes and to each other. Don’t use the same hand towels among the different people in your group if you can help it.

Keeping your clothes clean will be hard. Get a Wonder Washer or a scrub board and wash basin. Durable clothing is a must. Wool breathes very well, sheds water some (can be treated to improve this) and holds up best. If you’re allergic to wool, you can wear something underneath (cotton or silk is good). You can buy wool pants very cheaply from surplus stores online (recommended), and wool shirts quite cheap from used clothing stores. Cotton “duck” is a heavy duty cotton material that is also long lasting and durable and even blends in fairly well.

Buying used clothing is pretty cheap in reality, and oftentimes, you can find some real bargains. The only new clothes I buy are socks, underwear and shoes, everything else is used, including hats, jackets, coats, pants and shirts. Military clothing is also a good choice (lots of cargo pockets), but not as warm as wool in most cases, unless you’re buying foreign clothes, such as Swiss military wool pants. These are great, cheap, durable and warm. Many foreign armies make good durable clothes and can be found at a surplus store, or even better, online.

You will need both “street clothes” and work clothes. You will need to blend in at times and look like everyone else anytime your in public. Walking around in military fatigues will get you swiftly identified as being an non-conformists and a potential troublemaker. Collapse “survivalists” will undoubtedly be outlawed unless you have conformed. Realize this and wear what is appropriate for the tasks at hand.

Military clothing is subdued and comes in a variety of darker colors. It really doesn’t matter what color you get, but avoid the desert colors unless you live in the desert. Being able to be camouflaged will become critically important. Build a ghillie suit if you really intend to blend in.

Long underwear is a must. You may need to be without heat or fire for quite a while and they can really help keep you warm. Military surplus is good here too and usually a lot cheaper then “brand name”, which is not as well made. Silk underwear is very durable and warm but expensive. Haunt the used clothing stores for bargains, I go weekly and stockpile what I know I’ll be needing.

Good socks are also a must, along with good boots. Cotton traps moisture and can cause blisters. A good quality wool blend sock will wick moisture away from the foot. I like several brands, including Thorlo’s. I buy mine in bulk off eBay, ordering 50 or more pairs at a time. Socks you’ll always need, but they won’t always be readily available and to be honest, I’m not planning on knitting my own.

Toilets need to be sanitary as possible. There will be no guarantee for most people that water will still be running, or the sewer systems still operating if the collapse is very bad. Save your water for personal use including clean up, cooking and sanitation. Use a latrine if you can, or just dig a hole. Learn how to keep yourself clean when using the toilet, this takes a bit of practice. Conserve water by using rags (if necessary) or even usable gray water.

Toilet paper is already expensive and will be getting worse. If you’re not stockpiling, you should. Or learn to do without.

Daily vitamins are helpful in keeping your immune system up. There are some here that have long shelf lives that will do the job you need. A lot of people swear by spirulina and other “superfoods”. Keep your vitamins and medicines in airtight containers if possible for the longest possible shelf life and to keep out moisture which can destroy their efficacy. Simple zip lock bags work (sort of, they are not really airtight), or even a larger airtight container for the unopened bottles.

You need to do the same thing with your food storage. Oxygen destroys food, as does moisture and humidity, allowing it to degrade. Time and heat are also the enemy, so keeping your food airtight, dry and as cool as possible at constant temps (go underground) will keep your food storage viable.

I am not a fan of vacuum sealers. I haven’t found a single one that really works. The work for a short while, but then the double-bagged, double-heat sealed package leaks and I’m pretty much disgusted with this junk. I much prefer hard sided containers in varying shapes and sizes that can be counted on to stay airtight. Food grade airtight buckets work very well for smaller items, including food, but also for clothing and gear. Mylar sealable bags also work much better then those cheap vacuum sealer poly bags.

Keep your gear well oiled and lubed to drive away moisture and prevent rust. Stockpile such things as cleaners and lubes, you’re going to need a lot more of these then you probably think.

Buy several water filters. A good drip filter is a must (hands-free operation) and doesn’t require you to sit there and pump and pump and pump, such as the Katadyn Drip are recommended. Get spare filter elements. The Katadyn can do up to 30,000 gallons of filtration before the elements need to be replaced.

Water quality will be a huge, huge issue. Dead bodies, dead animals and poisoned water supplies will be a fact of life. You’ll need to filter and purify everything, and everything that is washed or cleaned will need to using clean water.

I have portable pump filter in my portable gear, and also have several hands free drip water filters. I intend to use them all, all of the time.

You can also boil water and filter your own water with homemade sand and charcoal filters. Even coffee filters will work ot remove sediment. Use something, unless your water comes from a well or quality spring with no contaminants. Have a backup water source identified too, in case something happens to your primary supply.

Food grade water barrels will also be highly useful for many reason. They permit you to create a mini-supply of water on hand and you won’t have to venture out as much. I recently bought 8 of the fifteen gallon drum sizes very cheaply, I don’t think the guy that sold them realized what he had. I also have over 20 water and storage barrels now, in fact, I’m not sure how many I’ve got. They will be used to store food, gear and water and are great for keeping out humidity, moisture, dirt, dust and rodents. Get the “wide mouth” type for storage and the spigot type for water.

Many of these barrels will be buried, “caching” my supplies. They can be put into your designated crashstead or scattered about as survival caches. Some should contain critical and well-prepared supplies, such as food, water, medicine and firearms. Don’t forget clothing too. A single “barrel” of the 60 gallon size or so, could easily supply one person for several weeks with careful planning and strategic location, or even longer, depending on what each one contained.

Mental Discipline

Collapse preppers are a different breed, already set apart from the rest of the crowd. They can already tell something is seriously amiss and are watching out for more, which is happening daily now. This is part of the mental discipline necessary to help your survival and those you are responsible for. There is much more then this.

Staying focused is critical. It’s very easy to be sidetracked and derailed from your preparations. Right now, you will survive these ‘lapses’ of attention and discipline. But during the dangerous period of collapse, a wandering focus could easily get you killed.

Focus is best obtained by exercising discipline. If necessary, make a checklists of essential tasks that need to be done daily. This list needs to include collapse security chores. Has anyone been checking your ’stead out? Has someone setup camp nearby? Are there strangers in the area? How would you know? Who’s been watching and who’s been nodding off to sleep?

Mental discipline is exhausting for those who are not accustomed to it, but it is essential. You must be alert, and pay attention to everything, even the smallest detail. This is quite challenging, because it is the opposite of what we are allowed to do right now. We can be sloppy, careless and forgetful and get away with it now, but not during the collapse. We will need to be alert and focused.

Animals are a good example. They live among other wild predators all the time, but even when relaxed, they are alert to any possible danger. They’re attuned to the snap of a twig, the rustle of leaves or the sudden quiet calm that can overtake a forest when danger or intruders are present. You need to become like this, alert to your surrounding and instantly notice whenever something is amiss.

Mental discipline also includes not letting your mind dwell on all the unpleasant things that will be going on. There is nothing you or anyone else can do to prevent the collapse of civilization, it’s too late for that now. The results of our lifestyle and carelessness and disregard for the planet and the health of our society will be the inevitable outcome.

This will include a great deal of suffering, death and disease. Warfare is very likely to break out right here in the U.S., with fighting going on among all of those involved, including civilians and the military and law enforcement.

I expect all kinds of things, prison camps, slave camps, work camps, outright attacks and property confiscation, personal assaults and even legislation decreeing that the non-conformists to government mandates are simply “fair game” to everyone else.

This is actually happening now if you think about it. Non-conformists are constantly being rounded up and arrested. The government likes to call them lawbreakers, but common sense tells you that some of these “laws” are stupid beyond belief. They’re forced into prison camps now and they work for slave wages for the US prison industries. This will worsen as collapse deepens and the government attempts to retain control.

I fully expect that this will mean martial law and the establishment of control points, also known as “choke points” over much of the things you will need to survive. Think power, food, water, medicine and transportation. Without these, you will die. Control these and you will comply, doing whatever they want and ask of you, even turning your neighbors in for non-compliance.

These programs are already underway now in America. Truckers are being told to “look for suspicious behavior” against mythical “terrorists”. Simply shifting your eyes on the subway can now get you arrested for suspicion. This will worsen, dramatically, as the draconian police state implements even more “controls” over the population.

All this means that there will be a lot of suffering going on, and you will be tempted to put a stop to some of it (if your human that is). There will be a lot of non-humans running around, having sold out and taking great pleasure in the pain of others. We are seeing this now in Iraq among the US military. These boys are coming home some day, angry, stressed and exceedingly dangerous.

Sub-humans are fair game as far as I am concerned. Anybody that is helping to exploit and hurt other humans has already forfeited their right to life. I have no plans to sit on my ass while such monsters live in my area. Collapse will bring out the worst in most people, and the best in a few others.

It will be difficult to “stay out of it” and stay sane (imo). It will also be difficult to know which battles you must fight, but fight you will if you intend to survive. You will fight for yourself and those with you and there is every reason to believe you will probably fight for the stranger too. We are all fighting to survive the onslaught that we know is coming, and we are not alone. Everyone else is too.

But you will not be able to fight for everyone. Many will seek the advantage, much like they do right now, trying to profit from you in some way and take advantage in some way. Many people believe right now that they are owed this for some bizarre reason too. These people are worse then death, they are a living death, seeking to take but never give and they will be dross and dead weight should you allow them.

Your mental discipline and sound judgment will be absolutely essential to keep these type of people at bay. They surround you right now — imagine what they will be like when the collapse hits them upside the head and they become suddenly frightened and scared and oh, so utterly dependent upon you.

People don’t really change — not like they claim. They just change their spots (and allegiance). Be aware of this and act accordingly.

Shelter

This is a critical component to your survival. You will need a reasonably warm, dry and safe shelter. Most people are thinking they are going to weather out the collapse in the homes they have now. I doubt if this will happen. A huge dislocation of the population will probably commence as the collapse deepens.

Unless you are already in a safe area, protected and even hidden, you stand a high likelihood of being displaced. Your shelter will stay behind as you are forced to go elsewhere. Therefore, you will need to know how to pick a suitable location and build a suitable shelter (or find one).

Unfortunately, this is a bit beyond the scope of this blog entry, since this would require an entry or two all by itself. Obtain some good books such as the SAS Survival Guide as step 1 in your preparations. This will help you with many other areas of survival also. Step 2 on shelter preparation is to learn how to build a root cellar and a natural house. Going underground may be the best type of shelter you can ever hope to provide for yourself.

There are many reasons for this. Underground offers natural insulation, shelter from high winds, unobtrusiveness and security. It’s not the only place to shelter, but it is a good choice. It will also be where many post-collapse survivors are ultimately to be found, as above ground dwelling are raided, burned down and attacked.

Obviously, I believe that staying hidden is the best chance for your survival. Collapse will sweep away (most) everything this is unsustainable, including our existing way of life. Personal security will be totally gone as desperation and hunger turns normal people into mutant zombie hordes. Staying hidden will be easier then fighting, but you’ll still have to fight eventually. Fighting a thousand hungry humans just isn’t possible for any group and not even worth trying. You will expend precious resources, including your life should you try.

Collapse will automatically adjust these numbers in your favor, given enough time. This is harsh, but true. You cannot feed a thousand mouths, almost nobody can. And you cannot defend against two thousand pairs of hands. They will rend you to pieces and eat the bones.

Your shelter and your best defense it to stay hidden, out of sight, quiet and conserving your supplies and resources. This is also a very good time to stop trying to grow your own food. I am not an advocate of collapse farming. I do no think this is either wise or safe. Farming and subsistence living can only be resumed in the post-collapse era, and it will still be dangerous for a time.

Unless your collapse plans truly mean remote living in the wilds, where you can be fairly assured of few mutant zombies, hiding for shelter, for safety and for survival is your better choice. Roaming around (on land or sea) will expose you at anytime of the day or night to others doing exactly the same thing. These “interactions” may well prove to be deadly, or a quick trip to a slave camp.

Safety

Carry a pistol at all times. This has been proven around the world as being an essential for personal safety and defense, especially during times of unrest. You should be very familiar with your guns and have essential spare parts to keep them in good repair (extractors, firing pins and springs, etc.). Personal safety can only be ensured by you, and you will need the means to ensure it.

Handguns are only usable in close quarter situations in the hands of most people. The saying that your pistol is what you use to fight to your rifle is true. A rifle provides you with equal standing against most assailants (and then some). Not just any rifle either, but any rifle is better then no rifle. Get a battle rifle and learn it’s use, function, ranges and capabilities. Get one (or two or three) before they make them illegal (again).

Scoped rifles are quite useful for long range defense and offense, but they create tunnel vision for the user. You can be blindsided while being engaged or distracted by an assailant. Shooting with both eyes open is a skill that needs to be practiced. Staying aware of your immediate surroundings at all times is essential. This doesn’t matter if your in the marketplace or in the field, knowing what is going on around you is critical.

This is called situational awareness. Know your exit points. Know who is dangerous and who is not. Know what you might have to do and when you will have to do it. This is really mental discipline, constantly shifting, focusing and assessing the possibilities and potentials.

The greatest danger (of violence) will of course come from other people. Wild animals will almost always leave you alone. Stay away from obvious danger, you’re trespassing in their territory when entering the woods. These are moose, bears, cubs and snakes. There’s really nothing to be afraid of out there, these animals are more afraid of you in 99.99% of the situations you might encounter. But NEVER get between a she-bear and her cubs. Never approach young animals of any sort, you may have to face down their angry mother who is much faster, stronger and sure of foot then you can ever hope to be.

I’ve spent many years in the woods and bear encounters are a fact of life. Just give them a wide berth. Black bears scare very easily with shouts and waving your arms. A grizzly is another story (if you don’t know what a grizzly looks like, look it up). You do not challenge a grizzly. Making noise while walking in the woods can alert animals to your path and they will almost always disappear long before you see anything. But if you suddenly encounter a grizzly, your safety response will be different then with any other animal. He’s king and he knows it and you’re trespassing. Rather then spend a lot of time on “what to do”, I suggest you look this up. This is really the only animal you have to be concerned about in North America, the rest will almost always avoid you.

Since I’ve never had any experience with alligators, you might might want to check this out too, in case you plan on living in a swamp (not a bad idea).

There are many other safety issues, including practicing safe procedures. Getting hurt during collapse is pretty likely. Getting help is not, so staying safe and staying healthy will be paramount. Work slowly if you can, methodically and with precision at whatever you are doing. Working quickly can cause injury and mistakes, including seemingly simple things such as hurting your back or causing a hernia. Remember, you may have to endure any injury you’ve inflicted upon yourself for the rest of your life. That body has got to last as long as possible.

Location

Here’s the “big one”. Everyone wants to know where to go. When to move. How to escape. Who and what to take.

Frankly, I have a hard time with such questions because they signify a lack of critical thinking. Why should anyone be telling you where to go? That’s your job. Only you know your abilities, resources and constraints. And why should anyone be telling you when to go? The lack of personal responsibility and accountability for these questions notwithstanding, these are things you need to know because they are only applicable to you. If you need to be told, you’re really not paying attention (still).

There are many people speculating on “safe zones” and places to live. Some are even making a living at it and charging for such “services”, selling books, tapes, videos and advice. Forget it. These people are nearly clueless and have absolutely no idea at all what they’re talking about. The only thing they are divining is your pocketbook.

Now, having said that (which can be applied to all prophetable advice givers), there are some things that will be worth knowing. I’ll share them here to get you started, but I won’t be listing latitudes and longitudes of where you should go.

Water will be in short supply in many parts of the world where climate change is most severe. A simple look here reveals where this is happening in the US (take the time and explore this site for your own good). This is not static and is expected to change (worsen). This will cause extreme disruptions and relocations and millions of people abandon drought stricken areas.

So you need to avoid these areas unless you have assured yourself of an adequate water supply. In “The Answer“, I stated what I still believe — bio-regional zones will become the occupied territories for future humanity. These will be based around existing water supplies and viable environmental regions, and those water supplies that can be safely and securely transported in. Many currently populated locations will be abandoned as drought increases their instability.

Relocating for a lot of people will be mandatory, even if you are not a crashstead survivor. Study the map, look at geological features, such as existing (natural) waterways. How far are some of these locations from where the rains actually fall? Most rainfall occurs in the mountains, collected by rivers and streams and sent downhill, oftentimes traveling a very long ways to the cities. Future rainfall (and snowfall) will continue to create precipitation in the mountains, even during drought. It’s much more likely there then anywhere else.

Other thoughts on location — population is a huge consideration. Are you already surrounded by mutant zombie consumerist hordes? This is a no-brainer, hardly worth mentioning. Lower populations will mean fewer zombies to deal with, fewer to feed, house, clothe, and fight off. Remote locations offer the best when it comes to the population question. But ultra-remote has the additional problem of being too remote. You’re isolated, alone and probably on your own.

Decide what “balance” is right for you. I am persuaded that fewer people will ultimately be better, since I fully expect “civilization” to completely dissolve into a winner-take-all type of scenario. And I know who the winners will be — the most ruthless, vicious, violent and cutthroat among us. Kind of like it is right now (we call them capitalists and businessmen). The politeness will be long gone as the rules go out the window along with all the useless eaters they plan on getting rid of. Only those that will work and provide and offer something in return will be allowed to stay (live). The rest will be culled from the herd.

No thanks. I want nothing at all to do with that world. I’d rather be far, far away if I can, living my life out without having to contend with that level of monstrosity. But that’s me. It may not be for you.

Some are relocating based on soil and weather patterns. This is good, but not necessarily absolutely essential. I don’t believe in collapse farming (at all). I think it will be too dangerous. And post-collapse farming and subsistence living can be done by employing some modern techniques that can take advantage of seasonal variations and water conservation (think greenhouses, Earthboxes, aquaculture and such like). A composting greenhouse can be kept warm even in winter for example. But erecting one during collapse is like inviting the living dead to dinner (imo).

Location will also require many other things, such as natural resources. Wood will be very important for heat, construction and raw materials. Available game populations (including fish) are highly desirable when you decide to venture forth. Good soils are also great, but could be built up given sufficient time and inputs.

Some terrain (topography) will keep some of the zombies at bay. This can be rivers, lakes, streams, natural formations such as mountains, cliffs and even heavy timber. I’m not at all concerned about spy satellites and infrared being used to target me, I doubt very much that the little fish will be worth catching, they’ll have other, more pressing problems.

Many cities are located in the “wide open” and can be easily entered (or attacked) from a multitude of directions. Some will be much better defended because of restricted road access. But “cities” are out of the question (entirely) in my opinion. Towns and villages are more like it, if you intend to be around other people at all. Towns that have limited road access will be more desirable then towns that are wide open. Ideally, townies would get together and cooperate, protecting and defending what they have (after they get rid of the bullies and monsters in their midst who are bound to rise up).

Some locations simply won’t ever make good locations, but almost any location is probably “survivable” with enough planning and preparation. You could survive in the desert, in the city or even in an apartment building if you were cunning enough and stayed hidden and out of sight, and had enough supplies accessible to you (even by stealing) to outlast and outwit the rest of the hordes. But don’t count on it. The odds of being found out are pretty high, and thieves will probably be executed without trial.

A great location is this: hidden, well-stocked, defensible, watered, with available natural resources, exposed to as few people as possible, but still accessible to you (and hopefully you alone). Sound impossible? It’s not, you just have to be creative in your planning. I’ve got a few other suggestions further down that relate to this.

Transportation

Forget cars. Budget collapse survival will require you to walk or ride a bike and peak oil / peak energy will take care of the automobile. Animal transportation will become useful again, but you’ll have a hard time keeping animals during the collapse, because animals mean food. Unless you can defend your farm or homestead, animals will be difficult and increasingly expensive to maintain during the collapse, possibly even costing you your life.

This is a Catch-22 situation, since the use of animals will become very important in the post-collapse era. They’ll be needed for work, farming and transportation, and of course as food. Those that survive will be highly prized and I expect their offspring to be pretty expensive. They will become the new cars of the future.

A good quality mountain bike should be in your survival supplies. I have five. I’m not bragging, just giving you some idea that I actually put this stuff into practice. This will enable you to travel in your region with the least amount of energy expenditure. A bicycle trailer is also a good idea, the BOB trailer is a single track one-wheeled trailer that can be attached to almost any bicycle. I bought mine and like it a lot.

Transportation will become limited to what is still available. Wood-gas powered automobiles will return. These work quite well and everyone who plans on surviving the collapse should have the plans and materials on hand to build one. Better yet, build it now and learn how to feed and care for a wood-gas powered engine. Some kind of “normalcy” will return to life and living at some point and your need for transportation will still be there.

Storing Supplies

Food storage should be cool or cold, out of direct sunlight and at a constant cool or cold temperature. This means for most of us, root cellars, basements or crawl spaces. Burying your food in the ground is a great idea. Keep your cans and buckets away from direct contact with the soil by placing them on boards or pallets. They’ll keep much longer like this and you will extend your shelf life dramatically.

Recently there was story of a Mountain House food supply stored in an attic for 37 years, which the owner then tried some and found it to still be edible. That may be true, but attics are terrible places to store food. Their constant high temperatures and temperature swings from season to season are poor for food storage. Ground temperatures are much more constant, varying only a few degrees year round (get below frost line in your area).

Get this book if you simply don’t know what to do for a root cellar. I also advocate stashing your food supplies in more then one location if possible. This gives you layered food security in case something happens to your stash. Rodents, humans, bears, earthquakes, fire, flood or acts of a vengeful God, you’ve spread your eggs around some and will be better off.

Protection & Defense

The downside to collapse is the danger this will pose from fellow humans, who will be quick, ruthless and capable of exploiting any weakness or vulnerability they find. Psychopaths will thrive. Desperation will turn mild-mannered book worms into dangerous bone-crunching cannibals and I’m not picking on bookworms either. Housewives, teenagers, soldiers, even the elderly will have nothing to lose.

See this article, Prepare For Your Defense for suggestions on rifles. A real battle rifle is a hundred times better then a hunting rifle, simply because you can lay down covering fire so quickly. Accuracy is reasonable and can be excellent with some tuning and in the hands of good marksmen.

Even if you don’t intend to fight off the mutant zombie hungry hordes, you will still need some type of protection as your defense. Hide. Stay out of sight and stay put if you can. Moving around exposes you to all kinds of things. Unless you are really remote, staying put makes the best sense if possible. You will avoid roaming hordes, exposure to disease and lower the risks of hurting yourself.

Hide underground if possible. A basement, root cellar and hidden dugout will work pretty well. The problem with existing underground structures is they are fairly easily identified. It’s not hard to figure out which houses have basements for example, and basements are known to contain food…

A new hidden underground location however, is unknown to outsiders (and neighbors) if planned right and built surreptitiously. You can do this yourself, or contract out the work for a “basement” or “root cellar” from someone out of the immediate area such as a contractor. Better, do the work yourself. Cover it all up and blend it in with brush, bushes and / or rocks. A brush pile on top will attract rodents, but it will also make it difficult for anyone to poke around looking for your smokestack or air vent. The rodents can be dealt with easy enough.

You will need a strong door and a second emergency exit. Both will need to be hidden and covered up, and lockable from the inside and the outside (when you leave).

The idea of living underground like this isn’t pleasant, but nothing about collapse will be pleasant. You will need to stay hidden and out of sight for the duration — as long as it take. This could be weeks or months in your area, but probably not much longer then this, as malnutrition, disease, violence and prison camps take their toll on everyone else.

When you come out is up to you, but you will still be at risk from all of the above, plus the added risk of having depleted your food supplies. Post-collapse, post-dieoff is the time to plant your garden and resume ‘living’. This will be risky as long as your area / region has ongoing issues and problems with roaming people, government confiscation or bandits / problem neighbors / survivors.

Bandits should simply be killed and left to lay as warnings to others (after stripping them of useful weapons and supplies). Anyone who endangers you or your family has already forfeited their life, even if their still walking around. This is part of the mental discipline that will be needed. There won’t be any “rescue” by police or the fire department or anyone else for that matter, you will be on your own and you will have to decide what your best course of action will be.

Many times, it will be better to just stay hidden. A tiny “cache” easily found might satisfy a roaming bandit to grab and scoot, leaving you without the problem of having to kill him and possibly attract others to your location. A crossbow is an excellent weapon for silent killing and can be very effective over 100 yards. Homemade silencers are also effective, but you’ll have to figure out how to build one yourself.

Keeping bandits away is best accomplished by simply having nothing to attract anyone. Distance (remote) is best, but simply not feasible for most people, because we’ll almost all wait until it’s too late to get to a remote, hidden location. Keep them away by making it “naturally difficult” for them to poke around in your area. Obvious difficulty such as booby traps, broken glass, tripwires and clear signs of effort to impede progress and investigation indicates “treasure” to those who are smart enough to figure this out. All a bandit has to do then is simply wait you out. Killing you from a thousand yards away as you go to the toilet is quite possible by a good marksmen, so stay out of sight at all times. And keep your “hide” truly hidden with natural obstacles.

Slimming Down

Pare down to essentials. This will be harder then affording the stuff you’re actually going to need. We’ve been taught to be “consumers” since birth. You don’t really need that much in order to stay alive, all you need are the essentials. Humans have been living on essentials for thousands of years just fine. It’s not easy because it goes against all of your programming up to this point, but it can be done. Eventually, you won’t have any choice anyway.

Those who are still heaping to themselves useless baubles and junk are really just writing the epitaphs on their gravestones with their pocketbooks. Just like corporate America, they will soon realize that all the crap they’ve acquired is absolutely useless.

The essentials are the following:

a) water
b) food
c) clothing
d) shelter
e) safety
f) medicine.
And don’t forget to:

1) stay healthy
2) stay simple
3) stay alive.

Also read “Sit Tight And Prep Right” for more thoughts on this.

A few more thoughts on some points raised in “The Answer“:

a) mobile (don’t be unwilling to relocate, but don’t be planning on moving around a lot during the depths of collapse unless your really remote and safely away from zombies).

b) self-reliant (learn to do most things for yourself. Don’t remain a dependent upon other people to keep you alive, especially for your basic needs).

c) self-sufficient (provide for yourself your own sustenance and supplies, again, dependency and reliance on others will be much more negative in collapse then it is right now).

d) homesteading (this gives you the practical skills and experience needed to learn b) and c) above.

e) well supplied (don’t wait to obtain what you know you are going to need. This makes no sense at all, prices are going up daily, supplies are going down. Be well supplied and ready now while you still can).

f) mentally and physically adjusted (get fit, get exercised and start a daily routine now while you still can, trying to get slim during collapse so you can “adjust” is a bad idea).

g) military trained (or some kind of training, that includes discipline, fighting, self-defense, firearms and focused preparation).

h) ruthless (unfortunately, this will be true. The ruthless will survive. There will be too many occasions when you will be forced to choose who lives and who dies, including yourself and the need for “self-sacrifice”. Ruthlessness doesn’t necessarily mean being evil, but focused, directed violence and decision making in times of crisis and extreme emergency).

i) well armed (hardly worth saying imo. Guns are still plentiful, cheap and available. Ammunition is going sky-high. Get lots and learn how to use them all).

j) grouped with others (for those who expect to “join up”, do it now. This takes a lot of time and a lot of trust, you cannot do this too soon).

k) financially secure (owe no man nothing, control your expenditures and live within your means. Gain financial independence from the “system” if at all possible, or even a measure thereof).

l) debt free (get debt free, or plan on abandoning everything forever, but don’t be foolish. Creditors WILL hound you for life. The future prison camps will be FULL of debtors, you can count on it).

m) single (the single will stand the best chance of all, because they will have no dependents and can be the most mobile, ruthless and flexible. This doesn’t mean anything other then single people have the one advantage of being “unattached” to the encumbrances that hold most of us back now. There is a reason the military recruits the young and the single).

n) young (the future belongs to the young and always has. Our job is to see that some of them survive the present).

Remember, this is a blog, not a book. These are the highlights in other words, hopefully useful to you to start thinking about what you need to do. I do not know if there will be future entries on this series — that’s hard to say right now. We’ll see. This should be enough to get you going. And if you don’t “get it” now, you probably never will and I’d be wasting my time anyway.

Contributions are appreciated, but as always, this advice is freely given. I hope that it is freely received in the same spirit as it was written. — Admin

viagra cialisdiscount rimonabantbuy rimonabantindocinbuy indocinsarafembuy sarafemorder mexitilmexitilorder trimoxtrimoxdiscount busparcheap buspardiscount lotrisonelotrisonebetnovatepurchase betnovatepurchase clonidine onlineclonidinenexiumcheap nexiumlevaquinpurchase levaquinprevacidcheap prevacidbentyl pricebentyldiscount prednisonebuy prednisoneorder differinbuy differinorder stromectolbuy stromectolorder avalidebuy avalideorder proventilbuy proventilorder noroxinbuy noroxinorder ciprobuy ciproomnicef pricebuy omnicefaugmentin pricebuy augmentindiscount zoloftbuy zoloftorder prednisolonebuy prednisoloneorder ventolinbuy ventolinorder elavilbuy elavilorder nolvadexbuy nolvadexorder cytotecbuy cytotecorder avodartcheap avodartxenical free shippingcheap xenicalpropecia pricecheap propeciafemale viagra discountfemale viagraultram free shipingultram onlinesoma free shippingcheap somadiscount acompliaacomplia onlinevpxl onlinediscount effexorcheap effexorclomid prescriptionclomid onlineorder viagra levitracompare viagra cialisproscar discountproscar onlinecialis super active pricecialis super active onlinelevitra professional prescriptionlevitra professional onlineviagra super active priceviagra super active onlinelevitra free shippingbuy levitraorder generic cialisbuy generic cialiscialis tabscheap cialis soft tabsgeneric viagra no prescriptioncheap generic viagradiscount cialischeap cialisorder cialis professionalcialis professional onlineviagra tabsbuy viagra soft tabsorder viagracheap viagraorder viagra professionalviagra professional onlinegeneric cialis

Next Page »
Add to My Yahoo!
Subscribe to Google Reader
Subscribe to Bloglines
Subscribe to Newsgator
Subscribe to Feedster
Subscribe to NewsIsFree
 
September 2010
S M T W T F S
« Aug    
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
2627282930  
Storable Foods
Food Plans
Alpine Aire
Mountain House
Rainy Day Foods
Richmoor Foods
Super Spectrim

mountain house freeze dried food

Red Ribbon Campaign - No War