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Is it just me that finds talking about Doomsday Preppers on a forum for a game that ends of the world as we know it ironic?
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Ironi
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GM: "Your characters meet in a bar. It has electric lighting, recorded music being played through speakers and most of the customers seem clean and parasite free." Player 1: "Cool. Do they have cold beer on tap? I'll order one of those. I remember what that was like." Player 2: "I'll sit on a bar stool, lean on the bar with my elbow and talk about how tough my day at the office was." LOL. Suspension of disbelief. |
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I went on a mini vacation to Mono Lake this weekend. While sitting in the hotel I got to catch a few episodes of the show. Watching was interested because there are interesting tidbits you can pick up an apply in your own life. But most of these folks seem paranoid and I do consider myself a prepper. I just prep for earthquakes and social unrest as best I can in a urban environment
One thing I did hear is that the show makes the prepper identify one reason. Tha sorta makes them look more paranoid then they may really be. |
I'm prepping for the eventual heat death of the universe.
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Hostess Baking is going into bankruptcy. This means NO MORE TWINKEES!!! Can TEOTWAWKI be real? Is this what the Mayans saw at the end of their great cycle? Can civilization survive with out Twinkees??? I am surfing my way over to E-Bay to buy up those $5.00 a PIECE twinkees!!! My $0.02 Mike |
I've never eaten a Twinkie but I've known what they are since I was a kid because they had advertisements for them in American comic books :D
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Here's a question...
I remember reading the online book "Surviving a Nuclear War" and one of the prep things it said was to not only make ready for yourself and your family, but for one neighbor as well. Clearly we're not in any immediate threat of a massive, 2500-missiles-over-the-Pole type exchange (I pray...) but as we've discussed, some of us have your Katrina or Sandy level event prepping down or ongoing - anyone here doing the "...and a little for the neighbor, too" thing? |
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How do I tell one "Here is food and water" and the other "Sorry, all gone"? I am afraid that my altruistic side would shrivel and DIE if SHTF. In all probabilty, I would do a "duck and cover" and wait.... It was Heinlein in his Starship Troopers that had Juan Rico state the following observation during his tour in O.C.S. Rico was reflecting on the H&MP course he was taking during OCS. "Man is what he is, a wild animal with the will to survive, and (so far) the ability, against all competition." Pretty graphic. And I fear, all too accurate. TO conclude my rambling on this subject. I like to think of myself as a moral being. However, if push comes to shove, the animal that lives inside will emerge. My $0.02 Mike |
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As an aside, starship troopers was required reading when I was at OCS. Can't remember who wrote it, but its a guy who really was a good soldier and NCO and must have gone on to be a great officer. |
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If the fertilizer really hits the ventilation I'll be doing my best to shepherd all my family members and their partners up to my mum's place in the hills outside my city. Then my guess is that we'd all head to my mum's other place in the far south of the state. My mum and her husband are scientists who spend most of their working lives doing field work in remote parts of my state. Mum's a botanist with an incredible knowledge of growing and preparing edible plants and her husband is a marine biologist. They have the vehicles, equipment, stores and skills that would certainly increase our family's survival chances greatly. They both have pretty deep-seated pacifist beliefs though, so my brother and I would be handling all the tasks requiring violence, brutality and "big boys' rules", I suspect.
I would do just about anything to protect my family, including sacrificing myself. That's not even really a conscious decision, it's instinctual, so I'm not claiming to be the most brave or heroic dude ever born or anything. Obviously I'd prefer it not to come to that, but I'd prefer death to living with the knowledge that I could've saved a family member but didn't act when I should've. |
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Originally Posted by HorseSoldier In places where there is a coherent sense of community and people know their neighbors this will tend to happen anyway. I think these days, though, that most neighborhoods are not especially coherent communities, with modern technology meaning we tend to socialize primarily with people that we share interests with, rather than those we share geography with. Quote:
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I don't know any of my neighbors. I've lived in this place since 2004. Of the 8 townhouses in our little row only two other families were here when I got here. I talk to them from time to time but that's all. Anyone I would want to help in a disaster lives anywhere from 5 to 45 miles away. I've wondered what I will do, I have 2-3 weeks of water for me but not for all of them. Would they try to come and take it? Could I just shut myself in and try to be stealthy?
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But would I share what little I have? Maybe. Hopefully. I try to be a good Christian but deep down I don't believe in the natural kindness of humanity. And I know for a fact I can be a vicious asshole at times. |
I wish I knew more of my neighbors, like in the old school block party and PTA kind of way. Most of us are just in & out on our way somewhere else. I got involved in my city's CERT mostly just to meet people. Because my safety is less dependent on my own preparation than it is on that of my neighbors. It doesn't matter if I can last three days or ten without power, gas, water, police & EMS if my neighbors are just going to riot and burn the place down on day two.
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