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#1
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Lost government caches....
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"Oh yes, I WOOT!" TheDarkProphet |
#2
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The abandoned sections of the Turnpike might be a bit too well-known, actually. There are hundreds, probably thousands of abandoned rail tunnels in the United States, especially after the big consolidations of the rail industry.
http://www.waymarking.com/cat/detail...d-79e4f400ec31 https://www.google.com/#q=abandoned+rail+tunnels http://www.abandonedrails.com/Donner_Pass -- Michael B. |
#3
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I always thought converting a old tunnel into some sort of shelter would be a good idea, but then there is the issue of air circulation if you shut one end down and bury it. Especially if power is an issue. Might be a good way to store equipment though, pull it in and blow both ends. When you need it down the road dig it out.
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#4
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#5
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If it has the word FEMA, Processing, or SEMA I'm not heading for the line but away from it. Especially if its through a tunnel I can't get out of.
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#6
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I'm not sure if there was another thread on this somewhere, but there are miles and f**king miles of old underground tunnel networks and bomb shelters throughout Germany, a lot of it under the cities around the Ruhr area and such.
When I attended University of Maryland overseas in Germany (they had an overseas program for dependents graduating from high school over there, back then) they had just moved the campus from Augsburg to Mannheim. The barracks the campus shared with a U.S. Army transportation/logistics outfit used to be an Imperial German army barracks around the turn of the century, later got converted into a barracks and depot for a Panzer unit during WWII and also was used as one of several AA observation posts. An old concrete MG nest/AA flak tower and several observation posts disguised as bell towers could still be seen studding the roofs of the barracks buildings. Anyway, there was a permanently fenced off entrance off in a grassy corner by itself, no adjoining buildings or anything, and I was told that was one entrance that led to a massive series of tunnels and shelters beneath Mannheim. A few old timers told us that before they'd closed it off, when the waters had receded (the tunnels were now flooded) they'd gone down below to look around and found old rotting bunk rooms, radio rooms, etc. and even found underground garages with a few old rusted, parked Panzer tanks still in them. Look around enough and I think you'll find plenty of stories of lost underground shelters/tunnels and weapons caches they were still turning up in Germany decades after the war.
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"The use of force is always an answer to problems. Whether or not it's a satisfactory answer depends on a number of things, not least the personality of the person making the determination. Force isn't an attractive answer, though. I would not be true to myself or to the people I served with in 1970 if I did not make that realization clear." - David Drake |
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#8
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I know but story wise it could complicate bug outs, become a brigand fortress, or for a zombie pandemic-the buffet. Before anyone thinks we're too harsh, FEMA has never worked as planned since it's inception under Carter.
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