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  by Mac Slavo
 September 22, 2013
 from 
			SHTFPlan Website
 
			  
			  
			  
			As you consider the threats we face and 
			the options available to you should the worst happen, you have no 
			doubt played out numerous scenarios surrounding the effects of a 
			total collapse event that would bring down the national power grid.
			   
			Be it, 
				
			 
			...the possibility is quite realistic.   
			Some have escaped major cities and 
			headed for the hills, but considering that the majority of the U.S. 
			population is
			centered in
			
			146 of the country’s 3000 counties, 
			chances are most of us will find ourselves in the middle of the 
			worst that humanity has to offer.     
			
			     
			Developing strategies that encompass 
			everything from food preparation and water harvesting, to security 
			and communications should be at the top of our lists.    
			This is where highly respected author 
			and 
			
			Survival Blog founder 
			James Rawles puts much of his focus in his most recent interview 
			with the team at alternative news hub
			
			
			SGT Report.   
			It’s an interview you don’t want to 
			miss, because that one little oversight in your preparedness plan 
			may be the mistake that kills you. 
				    
				
				Your chances of survival are  
				
				fairly low if you’re in a major metropolitan area. 
				In 
				a true grid down situation I recommend that  
				you 
				literally be prepared to hunker down for months.     
			
     
			Among 
			other critical preparedness topics James Rawles discusses the 
			effects and survival strategies for a grid down collapse in high 
			population urban centers: 
				
				For someone in an urban area who 
				plans to hunker down and doesn’t plan to bug out with country 
				cousins, one thing that should be at the top of everyone’s list 
				but that’s very much overlooked is… if you’re in a situation 
				where you have power because you have photovoltaics but your 
				neighbors don’t, you really 
				should concentrate on black-out curtains for your windows.
				   
				You need to black out your house 
				completely, without any light leaks so that your house will look 
				just as black as any other on your block.   
				Otherwise you’re going to be 
				targeted as the rich guy. You don’t want to become a 
				loot-me-beacon at night.  
				  
				That should be a fairly high 
				priority for you.   
				…   
				There’s so many things that are 
				going to go into it.    
				If we’re truly in a grid-down 
				situation you’re going to have 
				to think in terms of not just food storage, but where you can 
				collect rainwater or surface water, whether it’s a pond 
				or a creek, and how you’re going to transport that water home 
				without access to a gas engine vehicle.   
				…   
				You’re going to want to be 
				able to cook without any spices whatsoever… From an efficiency 
				standpoint… you’re going to want to use a special insulated 
				cooker…    
				It’s essentially like 
				crock-pot cooking where you bring your water to a boil, add your 
				rice, meat, vegetables, whatever… and you’re going to enclose it 
				in a double-insulated container. 
				With that 
				cooking method you have a couple of advantages. 
				   
				
				One is you don’t have cooking odors escaping and 
				the other is you have the absolute minimum energy input.   
				That’s 
				just one example of the work-around that you can use in 
				an urban or suburban environment if you literally can’t trust 
				your ravenous neighbors.   
				…   
				For 
				someone who has to hunker down you’re going to have think 
				through each of those situations, whether it’s sanitation, 
				cooking, home security, communications… the whole works. You’re 
				going to have to think through each of those.   
				Unfortunately, in an urban 
				environment, you can do everything right but if you’re neighbors 
				can’t adapt you’re going to end up just as dead, because… the 
				sanitation situation is going to be horrendous. And, if people 
				are going door-to-door kicking in the front doors of houses, 
				eventually they’re going to get to your house. If it’s that bad, 
				if it’s a total worst case your chances are not that good 
				hunkering down in place.   
				You may beat the odds, but I would 
				rather be somewhere else, frankly.   
				…   
				[Living in the city] You’re in the 
				same situation as probably 30% or 40% of my readership, so don’t 
				feel like you’re alone.    
				There are a lot of people that would 
				love to relocate, but either for financial reasons, or family 
				obligations, or work obligations, or health considerations… 
				you’re not alone.   
				…   
				A 
				level of planning that you’ll have to make is definitely a step 
				up than your average suburbanite. You’re going to have to think 
				everything through. You’re going to have to shepherd your funds, 
				and prioritize your purchasing and your training with 
				exactitude.   
				All 
				it takes is one overlooked area and you’re another statistic. 
			We strongly encourage you to listen to 
			James Rawles’ interview with SGT Report in full. It has tons of 
			ideas, tips and situations that any serious prepper needs to 
			consider - not tomorrow, today.   
			There are a variety of excellent 
			resources available to help you insulate yourself for a long-term 
			disaster scenario no matter where you find yourself when it goes 
			down, starting with Rawles’ preparedness guidelines outlined in
			
			How to Survive the End of the World as We Know 
			It where he details tactics, techniques, and technologies 
			for uncertain times.   
			We encourage you to forward this to 
			friends and family who may not be as convinced as you are about the 
			possibility of an emergency that wipes out our electric grid.   
			The fact is, the
			
			U.S. government has been preparing 
			for exactly such a scenario, and they’ll be launching nationwide 
			simulations later this year. They’ve been stockpiling 
			food, water treatment supplies, firearms, ammunition, and training 
			personnel to deal with the aftermath.   
			If you’re not doing the same thing, then 
			you haven’t been paying attention - or you’ve chosen to stick your 
			hand in the sand and pretend that it’s not really happening. 
			  
			  
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