2014-02-22





Survivability, defined as the ability to remain alive or continue to exist, is something that we, as Preppers, are attempting to achieve not only for ourselves, but for future generations.  I find this particularly poignant because I did not have children of my own.  You might say that making an effort to preserve our society and our planet is the legacy I want to leave when my time is gone.

Quite some time ago, a Backdoor Survival reader posted some thoughtful comments on the topic of sustainability and the achievement of survivability.  His comments were far too important to be buried where no one would see them.

Luckily, “Ed” has given me permission to reproduce his thoughts below. Thank you Ed, for sharing your thoughts.

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Observations on Sustainability

O.K., I’ll go out on a limb and report my musings and observations on the Sustainability topic.  It’s a topic of some interest to me and I’ve wondered whether or not it’s actually scientifically possible for a society to achieve 100% sustainability.

As individuals/families, the pursuit of survivability naturally entails the pursuit of some degree of achieving a more “sustainable” life style.  Growing our own food, reducing our energy consumption to a bare minimum, providing for our own water supplies, learning to “live off the land”, i.e., hunting, fishing for food, learning essential medical technology and stocking up emergency medical supplies are all integral parts of achieving survivability and obliviously entail the achievement of a more sustainable lifestyle.

And frankly, my wife and I have found these to be fun pursuits and our modest achievements in this endeavor have yielded significant benefits.  For example, during a recent storm event, Hurricane Ike, the “survival” camp we created proved to be a handy refuge for our children and grand children such that they didn’t have to endure either the dangers nor the discomforts of that event.

Sustainability on a societal level, or Macro Level, if you will, is an entirely different consideration.  And, having had the advantage of living overseas in Europe, North Africa and Mexico, I can tell you that societal sustainability in the U.S. would be inordinately difficult.

There are a number of genuinely fundamental reasons for this which, I suspect, many in the U.S. simply refuse to consider and some are intentionally ignored for reasons of sheer political correctness.  I’ll enumerate a few of the problems in a comparison method to contrast the major differences I see with the U.S. and the rest of the world.

1)  Transportation Energy use: Europe and European cities are compact; U.S. cities are, with a few exceptions, sprawling affairs;  Ground transportation in Europe is easily accomplished with mass transit, trains, trolleys and buses.  Ground transportation in the U.S. is highly complex and diffuse with little in the way of resources in terms of public transportation and trains.

Distances in the U.S. are enormous in comparison to Europe meaning that in terms of personal travel between cities is best accomplished by automobile or aircraft.  In this regard, the U.S. more closely resembles Russia.

2)  Supply chain:  European supply chains are a) short and b) diffuse.  By diffuse I mean that in Europe, Italy being my preferred example, city grocers feature products grown and manufactured within 75 miles of a city such as Rome; they are processed in  Rome and distributed by everything from small trucks to motor bikes.  In the U.S., our supply chains are modeled after the hub and spoke system.  Cattle, for example, grown in the western U.S., processed in Denver, shipped as ground meat to St. Louis to a shipping facility that dispatches trucks to the Midwest, Oklahoma, and yes…Texas.

3)  Electricity: with the exception of Texas which has it’s own, discreet generation and distribution system, the rest of the U.S. is dependent upon a weird, spaghetti system which lends itself to failure on a huge scale.  A power plant shuts down in say, Denver and the lights go out in Salt Lake city.  We’ve seen this on the east coast.  In Europe, they use a small scale, small hub with short spokes system.  A power plant goes down and 1/4 of Rome goes dark……not the whole city.

I could go on and on, but the examples above point to several fundamental problems in the U.S.  1) sheer size; 2) lack of manufacturing, (I forgot to mention that in Europe they have millions of small manufacturing plants that make basics, clothes, leather goods, electronics, etc.) 3) poorly planned electrical and energy distribution systems and 4) poorly planned/not planned, cityscapes.

To put it bluntly……….the U.S. has developed in all the wrong directions to achieve sustainability……..the U.S. went in exactly the opposite direction.

Finally, I could address the societal differences between Europe and the U.S. at great length, but I think that we all recognize the biggest problem in the U.S. and we’ve acknowledged it by our actions in our attempts to achieve survivability whether we wish to talk about it or not.

To achieve survivability in the U.S. means to locate a survival base camp as far away from any major urban area as possible.  Why? Because we’ve all seen the pictures and heard the reports of what happened in New Orleans after Katrina.  For my part, my wife and I returned to NOLA just 4 days after Katrina to help relatives.  It was……a lawless free-fire kill zone. Looters emptied store shelves and then, gratuitously, set fire to the grocery stores, liquor stores and drug stores.

All that being the case, when I read stories about sustainable communities, Agenda 21 and the like, at the back of my mind lies a truth no one speaks of.  It won’t work because the U.S. is inhabited by a huge, criminal element that will take advantage of any situation to their greater gain.

My fear and concern is that the elites that drive the “agenda” of social engineering in the U.S. will intentionally overlook this problem in their drive to socially engineer sustainability and when a location incurs a disaster, natural or otherwise, the result will be a whole sale slaughter that’s far worse than the effects of whatever natural disaster might have occurred.

Thankfully, as I’m 57 years old, I won’t live long enough to see the results of their misguided efforts.  But our children and grand children will certainly be the ones to suffer, particularly if we don’t provide them with some form of remote refuge.

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Finding That Perfect Survival Camp

Although Ed and his family were able to take refuge at the “survival camp” he created far away from the city, that may not be practical or viable for everyone.  Instead, we must do what we can to create a safe “camp” of our own wherever we live.  Outfitted with enough food, water, first aid and defensive tactics, you can survive in place and not venture out to confront lawlessness and civil disobedience.  They key is to be prepared and to, as I often say, homestead in place.

The Final Word

Whether your interest in living a sustainable and self-reliant life is new, or whether you are an old hand, the motivation to survive and to live a meaningful life has got to be at the core of your efforts.  Having that motivation is over half the battle and an important to the survival mindset.

Some of the lessons we must learn and the steps we must take are not easy.  Giving up old habits and old ways is tough.  On the other hand, the rewards are great will lead to abundance of heart rather than an abundance of material objects.  The road is well paved; we just need to take it.  I am grateful to have you along as I walk my way down the path of sustainability and survivability.

Enjoy your next adventure through common sense and thoughtful preparation!

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Gaye Levy, also known as the Survival Woman, grew up and attended school in the Greater Seattle area. After spending many years as an executive in the software industry, she started a specialized accounting practice offering contract CFO work to emerging high tech and service industries. She has now abandoned city life and has moved to a serenely beautiful rural area on an island in NW Washington State. She lives and teaches the principles of a sustainable and self-reliant lifestyle through her website at BackdoorSurvival.com. At Backdoor Survival, Gaye speaks her mind and delivers her message of prepping with optimism and grace, regardless of the uncertain times and mayhem swirling around us.

The article Sustainability And The Achievement Of Survivability published by TheSleuthJournal - Real News Without Synthetics

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