The situations in which survival skills become desirable or even necessary cover a wide range of possibilities.
For example, if you are in what is euphemistically referred to as the "Golden Years," and your own government decides to manipulate interest rates to the point that the fixed income you rely on to survive falls into negative territory, survival skills will quickly come in handy, but survival skills of a different sort than, say, those required to stay afloat in a failed economy such as Zimbabwe. On that front, we'll hear from a Zimbabwean a bit further on.
Taking things to an entirely different level, there are the extreme frontiers of a complete breakdown of civil society, such as is recounted in Words from a Bosnian Survivalist reprinted later.
Simply, in the case of the oldster, surviving will likely include some or all components of the following:
- Cutting back on non-essential spending.
- Moving earning assets out a bit further on the risk scale (for example, by selling CDs and putting funds into high-quality dividend stocks).
- Taking a job, almost no matter how menial, to provide some small offset against the daily cost of living.
- Going hat in hand to a well-off relative.
- Taking out a reverse mortgage (but only after having done your homework, of course).
- Using spare time to learn useful new skills, starting with how to be a better investor. But also, perhaps, how to produce a marketable craft or repair household appliances – anything useful.
By contrast, as you'll read shortly, a person caught in the middle of an apocalyptic fight against determined foes in Sarajevo will be better served with skills such as:
- Traveling quietly at night.
- Having a winning personality and/or a big family so you'll have people available to help you fight off intruders.
- A willingness to eat rats, or pretty much anything else that offers a modicum of nutritional value.
- A basic understanding of how to treat various types of wounds and illnesses.
As with so many aspects of our human existence, however, there are nuances to this topic.
For example, anticipating when survival skills may be necessary. If, as is the case with so many people currently living in the civilized, developed countries, you have grown up in a period of almost unbroken economic prosperity, it is only natural that you will not anticipate the need to develop the skills required to survive in a collapsing economy.
And while the United States has been at the center of pretty much every shooting war of any consequence since the end of WWII, these wars have all taken place in someone else's back yard. Thus, for an American, the pressure to learn the skills necessary to cope with physical threats from an opposing force is nonexistent.
As a result, the biggest blowback from 9/11 has been the country's panicked and mind-numbingly expensive and destructive scramble to defend itself against the bogeymen who are determined to bring the forever war to US shores.
The Israelis, on the other hand, know to the level of DNA that they live in a dangerous neighborhood and have developed all the necessary skills to keep the barbarians off the gates. That these skills involve dirty deeds done right is beside the point. The first rule of surviving is to survive. Being sensitive to the damage done to those you feel are a threat ranks somewhere pretty much right at the bottom of the list.
Likewise, if you came to believe that running around a foreign country playingcowboys and native indigenous first nations' peoples with real bullets would be a good use of your talents and so signed up for duty in Afghanistan, you would certainly pay close attention during boot camp. For the simple reason that you would anticipate needing the prerequisite survival skills being taught in the near future.
In contrast, if you were to believe the politicians and their cronies on Wall Street (or is it the other way around, I can never keep that straight) and come to believe that the economy is on the mend and will only be enhanced by the current flood of funny money, then you will be steadfastly unprepared for the coming inflation that will decimate your net worth… then decimate it again, year after year.
Fortunately, there is a system that professionals in the survival business have developed and refined that can help you anticipate levels of risk and adopt the correct level of preparedness. I have written about that system in the past, but as it was some time ago and is appropriate to today's musings, I'll mention it again.
The Cooper Color System
While the government, in its usual fashion, has bastardized Cooper's Color System to the point where it is now largely a laughingstock – you know, the "Alert Level Yellow" signs in airports – the idea of the original system, developed by ex-Marine and pistol fighting expert Jeff Cooper is very sound.
The color codes developed by Cooper were designed to assign an appropriate assessment to the level of risk inherent in any given situation and, more importantly, to trigger a level of mental preparedness to handle the risk.
The basic levels are:
White – no risk. For a pistolero, this would be akin to having a gun with no chamber loaded, no magazine, and the safety on. In other words, you assess that there is no risk whatsoever. In the event that you were mistaken, therefore, you would be the proverbial sitting duck.
In terms of economic threats, this is the state most people in the developed world are in.
Yellow – relaxed alert. While you sense no specific threat, you might be out of your house in an urban mall or a strange part of town. Generally, this state of mind reflects the basic truth that the world can be dangerous, so you keep your eyes open and remain prepared to act if necessary. In other words, unlike White, you are mentally alert to the potential of needing to take action if a threat suddenly arises.
In terms of economic threats, an equivalent might be deciding to have 10% of your portfolio in gold – "just in case."
Orange – specific alert. In this condition, you recognize that something is wrong and that you are facing a specific threat. Using the pistol analogy, in this condition you would chamber a bullet, though still keep the safety on. As mentioned above, though, the most important aspect of Cooper's system is that the alert status is meant to trigger in the individual a mindset that is appropriate to the threat. In the Orange alert status, the mindset you might adopt is, "If that person does 'X', I will need to stop them," and be fully prepared to do just that.
From an economic-survival perspective, you might adopt the Orange alert level based on observing the actions of the Fed and the government over the past few years. For example, by saying, "If the Fed adopts open-ended quantitative easing and the politicians make no serious attempt to reduce the deficit, then I'm going to buy gold and gold shares on dips until they make up 30% of my portfolio. Furthermore, I'm going to begin trading my fiat currencies for other tangible assets, including property, spread throughout a number of jurisdictions."
Likewise, viewing things from the perspective of a person who values personal liberties, you might shift to Orange status when the government approves using drones for domestic police actions and mentally prepare yourself by saying something like, "The first time an American is killed on domestic soil by a drone, I'm getting the hell out of here."
Of course, you'll have to define what constitutes your own line in the sand – my point here is that if you don't take the time to think this stuff through, you are far more likely to be caught by surprise.
Red – fight. In this case, you have a bullet in the chamber, the hammer is cocked and your safety is off. Your mindset at this point is that the condition for taking the next action in the Orange level has been met, and your next move is to take out the threat.
From an economic perspective, your equivalent action would be to take the steps you mentally prepared to take above, or others that are more appropriate to your circumstances.
From a personal-liberty perspective, the options are fairly narrow. In my view, moving to less threatening environs is pretty much the only rational choice, if you can manage it.
Be Prepared
As I have tried to demonstrate, Cooper's Color System can be adapted for a wide range of circumstances where threats may arise... including those involving personal safety, economic security and threats to your individual liberty.
In terms of the biggest threats I see at this point, there are two.
- The failure of the global fiat monetary system – alert status Orange with tinges of Red. Monetary scholar Edwin Vieira has studied the life cycle of monetary systems and found that, on average, they collapse after about 27 years. Nixon's closing of the gold window, which set the dollar completely adrift from an underpinning tangible value, occurred in 1971 – so the current dollar-based global fiat system is now about 41 years old, pretty much at the extreme end of the range. All the signs that the endgame is near are now evident, with the world's central banks united in adopting massive money printing and engaged in what is essentially a currency war.
Confirming me in my opinion is that, according to a just-released report by the World Gold Council, central banks are now purchasing much more gold than the gold ETFs. The central bankers see what's coming and are preparing for it.
What would cause me to shift my assessment to Red? When US interest rates begin to rise uncontrollably, and the government begins to take increasingly draconian measures to buffer itself from collapsing under its massive debts and unfunded obligations.
The chart shown just below, snagged from the just-released edition of The Casey Report, shows the clear downtrend in US bonds and gives rise to the potential that the long bull market in bonds may be coming to an end.
(Click on image to enlarge)
The question of interest rates is, of course, of monumental importance. Once the government's monetary machinations and manipulations lose their effectiveness, it's game over for the bond bubble.
As far as taking action to survive the collapse of the bond bubble, and with it the fiat monetary system, the single most up-to-date and useful way to understand the situation is found in the current edition of The Casey Report, released this morning.
In addition to the technical work done by Dominick Graziano in identifying the trigger points to watch so you'll know that the bubble is burst, Casey Research Chief Economist Bud Conrad goes all out with a slew of proprietary charts and data to help you understand when and how the end to the government's manipulation of rates will come about, and the consequences thereof.
The edition is topped off with "Decline and Fall" by Doug Casey, in which he talks about the fundamental roots of the Greater Depression now gripping the world.
It is, I believe, one of the best editions of The Casey Report in months (which issaying something). But don't take my word for it. Sign up for a three-month trial today, download the current edition right away, take three months to decide whether the publication is right for you, and if it isn't, simply cancel by email for a full refund.
You literally have nothing to lose, but much to gain in terms of understanding today's mega-trends and how to profit. Details here, but only if you make the effort to click this link.
- A transition in the United States to a police state – alert status Orange. In my view, the country is one or maybe two headline-grabbing incidents away from completing the transition from a country where individual liberty is sacrosanct to where it is granted entirely at the leisure of the state. Yes, you may fly, but only if your papers are in order and you haven't tripped an algorithm from some secret agency. Sure, you can buy a gun, but only if you pay a big tax, pay for special training, have a clean criminal record (no DUIs allowed) and pass a government exam that assesses your mental health.
What would cause me to upgrade my alert status to Red? The next 9/11. Since the World Trade Center went down, the US government has spent an incredible amount of resources developing and distributing expensive hammers (drones, surveillance systems, high-tech weaponry, body armor, laser weapons, etc.) for every institution from the military right down to the local constabulary. All that's missing now is the right nail.
Importantly, as was seen this week, the odds of the next attack coming from a US military veteran are high. Which means when the hammers start to come down, they will be coming down on home turf.
Summing up, it behooves us all to do our own personal threat assessment. For example, do you live in or near a big city that might experience problems should the government's ability to continue redistributionist policies be hindered?
As one hard-ass ex-military type recently reminded me, one of the key tenets of personal security involves physical distance from the threat. Even if you don't decide to move away from the city, you should at least go through the mental exercise of determining, in advance, what would trigger a move and then be fully prepared to act should that trigger be tripped.
Likewise, you need to develop financial strategies, held in reserve, should the moral and fiscal debasement in Washington DC (and other world capitals) continue unchecked. Personally, I am already at the Orange alert level, which is no small part of the reason why I am writing you looking out the window on the street of a happy little town in Northwest Argentina, not just far from the maddened crowd but incredibly successful thanks to the steady influx of tourists and the booming wine business.
(Speaking of which, the annual Harvest Celebration is close to selling out. If you're interested in escaping the Northern Hemisphere winter and joining in on the festivities, March 14-19, drop Dave Norden a note at dnorden@LaEst.com and he'll rush you out all the info.)
While we all hope that things will turn out for the best, and they very well might, I suspect that, like me, most of you sense that something is fundamentally wrong in the world today.
Trying to ignore the risks, effectively keeping your alert level at "White," leaves you woefully unprepared. Now is the time to think this stuff through, while you still can do so calmly.
Now, moving on, I want to share with you stories from two individuals faced with severe disruptions in the norm – one from old friend Roger S. from Zimbabwe, who reports on the current state of things there and the other from an individual who survived the war in Sarajevo.
Update from Inside Zimbabwe
By Roger S.
It's been just about four years since Zimbabwe's coalition "inclusive" government was formed and hyperinflation was stopped in its tracks with the abandonment of the Zimbabwe dollar and the adoption of a "multi-currency regime," effectively the US dollar.
But although hyperinflation can be stopped abruptly in this way, it takes much longer to fix the economy. In the 2011 Human Development Report, Zimbabwe was ranked 173 out of 187 countries; Foreign Policy magazine placed Zimbabwe sixth in the 2011 Failed State Index; the country was #132 out of 142 countries in the World Economic Forum's Global Competitiveness Index 2011/12, and in the World Bank/IFC Doing Business Report 2012, Zimbabwe was ranked 171 out of 183 countries.
Most manufacturing industries ground to a halt during the years of hyperinflation and irrational price controls, and now that there is no exchange control, it is much easier for retailers to import finished goods from neighboring South Africa than to wait for industry to start up again.
In fact, few industries are in a position to do so, as their machinery and equipment are in need of upgrading or replacement, they have lost skilled and experienced staff to the diaspora, and they have lost their markets. Trade figures for 2011 suggest that the manufacturing sector imported more than five times as much as it exported.
But the absence of exchange controls since dollarization has enabled those with money to move it around. And 90-day term deposits on the money market can earn at least 7%, with up to 11% apparently available for longer-term investments.
The political situation is such that, although the environment is not as unstable as it was a few years ago, there is not a great deal of confidence in the future at the moment. Parliamentary and presidential elections are due to be held later in the year, but it still seems unclear whether they will produce a conclusive result.
But Zimbabweans have gotten used to living in a kind of limbo and "making a plan" for whatever might come next. We always expect that "next year will be better"!
David again. Roger and his wife Cheryll remained in Zimbabwe throughout the entire Mugabe regime, a despised minority in an economy where inflation was measured in the millions of percentage points. His demeanor is quiet and unassuming, go along to get along, and despite all the travails, he always remained an optimist even after being tossed in jail twice for pushing back against a corrupt government official.
However he managed, he did indeed manage. But I suspect his survival skills in a collapsing economy would have been sorely tested in the next scenario, that of the collapse of civil society.
Words from a Bosnian Survivalist
Translator's note: This tale had originally been recorded in French and then translated by two Russian survivalists who met the man. The Bosnian is anonymous for reasons which will soon be made clear from reading the articles. –MicroBalrog
I am from Bosnia. You know, between 1992 and 1995, it was hell. For one year I lived, and survived, in a city with 6,000 people, without water, electricity, gasoline, medical help, civil defense, distribution service, any kind of traditional service or centralized rule.
Our city was blockaded by the army, and for one year life in the city turned into total crap. We had no army, no police, we only had armed groups – those armed protected their homes and families.
When it all started, some of us were better prepared, but most of the neighbors' families had enough food only for a few days. Some had pistols, a few had AK-47s or shotguns.
After a month or two, gangs started operating, destroying everything. Hospitals, for example, turned into slaughterhouses. There was no more police. About 80% of the hospital staff were gone. I got lucky – my family at the time was fairly large (15 people in a large house, 6 pistols, 3 AKs), and we survived (most of us, at least).
The Americans dropped MREs every 10 days, to help blockaded cities. This was never enough. Some – very few – had gardens. It took 3 months for the first rumors to spread of men dying from hunger and cold. We removed all the doors, the window frames from abandoned houses, ripped up the floors and burned the furniture for heat. Many died from diseases, especially from the water (two from my own family). We drank mostly rainwater, ate pigeons and even rats.
Money soon became worthless. We returned to an exchange. For a tin can oftushonka, you could have a woman (it is hard to speak of it, but it is true). Most of the women who sold themselves were desperate mothers.
Arms, ammunition, candles, lighters, antibiotics, gasoline, batteries and food. We fought for these things like animals. In these situations, it all changes. Men become monsters. It was disgusting.
Strength was in numbers. A man living alone getting killed and robbed would be just a matter of time, even if he was armed.
Today me and my family are well prepared, I am well armed. I have experience.
It does not matter what will happen – an earthquake, a war, a tsunami, aliens, terrorists, economic collapse, uprising. The important part is that something will happen.
Here's my experience: you can't make it on your own. Don't stay apart from your family, prepare together, choose reliable friends.
1. How to move safely in a city
The city was divided into communities along streets. Our street (15-20 homes) had patrols (5 armed men every week) to watch for gangs and for our enemies.
All the exchanges occurred in the street. About five kilometers away was an entire street for trading, all well organized, but going there was too dangerous because of the snipers. You could also get robbed by bandits. I only went there twice, when I needed something really rare (list of medicine, mainly antibiotics, of French origin).
Nobody used automobiles in the city: the streets were blocked by wreckage and by abandoned cars. Gasoline was very expensive. If one needed to go somewhere, thatwas done at night. Never travel alone or in groups that were too big – always 2-3 men. All armed, travel swift, in the shadows, cross streets through ruins, not along open streets.
There were many gangs 10-15 men strong, some as large as 50 men. But there were also many normal men, like you and me, fathers and grandfathers, who killed and robbed. There were no "good" and "bad" men. Most were in the middle and ready for the worst.
2. What about wood? Your home city is surrounded by woods, why did you burn doors and furniture?
There were not that many woods around the city. It was very beautiful – restaurants, cinemas, schools, even an airport. Every tree in the city and in the city park was cut down for fuel in the first two months.
Without electricity for cooking and heat – we burned anything that burned. Furniture, doors, flooring – that wood burns swiftly. We had no suburbs or suburban farms. The enemy was in the suburbs. We were surrounded. Even in the city, you never knew who was the enemy at any given point.
3. What knowledge was useful to you in that period?
To imagine the situation a bit better, you should know it was practically a return to the Stone Age.
For example, I had a container of cooking gas. But I did not use it for heat – that would be too expensive! I attached a nozzle to it I made myself and used to fill lighters. Lighters were precious.
If a man brought an empty lighter, I would fill it and he would give me a tin of food or a candle.
I was a paramedic. In these conditions, my knowledge was my wealth. Be curious and skilled. In these conditions, the ability to fix things is more valuable than gold.
Items and supplies will inevitably run out, but your skills will keep you fed.
I wish to say this: learn to fix things, shoes, or people.
My neighbor, for example, knew how to make kerosene for lamps. He never went hungry.
4. If you had 3 months to prepare now, what would you do?
Three months? Run away from the country? (joking)
Today I know everything can collapse really fast. I have a stockpile of food, hygiene items, batteries… enough to last me for 6 months.
I live in a very secure flat and own a home with a shelter in a village 5 kilometers away. Another six-month supply there too. That's a small village, most people there are well prepared. The war had taught them.
I have four weapons, and 2,000 rounds for each.
I have a garden and have learned gardening. Also I have a good instinct – you know, when everyone around you keeps telling you it'll all be fine, but I know – it will all collapse.
I have strength to do what I need to protect my family. Because when it all collapses, you must be ready to do "bad" things to keep your children alive and protect your family.
Surviving on your own is practically impossible. Even if you're armed and ready – if you're alone, you'll die. I have seen that happen many times.
Families and groups, well prepared, with skills and knowledge in various fields – that's much better.
5. What should you stockpile?
That depends. If you plan to live by theft – all you need is weapons and ammo. Lots of ammo.
If not – more food, hygiene items, batteries, accumulators, little trading items (knives, lighters, flints, soap). Also alcohol of a type that keeps well. The cheapest whiskey is a good trading item.
Many people died from insufficient hygiene. You'll need simple items in great amounts. For example, garbage bags. Lots of them. And toilet paper. Non-reusable dishes and cups – you'll need lots of them. I know that because we didn't have any at all.
As for me, a supply of hygiene items is perhaps more important than food. You can shoot a pigeon, you can find a plant to eat. You can't find or shoot any disinfectant.
Disinfectant, detergents, bleach, soap, gloves, masks…
First-aid skills, washing wounds and burns. Perhaps you will find a doctor – and will not be able to pay him.
Learn to use antibiotics. It's good to have a stockpile of them.
You should choose the simplest weapons. I carry a Glock .45, I like it, but it's a rare gun here – so I have two TT pistols too (everyone has them and ammo is common).
I don't like Kalashnikovs, but again, same story – everyone has them, so do I.
You must own small, unnoticeable items. For example: a generator is good, but 1,000Bic lighters are better. A generator will attract attention if there's any trouble, but 1,000 lighters are compact, cheap, and can always be traded.
We usually collected rainwater into 4 large barrels and then boiled it. There was a small river, but the water in it became very dirty very fast.
It's also important to have containers for water – barrels and buckets.
6. Were gold and silver useful?
Yes. I personally traded all the gold in the house for ammunition.
Sometimes we got our hands on money – dollars and deutschmarks. We bought some things for them, but this was rare and prices were astronomical – for example a can of beans cost $30-40. The local money quickly became worthless. Everything we needed, we traded for through barter.
7. Was salt expensive?
Yes, but coffee and cigarettes were even more expensive. I had lots of alcohol and traded it without problems. Alcohol consumption grew over 10 times as compared to peacetime. Perhaps today it's more useful to keep a stock of cigarettes, lighters, and batteries. They take up less space.
At this time I was not a survivalist. We had no time to prepare – several days before the shit hit the fan, the politicians kept repeating over the TV that everything was going according to plan, there's no reason to be concerned. When the sky fell on our heads, we took what we could.
8. Was it difficult to purchase firearms? What did you trade for arms and ammunition?
After the war, we had guns in every house. The police confiscated lots of guns at the beginning of the war. But most of them, we hid. Now I have one legal gun that I have a license for. Under the law, that's called a temporary collection. If there is unrest, the government will seize all the registered guns. Never forget that.
You know, there are many people who have one legal gun – but also illegal guns if that one gets seized. If you have good trade goods, you might be able to get a gun in a tough situation, but remember, the most difficult time is the first days, and perhaps you won't have enough time to find a weapon to protect your family. To be disarmed in a time of chaos and panic is a bad idea.
In my case – there was a man who needed a car battery for his radio, he had shotguns – I traded the accumulator for both of them. Sometimes I traded ammunition for food, and a few weeks later traded food for ammunition. Never did the trade at home, never in great amounts.
Few people knew how much, and what, I keep at home.
The most important thing is to keep as many things as possible in terms of space and money. Eventually you'll understand what is more valuable.
Correction: I'll always value weapons and ammunition the most. Second? Maybe gas masks and filters.
9. What about security?
Our defenses were very primitive. Again, we weren't ready, and we used what we could. The windows were shattered, and the roofs in a horrible state after the bombings. The windows were blocked – some with sandbags, others with rocks.
I blocked the fence gate with wreckage and garbage, and used a ladder to get across the wall. When I came home, I asked someone inside to pass over the ladder. We had a fellow on our street that completely barricaded himself in his house. He broke a hole in the wall, creating a passage for himself into the ruins of the neighbor's house. A sort of secret entrance.
Maybe this would seem strange, but the most protected houses were looted and destroyed first. In my area of the city there were beautiful houses, with walls, dogs, alarms and barred windows. People attacked them first. Some held out, others didn't – it all depended how many hands and guns they had inside…
I think defense is very important – but it must be carried out unobtrusively. If you are in a city and SHTF comes, you need a simple, non-flashy place, with lots of guns and ammo.
How much ammo? As much as possible.
Make your house as unattractive as you can.
Right now I own a steel door, but that's just against the first wave of chaos. After that passes, I will leave the city to rejoin a larger group of people, my friends and family.
There were some situations during the war… there's no need for details, but we always had superior firepower, and a brick wall, on our side.
We also constantly kept someone watching the streets. Quality organization is paramount in case of gang attacks.
Shooting was constantly heard in the city.
Our perimeter was defended primitively – all the exits were barricaded and had little firing slits. Inside we had at least five family members ready for battle at any time, and one man in the street, hidden in a shelter.
We stayed home through the day to avoid sniper fire.
At first, the weak perish. Then the rest fight.
During the day, the streets were practically empty due to sniper fire. Defenses were oriented towards short-range combat alone. Many died if they went out to gather information, for example. It's important to remember we had no information, no radio, no TV – only rumors and nothing else.
There was no organized army, every man fought. We had no choice. Everybody was armed, ready to defend themselves.
You should not wear quality items in the city – someone will murder you and take them. Don't even carry a "pretty" long arm, it will attract attention.
Let me tell you something: if SHTF starts tomorrow, I'll be humble. I'll look like everyone else. Desperate, fearful. Maybe I'll even shout and cry a little bit.
Pretty clothing is excluded altogether. I will not go out in my new tactical outfit to shout: "I have come! You're doomed, bad guys!" No, I'll stay aside, well armed, well prepared, waiting and evaluating my possibilities, with my best friend or brother.
Super-defenses, super-guns are meaningless. If people think they should steal your things, that you're profitable – they will. It's only a question of time and the amount of guns and hands.
10. How was the situation with toilets?
We used shovels and a patch of earth near the house. Does it seem dirty? It was. We washed with rainwater or in the river – but most of the time the latter was too dangerous. We had no toilet paper, and if we had any, I would have traded it away.
It was a "dirty" business.
Let me give you a piece of advice: you need guns and ammo first – and second, everything else. Literally EVERYTHING! All depends on the space and money you have.
If you forget something, there'll always be someone to trade with for it – but if you forget weapons and ammo, there will be no access to trading for you.
I don't think big families are extra mouths. Big families means both more guns and strength – and from there, everyone prepares on his own.
11. How did people treat the sick and the injured?
Most injuries were from gunfire. Without a specialist and without equipment, if an injured man found a doctor somewhere, he had about a 30% chance of survival.
It ain't the movies. People died. Many died from infections of superficial wounds. I had antibiotics for 3-4 uses – for the family, of course.
People died foolishly quite often. Simple diarrhea will kill you in a few days without medicine, with limited amounts of water.
There were many skin diseases and food poisonings… nothing to it.
Many used local plants and pure alcohol – enough for the short term, but useless in the long term.
Hygiene is very important… as well as having as much medicine as possible. Especially antibiotics.
David again. For the record, I included that article not because I think things are going to get anywhere near as dire in the West, but rather because I thought you'd find it interesting, too.
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Replies
Interesting. I remember years ago hearing/reading Prabhupada say something along the lines of how this society, as we know it, has another 50 years at most. Does anyone have the exact quote? It's one of those things that's been in the back of my mind for all these years, but I don't know the exact context of the statement. Please, if anyone knows, I would greatly appreciate if you would post it.
I also recall his saying for example that Denver will not be here in such and such a length of time, but am havingt trouble finding the quotes...it was huge news for us at the time and spread throughout the Movement. Editor.
Here is some relevant material but no directly the quote you wanted to see...
Prabhupada: So it is a civilization of dog race. The man does not know, "By riding on a car, racing, is there any value if I do not know what is the meaning of my life?" Hmm? So this is going on. Big, big road for dog racing -- that is civilization. [break] The rascal yogis, they say that "By this transcendental meditation you will keep your dog race very nice." They are attracted, "Oh, very nice. It is very nice." That's all. Mudha nabhijanati mam ebhyah param avyayam. All mu..., rascals. Only hope is that you distribute books, as much as possible, whole Europe, whole America. If they come to some day, they will realize what is this value. [break] ...day they will realize that what valuable books we have left for the study of the whole world. That will come. [break] ...London city there is a big hall for dog race, you know that? Many people are coming to see the dog race. You have been in London?
Brahmatirtha: No, but I know that... Yeah, I was in London, but I didn't see the dog race, but they have that in America also.
Brahmananda: In this country they have also.
Brahmatirtha: In Florida it's very popular.
Kurusrestha: Denver it's very popular.
Prabhupada: For dog race? (laughter)
Kurusrestha: We've gone there for distributing books before.
Prabhupada: Anyway... And Australia also, Sydney, oh, they are very fond of dog race. Every man is coming with big big, dog for racing purpose.
Satsvarupa: It's good gambling.
Prabhupada: And Europe, the most aristocratic person means he is keeping so many horses and so many dogs. That is aristocracy. They will ride on the horse, and taking their dogs, they will go to the forest and kill some innocent birds. That is their heroic activities. We went to see one palace in France.
Satsvarupa: Yes, I remember. In the hall they had all pictures of those activities.
Prabhupada: Yes.
Satsvarupa: Killing birds and fox.
Prabhupada: That is aristocracy. [break] ...cannon, there was fight? Or this man is very famous hero? There was statue of Napoleon also in Paris. And they identify Napoleon and France, the same. But France is there; there is no Napoleon. (laughter) Napoleon finished, Hitler finished, Gandhi finished. [break]
Brahmananda: That statue where Napoleon is, formerly there was another statue there of Louis XIV. So Napoleon, he pulled down that other statue and put his statue there.
Prabhupada: And somebody will come... Just like in Karachi they have pulled down Gandhi's statue, and I do not know what statue they placed. [break]
Kurusrestha: ...worship these statues by the stool of crows. They worship these statues by the stool of crows.
Prabhupada: (chuckles) Yes. No, if you want to worship, then worship as we do. We have Krsna's Deity worshiping. But what is this, keep a statue on open place and the crows pass stool on the head? (laughter) What is this respectful? In the Vedic civilization does not required. They worship deity but not like that, exposed to the crows for passing stool. That is idolism, and this is good.
Brahmananda: The Christians do this. They have Jesus Christ outside,...
Prabhupada: In the open.
Brahmananda: ...exposed. And they accuse us of idol worship.
Prabhupada: Chant Hare Krsna. Very dangerous place. Padam padam yad vipadam [SB 10.14.58]. This is a place -- in every step there is danger. We are walking in a very nice park. At any moment there may be revolution, whole thing is changed. Whole thing is, becomes fire. Just like, in India now it has become. So we should remember that here in this material world, padam padam yad vipadam, every step there is danger. Give up this place. That is the real intelligence. And the education misleading them, maya-sukhaya, making gorgeous plans for temporary happiness. That's all. If in the slaughterhouse the animals are kept very comfortably, so what is the meaning of it?
Brahmananda: They'll still be slaughtered.
Prabhupada: Eh? What is the meaning?
Satsvarupa: No meaning.
Prabhupada: It is sure that all the animals will be slaughtered, and if the arrangement is "All right, before being slaughtered, let them live very comfortably," is that very good intelligence? The intelligence is "Why we shall be slaughtered?" That is intelligence. What is the meaning of slaughterhouse? Who can explain?
Brahmananda: Everyone dies there.
Prabhupada: No, no. Dies there... A slaughterhouse, what is the meaning of this particular word?
Devotee (2): They're killed brutally.
Harikesa: A specific place where all the animals are killed.
Prabhupada: Yes. All of a sudden many animals are killed at once. So this is also slaughterhouse. When there is need, many animals will be brought into war and killed. It is slaughterhouse. And the foolish animals, they are thinking, "We are now very comfortably situated." He forgets that "I am going to be slaughtered." Mrtyu-samsara-sagarat, the ocean of slaughterhouse. In the Bhagavad-gita it is said, mrtyu-samsara-sagarat. A slaughterhouse, being accepted as... It is called mrtyu-loka. Mrtyu-loka. So still, they are taking it as very comfortable place. This is their intelligence: a slaughterhouse is being accepted as very nice place. What is the answer of these animals who are going to be slaughtered?
Devotee (3): Animals don't have an answer.
Kasirama: Just a few days ago there was a plane crash and many people died, but they were sitting very comfortably in their chairs thinking, "It is so nice," but then it was all over, finished. And in the airport I was distributing books, and I was telling them, "You could die at any moment," but they still are thinking, "I am going to enjoy." They are not caring.
Prabhupada: Where this air crash took place?
Kasirama: In New York. And it landed on the freeway.
Satsvarupa: A lightening bolt hit the plane.
Prabhupada: Lighting...?
Harikesa: Thunderbolt.
Prabhupada: Oh. Just see, slaughterhouse.
Satsvarupa: You said in your lecture the other day in Los Angeles that when that happens that many people are killed in one place, it means that it's arranged by the Supreme. Just like Kuruksetra.
Prabhupada: Yes. That is stated by Krsna, that "You are thinking very patriotically that you will not kill. But it is already settled. They must be killed here. I have brought them. You kill or not kill, they will be killed. That is My plan. If you want, you take credit that you have killed." This is same arrangement. It is prearranged. War means it is bringing all the animals together and kill them, finish. And that is happening every few years after years. The Napoleon is coming for killing, and Hitler is coming for killing. Sometimes Nelson is coming for killing. But here in India the God comes for killing. Lord Ramacandra came for killing the Ravanas and Krsna came for killing the Kauravas.
Satsvarupa: Sometimes in those mass killings pious men are killed also. At Kuruksetra many pious men were killed?
Prabhupada: Well, when there is killing, it is not that the pious men... But mostly they were saved. The Pandavas were saved. The five brothers, they remained. Now the moon is sour. Grapes are sour? (laughter) The jackal jumped over to catch some grapes, and when he fell, "Eh, what is the use of grapes? It is sour." The jackal said. So this is... Now they say there is, that is not good for him. "Let us go to Venus. (laughter) Moon is sour." And why you spent so much money? [break] ...stone man has come. That is the museum.
Brahmananda: Stone?
Prabhupada: How from stone...
Kurusrestha: Anthropologists.
Prabhupada: Modern stone does not produce. They have become modernized? (laughter) [break]
Kurusrestha: In Dvaraka, when Krsna was here, they would have such parks?
Prabhupada: Oh, yes.
Kurusrestha: Nice walkways?
Prabhupada: Mmm. Better than this.
Kurusrestha: Mangoes growing?
Prabhupada: Oh yes. In a time the swan gives birth, dozen children, and there is no overpopulation. And men are killing so many children, and still, they say overpopulation? Why overpopulation? In the animal society, bird society, they do not say it is overpopulated, neither they kill. Rather, those who are bird eaters, they will be glad, overpopulation. "We shall be able to eat them." You see. How many there are?
Brahmananda: Nine.
Prabhupada: The mother is not concerned how to feed them. [break] ...safe under the protection... They are learning from the mother how to pick up food. (end)
“A Godless Civilization Cannot Be Happy in any Stage”
Srila Prabhupada continues: So our human civilization is going to be like
that. The other day I was reading in your -- what is it called? -- World
Almanac. In the next hundred years people will live underground like rats.
So our scientific advancement has created this atomic bomb to kill
man, and it will be used. And we have to go underground to become again
rat.
From tiger, again rat. That is going to be. That is nature's law. Daivi hy esa
gunamayi mama maya duratyaya [Bg. 7.14]. If you defy the laws of your
state and you are put into difficulty, similarly if you continue to defy the
authority, the supremacy of the Supreme Lord, Personality of Godhead, then
the same result: again you become rat.
As soon as there is [the detonation of an] atomic bomb, everything--all
civilization on the surface of the globe--will be finished. So people may not
like it. It may be very unpalatable, but the fact is like that. Satyam bruyat
priyam bruyat ma bruyat satyam abruyat. It is a social convention that
if you want to speak truth, you speak the truth very palatably,
flattering. Don't speak unpalatable truth. But we are not meant for
that purpose, social convention. We are preacher, we are servant of
God. We must speak the real truth. You may like it or may not like it,
that a godless civilization cannot be happy in any stage. That is a
fact. Therefore we have started this Krishna consciousness movement to
awaken this godless civilization; that you try to love God.”
Megtekintések: 10
Részvény
The Trigger has been pulled, the Crash has begun. How are things going to play out? My take…
We have obviously crossed the threshold folks, things are falling apart by the day and the game of Kick the Can has at long last gone as far as it can. The rest of the World no longer has a choice, the United States is no longer the big bully on the playground who won WWII and their fingers are no longer so firmly around the throat of the planet. The long lunatic nightmare of Bernanke monetary ponzi schemes cannot continue.
It will be interesting to see what their plan is to try and switch the U.S. (and possibly the World) to a new currency system. My take?
There will be an immediate bank holiday across the board, stopping all transactions of any kind in all avenues of banking and stock markets
. This will likely happen on a Friday afternoon, and there will be no warning. A temporary state of martial law will be instituted, in which people are told to basically stay at home as though they are taking a sudden ‘cheap holiday’ and things like trucking of supplies of normal groceries and the like will be the only thing still going on under strict military rules, keeping all emergency supplies of diesel available to those lines of credit used for that infrastructure. Military escorts of supply convoys will be the only thing moving on U.S. highways for perhaps several weeks until they restart the engine under the new rules. Police in all cities will be given total freedom to ‘shoot first, ask questions later’ for any deviation from total movement restriction of citizens. Examples will be made, and the media will carpet bomb the public with this message.
The U.S. will lock down the dollar (both digital and paper) to a complicated SDR basket of currencies around the World, the Canadian dollar will figure heavily in this. This will obviously include devaluation across the board of many world currencies, and some of the currencies (like our Canadian dollar) will also be strictly controlled during this time (wanna know why we care so much? 90% of our economy is still directly tied to you Yanks) The U.N. and IMF will be token heads of an emergency council that all countries of the World will have no choice but to agree to (barring a few examples in the Middle East and North Korea, Cuba, a few South American countries, etc).
Debt restructuring will be performed from top to bottom. The 1.4 Quadrillion derivatives bubble will pop like the veritable tree falling in the forest that no-one hears. The wage structure of the entire United States will be chopped off at the knees when jobs are ‘started’ again, and people are going to learn rather bluntly that their standard of living is going to drop by a large margin. Even when financial markets are loosened on the leash enough to make it look like things are ‘running’, foodstuffs and all energy (gas, diesel, natural gas, propane, etc) will be price controlled from that point on. This could be seen as an enforced Socialist military junta rule, which it is, but honestly there really is no choice.
Production of goods will continue by force if necessary, people will clamor to the new low wage positions because they won’t have a choice. It is either that or starve.
Inner cities could collapse entirely during the transition period, the military in all forms will setup blockades around zones in these areas and food rations will be handed over in exchange for firearms and ammunition. It doesn’t even bear mentioning the horrors that await some areas during this period. Within two weeks of supply infrastructure collapse things like rape, murder, and cannibalism will be commonplace. People are exactly three square meals away from becoming savages, it is as simple as that. In San Fransisco there are 17,500 people per square mile, I won’t go into lurid details but let’s just say there will be shoot-outs in the local 7/11 for the last bag of Doritos a lot sooner than most people think.
Slowly but surely ‘zones’ will form, protected areas where people are moved (perhaps forcibly) and live under what seems like a fairly free system but is obviously locked down military camps. Again, is this a bad thing? They aren’t necessarily trying to clamp down control, they have known for many decades the collapse would happen under a fiat currency system and have planned accordingly.
There will be a lot of hardship, a lot of deaths, in a lot of areas of the World and United States things will collapse into ‘One Second After’ conditions where attrition will reduce population drastically over the next several years. The media will cover some of this, but not the true horrors, and it goes without saying that ‘the revolution will not be televised’. This means that the Internet will no longer be free, and when and if an ‘Internet’ is brought back up and running it will be the government sanctioned AOL style system with no freedom of any kind. There will be no anonymous communication, any Internet Service Providers will be under total government control and it will be technically impossible to transmit encrypted packets. As a result communication can be controlled, and when it gets to that point a smattering of free Ham Radio will be the only true source of freedom.
There will be pockets of resistance, even entire States that balk at the new way of things, at first they will be treated with hands off respect but in time they will be forced with simple supply blockades to conform to the new rules. They have the technology, and the patience, and the means to cut off outside supply. There will obviously be a lot of ‘free people’ out there, entire communities where they are self sufficient in every way – but these will be small Colonial technology areas that are visited by smiling officials on a regular basis to let them know the limitations of such existence.
I obviously can’t say exactly when this banking holiday will happen, but I think it is safe to say it is going to happen sometime in the next 18 months for sure, and possibly a LOT sooner than that. They simply cannot keep pretending things are okay for much longer. Anyone who isn’t a Prepper yet, there is still time as long as the stores are open and your debit/credit card still works. Lay low, don’t brag about supplies, and stockpile simple foodstuffs for the time when your family needs to hunker down.
What do you guys think? I have spent my life as an Eschatological High Priest, studying and preparing for the inevitable Crash of our soft Western Civilization. We have lived the easiest life of any Humans in our History, but that ride is about to come grinding to a halt. How do you think the United States (and the rest of the World) will handle the ‘adjustment’ that is in the mail?
kaibosh
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