by gego » Fri 04 Aug 2006, 02:57:51
I am a reluctant doomer. By that I mean that I have concluded that the energy ship will sink, probably during the next 20 to 40 years, and a serious struggle for survival, that I would not volintarily choose, will ensue. I am not one of these bring it on type of guys that is looking forward to the carnage, as I have seen posted here and there. As some survivalist do think, I do not think that it will be a matter of hiding out in the basement for 6 months, eating tuna fish and coming out after all the carnage is over. I think that the shift from economic and population expansion will happen over the decade after peak oil, and that, as Richard Duncan concluded, the proximate cause of the dieoff will be the failure of the electric system. I think this will be just the first wave of the dieoff and that the whole process will take at least a century, before stability is reached.
I stopped by Walmart after dinner out with my wife today, and while she shopped I wandered over to the sporting goods section where I found them liquidating some 30'06 shells for $7 a box (normally $17.48) so I bought the 12 boxes (20 shells each) they had. They are shells designed for large game like elk and moose, and I normally would not have bought them for hunting as they are a little heavy for the deer we have around here. I bought them to add to my arsenal, and intend them for use as self defense. As I walked around the store looking at the people and thinking about the idea that one day I might be forced into a they or we type situation, it actually made me feed nausiated.
I do think that those who have access to water, an operating septic system, wood stoves for heating and cooking, gardens, meat on the hoof, stored grains, hand tools, and the like in a rural setting with self reliant neighbors will have some advantage over someone living on the 30th floor of a highrise in a concrete jungle. There is no certainty, just an advantage, so I cautiously voted that I think I will survive.
I am not depressed about it and occupy myself with my life with one eye to the future. I consider the challenge of survival to be something that I want to see if I can accomplish.
Last edited by
gego on Fri 04 Aug 2006, 03:04:18, edited 1 time in total.