by untothislast » Sat 19 May 2007, 07:10:27
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ebyss', 'W')hy is it that people equate rural living with isolation??? What, you think we don't have neighbours down here? . . .
Seriously - I don't know what you think rural living is about, but isolation ain't it.
The point I'm making, is that the 'Peak Oil Crisis' actually begins the day the public at large fully realises its full implications (economic and social) - which will obviously be well before any real supply shortages kick in.
At that point, wherever you are - and if you have arable land and a stock of supplies to hand - enforced and secretive isolation will become the only option, if only because 'Night of the Living Dead' hordes will have gone into panic overload, after waking up to the fact that the supermarkets which sustain them are likely to remain permanently empty.
The ruling elite will enforce draconian control measures; starting with curfews and the issue of ration books to restore public order. Then it will want to know where everyone is, using their databases of National Insurance numbers, welfare and social security records and so on. Those in rural communities will have land-holdings and facilities 'seconded' from day one. Unless you inhabit a network of subterranean caves, or live so deeply in the backwoods that not even thermal imaging is likely to pick you out, you would be well advised to stay as isolated as is humanly possible.
Don't get me wrong - if you have the resources and the wits to go about it, it's by far the preferred option. But don't think for a second you can escape, for long, the fallout of what's about to engulf us all.
(By the way, if anyone out there does have a gated/walled/armed compound . . . could I have the address?)