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THE Mutant Zombie Hordes Thread pt 2 (merged)

What's on your mind?
General interest discussions, not necessarily related to depletion.

Re: Will starving masses roam or stay put?

Unread postby Hermes » Wed 18 Jun 2008, 00:06:02

Book: The Mountain People
Link at Amazon.com

I'm going to remember the book imperfectly... but I'll relate as much as I can, as accurately as I can.

The author visits the Ik tribe in Africa to study them. He happens to arrive as they're entering a vicious drought. They were already hungry, and had had it tough for some years, but the drought diminishes the available food dramatically.

I read it because I wanted to get an answer to this question which is: What happens to a group of people as they starve to death, because of course it's what is about to happen and I want to prepare.

The Ik people behaved somewhat differently than I expect so-called first world people to behave in the circumstances. First of all they knew how to hunt and gather. Second they had social systems which at least partially weathered the storm of starvation.

In our case I expect things to be far more decimating. Almost no one in this society can forage. This society is deeply removed from the earth, and as it is forced to return to the earth in order to survive it will be less successful than the Ik were.

That said the Ik stole food out of their grandparents' mouths as they were chewing, ate smooth rocks to keep their hunger pangs down, restructured their language itself to equate the individual posession of food as the purest good, and eventually shambled along from place to place to be with other starving people so they could die in one another's company. Children were tossed out at about 3 years old because they were too much a burden.

Children banded together into little gangs. The first gangs were of the 3-10 year old range, and the second gangs were of the 10-15 ish year old range. After that people were pretty much adults in their society, and began to "settle down" more.

The young went out and foraged. And especially the young adults (10-20 or so) ranged out for days in search of food, and were successful in stuffing themselves. The older (25 yrs old or more) just remained near the village, trying to keep their death at bay for as long as possible. 35 years old was OLD. At 45 a person was ancient. There weren't more than a few people 55 years old.

The big lesson, and one which the author himself was fascinated by, was that even though they could have moved to somewhere else where the food was better, even though their social bonds were so deeply and horrifically fragmented, even though moreover their water was rank and foul and better water was elsewhere ...
... they stayed there in the villages.

Yes, those that could went out on food gathering missions, but they kept coming back to the horror of their village. They always returned (Except for one notable exception in this one family which apparently permanently got out. But there was furthermore another family which got out for some months, lived a great life elsewhere... and then ended up returning back to their horrific village)

Yes, the Ik society is different than ours. But at the same time when a human animal suffers this kind of starvation I doubt the cultural laws which made the Ik and Joe 6-pack different will much exist anymore. Both will be driven by a deep desire to eat, which will overpower all else.

Among the things I took away from the book was a sense that in the USA people will generally stay put. Indeed, people everywhere will generally stay put.

And they will die right there where they are.

Yes, some will range out on multi-day foraging missions, but they will almost always come back to the city again. Furthermore a handful will make it out of the city and never return, but they will be a VERY small number.

But is this so hard to believe though? Look deeply at our current society. Who but an insane person would stay in it? Who but an insane person would want to stay in the city TODAY? And yet they all do remain.

So I do believe that there will be roving zombie bands, but not roving hordes. They will be small groups of enterprising young people looking for food and a quick smash-and-grab looting that they can bring back home to the city with them. And I believe they will range out about 40-60 miles from the city but probably no further. The rest of the population in the cities (all other ages than the generally 10-25 year olds) will remain in the city, starving to death.
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Re: Will starving masses roam or stay put?

Unread postby mos6507 » Wed 18 Jun 2008, 00:41:27

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('cube', '
')There are people who live in the 3rd world on $300/month in densely populated cities. If they can afford to eat food sent in 3,000 miles away


Transport aside, how will packing people together like sardine cans surmount the problem of growing enough food for them when we're only able to do that now because of fossil-fuel-derived fertilizers? I just think there will be shortage of food regardless of where people live, 5000 mile diet or 1 mile diet. Truly sustainable agricultural practices will necessitate a smaller population.
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Re: Will starving masses roam or stay put?

Unread postby vetusfirma » Wed 18 Jun 2008, 01:20:20

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kjmclark', '
')
I would guess that most starving masses wouldn't try to go far and mostly wouldn't succeed if they tried. However, the starving masses I'm concerned about are gangs, teens/young adults who might join gangs, people selling or transporting drugs, and the prison population that the state releases when it can't afford to house them any longer. I suppose you could add former military, though for different reasons.

Now, what percentage of the US population is gang members, potential gang members, prisoners, and former or current military? I would expect the veterans to mostly be willing to work for the food, and only take it if the answer is no and there are no other options. The criminal types I don't expect to bother to ask. It would only take a few armed gang members to ruin your day.


You brought up some good points, but when you talk about former military you need to consider that in relation to gangs also. I an retired army, and my brother is at Ft Riley and tells me many of the soldiers have gang, like crips and bloods, tattoos. A National Guard Captain with 2 Iraq tours says it a real problem and my son saw gang problems at Ft. Benning when he went thur basic training. The history channel has been showing segments on gangs and in one the gang leaders talk about send members to the army to get 'training' so they can be tougher on the streets. If things get real bad, its possible for parts of military units to 'go rouge' and use their equipment and training as a means to power. Even the national guard might become local or regional power bases if things really go bad. Now I'm not saying this will happen, but when you look at other countries, its not the citizens that are the MZB, its the armed forces that cause the most terror.

anyway, food for thought.
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Re: Will starving masses roam or stay put?

Unread postby cube » Wed 18 Jun 2008, 01:25:42

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mos6507', '.')..
Transport aside, how will packing people together like sardine cans surmount the problem of growing enough food for them when we're only able to do that now because of fossil-fuel-derived fertilizers? I just think there will be shortage of food regardless of where people live, 5000 mile diet or 1 mile diet. Truly sustainable agricultural practices will necessitate a smaller population.
Oddly enough some of the greatest agricultural exporters are wealthy nations: USA, Canada, France, Australia. A person living in Japan should be able to outbid an African for that last bushel of wheat grown in Nebraska. Therefore the 3rd world will die-off. How many people will be left alive, once everything reaches an equilibrium point? 1B or 3Billion? I don't know....save for another discussion.
So why pack people into sardine cans? You're right...it does not address the issue of food production. The reason is simple.
People will no longer afford to live in suburbia.
//
Of course we'll have a smaller population!
But that doesn't mean we can't have big cities right? Even if the world population drops to only 1 billion why can't we have a couple mega-cities of 7million++ New York, London, Moscow, Tokyo?
//
here's the cube scenario:
Due to environmental damage, especially topsoil erosion, there will be vast stretches of land that was once farmland or grazing will be abandoned.
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Re: Will starving masses roam or stay put?

Unread postby mos6507 » Wed 18 Jun 2008, 01:29:12

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Hermes', '
')Yes, the Ik society is different than ours. But at the same time when a human animal suffers this kind of starvation I doubt the cultural laws which made the Ik and Joe 6-pack different will much exist anymore. Both will be driven by a deep desire to eat, which will overpower all else.


I think it's apples an oranges to the extreme. A 1st world nation falling into decay starts out with a great deal of resources and mobility. People will exercise the options they have while they still have it long before their society breaks down to the level of a Unicef commercial. Not only that, if people really do "get it" and realize that humanity is going to go through a "die off", they will not abide by the law the way they did during the great depression, because they will know the situation will only get worse. Then it's every man to himself.
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Re: Will starving masses roam or stay put?

Unread postby mos6507 » Wed 18 Jun 2008, 01:41:00

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('cube', '
')Of course we'll have a smaller population!
But that doesn't mean we can't have big cities right? Even if the world population drops to only 1 billion why can't we have a couple mega-cities of 7million++ New York, London, Moscow, Tokyo?


I just don't see how 5/6th of the world's population can die off rapidly without having enough of a ripple effect on the world to cause WWIII. I just don't see how you can sandbox a die-off of that magnitude in such a way that the major 1st world cities just kind of coast through it by virtue of their wealth-advantage.
Last edited by mos6507 on Wed 18 Jun 2008, 01:44:53, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Will starving masses roam or stay put?

Unread postby Hermes » Wed 18 Jun 2008, 01:44:22

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mos6507', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Hermes', '
')Yes, the Ik society is different than ours. But at the same time when a human animal suffers this kind of starvation I doubt the cultural laws which made the Ik and Joe 6-pack different will much exist anymore. Both will be driven by a deep desire to eat, which will overpower all else.


I think it's apples an oranges to the extreme. A 1st world nation falling into decay starts out with a great deal of resources and mobility. People will exercise the options they have while they still have it long before their society breaks down to the level of a Unicef commercial. Not only that, if people really do "get it" and realize that humanity is going to go through a "die off", they will not abide by the law the way they did during the great depression, because they will know the situation will only get worse. Then it's every man to himself.


I was referring to how people will act once they are starving, which was the original subject of the thread. Certainly in the wind-up TO starvation there will be people moving from city to city, or out of the city. There will be some stockpiling of course. Some will leave the country, etc.

But when the starvation starts in this society on a massive scale, then the resources and mobility you mention will have been depleted. The options will have been closed.

What happens between right now and the "starving masses in the cities" point is a different conversation that I'm not attempting to address.
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Re: Will starving masses roam or stay put?

Unread postby mos6507 » Wed 18 Jun 2008, 01:52:33

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Hermes', '
')What happens between right now and the "starving masses in the cities" point is a different conversation that I'm not attempting to address.


True, that is the title of the thread. But what I'm personally interested in is whether or not I'm going to have to face zombie hordes, period. I really don't give a damn what happens when people starve if I'm already dead from the wave of zombie hordes that preceded it. In that case the final starvation event will be rather anticlimactic.
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Re: Will starving masses roam or stay put?

Unread postby cube » Wed 18 Jun 2008, 01:56:09

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mos6507', '.')..
I just don't see how 5/6th of the world's population can die off rapidly without having enough of a ripple effect on the world to cause WWIII. I just don't see how you can sandbox a die-off of that magnitude in such a way that the major 1st world cities just kind of coast through it by virtue of their wealth-advantage.
so in a nutshell you're saying a "breaking point" will be reached where money isn't going to shield a rich man from the world's problems?
//
I think we're getting off topic but this is an interesting point
*perhaps worthy of its own thread?*
Can money always save you?
or
Will we reach a point similar to that scene in the movie Titanic where a rich man tries to bribe his way into a life boat only to have the ship's officer throw the money back saying, "you can't buy your way out of this mess!"?
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Re: Will starving masses roam or stay put?

Unread postby Pretorian » Wed 18 Jun 2008, 02:00:03

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ludi', '[')Sterile males continue to compete for mates, reducing the number of successful fertilizations. Sterilizing males is the preferred practice for controlling animal populations. Why would it be different for humans? Men don't generally have the drive to have a baby that women have, they mainly seem to want to have sex. Sterilized men would still want to have sex, and would compete with fertile men for mates, reducing the total number of fertile unions.


Are you suggesting that a woman will not be able to find a normal man to make a baby? Is this even serious suggestion?


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ludi', '[')However, male sterilization has a negative stigma in human populations, because men often erroneously assume it means loss of virility.

It is a very direct loss of virility. Man is born to father children-- as many as possible.-- or at least to try his luck.

Overall, it shockes me when someone is suggesting vasectomies for population control. Men do not bear children, are you aware of that? A village with 1 man and a 100 women will have exactly same amount of pregnancies as a village with a 100 women and a 1000 men. Perhaps even more children will come from the first vilage since chances are that among 1000 men there are will be plenty of paedophiles/accidental killers/jealous killers/ets.
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Re: Will starving masses roam or stay put?

Unread postby mos6507 » Wed 18 Jun 2008, 02:29:20

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Pretorian', '
')Man is born to father children-- as many as possible.-- or at least to try his luck.


Men are just wired to insert tab A into slot B because it feels good. The premeditation stops there. By hook or by crook, nature wins in the end, but it's not because that's what men are really after.
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Re: Will starving masses roam or stay put?

Unread postby Hermes » Wed 18 Jun 2008, 02:38:29

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mos6507', 'A') 1st world nation falling into decay starts out with a great deal of resources and mobility. People will exercise the options they have while they still have it long before their society breaks down to the level of a Unicef commercial. Not only that, if people really do "get it" and realize that humanity is going to go through a "die off", they will not abide by the law the way they did during the great depression, because they will know the situation will only get worse. Then it's every man to himself.


Aaaah. Ok, between this post and your last response to me I now understand what you mean. You mean that you expect the zombie hordes to not be the super-destitute ultra-zombies of the deep collapse, but rather you are prepping for the pseudo-zombies of the early-mid collapse who are far more mobile and technologically inclined.

You and I are focusing on different hordes on the zombie scale, hence the misunderstanding.

I then agree with you, that if the zombie hordes are mobilized while they still have got tech and food then that's a whole different kettle of blind, albino cave fish.
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Re: Will starving masses roam or stay put?

Unread postby AgentR » Wed 18 Jun 2008, 02:42:31

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mos6507', 'I') think what's more likely is a "zombie horde lite" which is just people strategically moving from collapsing cities to rural regions. In so doing they will destroy these rural areas with thier sheer numbers. They will move while they still have the means to do so.


Not hardly. They will be walking fertilizer once they get out of eyeshot of someone who would be forced to react to zombie-control with an official response. Which, in rural America, is pretty much everywhere.

If you intend to be one of the zombies hunting for "helpless" rural folks... understand this, a good portion of them (us/me?) are flat out nuts, have guns, and routinely shoot at or nearly at people already for no particularly good reason. Out of town zombies, trespassing?

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Re: Will starving masses roam or stay put?

Unread postby CACynic » Wed 18 Jun 2008, 03:00:21

When I was a reporter covering the L.A. riots (scariest three days of my career), I realized that law enforcement won't be able to do much in the first days of a major collapse. All they'll do is sit in their cars and watch. It will depend on how quickly it happens, such as food and water running out. I think desperate roaming mobs will exhaust themselves within a matter of days, possibly a week or two, allowing the authorities a chance to mobilize and restore order. Therefore, I think the best bet is to have the resources, including guns and ammo, to stay locked inside for a month just to improve the odds. Long-term, of course, is another story.
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Re: Will starving masses roam or stay put?

Unread postby mos6507 » Wed 18 Jun 2008, 04:43:18

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('AgentR', '
')If you intend to be one of the zombies hunting for "helpless" rural folks...


I'm probably letting my imagination run wild, but...

The first wave of zombie hordes will be eco refugees who buy up properties in rural areas. People like many here who are looking for our peak oil homesteads in the boonies. To the unaware, this will appear to be a harmless thing. Right now this doesn't amount to much, but as people catch on the population density will quickly pass into a level that will be unsustainable when peakoil bottoms out. So what once looked like a permanent haven will now be in the same boat as any other overpopulated region.

Something similar has already played out counltess times. A region becomes an attractive spot for people to move to because it has a rustic unspoilt quality due to its low population density. Before you know it, the density has shot up and what originally attracted you to the area no longer exists. It becomes a victim of its own popularity. This time it's not really about aesthetics. It's about sustainability.

Wasn't that the whole point of Bartlett's lecture on youtube, regarding Colorado?

What I'm saying is that in order for a community to survive post-peak-oil it may have to wall itself off before TSHTF. If peakoil takes long enough to play out, the original hot destination places for scared yuppies may just become urbanized and over carrying capacity.

I don't see any way to legally prevent an influx of residential development into sparesely populated towns. Only after government collapses will it be possible to have walled off eco fortifications.
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Re: Will starving masses roam or stay put?

Unread postby Fredrik » Wed 18 Jun 2008, 04:50:33

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mos6507', 'I') just don't see how you can sandbox a die-off of that magnitude in such a way that the major 1st world cities just kind of coast through it by virtue of their wealth-advantage.


Die-off sounds very dramatic and apocalyptic. But it's hardly going to be felt as a singular event. In reality I expect it to endure for years or decades and find different expressions in different places, as living standards drop, local wars are fought, ag production slowly wanes in many places but is boosted in others, governments are ousted and new ones arise etc.

As long as a nation-state is functional, and can feed itself, it would just need a strong military presence at the border (lots of young volunteers for meager pay will be available) and a good coastal artillery. A starving nation with nukes would be more problematic if they're next to you and you had none, but this would be quite exceptional.
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Re: Will starving masses roam or stay put?

Unread postby wisconsin_cur » Wed 18 Jun 2008, 04:52:48

Mos, Wouldn't that require an ability to sell the old home in the now unattractive city in order to buy or build the new place? And do they commute to the old job from the boonies?

My point is the old model of the despoiled enclave was dependant upon cheap oil. Take that away and people will hit the ground (in he early days of a crisis) and try to deal with things were they are. I admit, I am becoming increasingly convinced that people will primarily stay were they are and go out only if they have a destination or goal in mind.
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Re: Will starving masses roam or stay put?

Unread postby mos6507 » Wed 18 Jun 2008, 05:07:36

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('wisconsin_cur', 'M')os, Wouldn't that require an ability to sell the old home in the now unattractive city in order to buy or build the new place? And do they commute to the old job from the boonies?


I think the only people who will be able to make the maneuver will be those who were not hit by the housing crunch and who have become po aware and undaunted by the job issue, people like you or me. Statistically I don't know how big that number could be, but when you factor in how overpopulated the world is and how few enclave targets there may be, it might still be an issue. What do you think?
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Re: Will starving masses roam or stay put?

Unread postby wisconsin_cur » Wed 18 Jun 2008, 05:58:43

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mos6507', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('wisconsin_cur', 'M')os, Wouldn't that require an ability to sell the old home in the now unattractive city in order to buy or build the new place? And do they commute to the old job from the boonies?


I think the only people who will be able to make the maneuver will be those who were not hit by the housing crunch and who have become po aware and undaunted by the job issue, people like you or me. Statistically I don't know how big that number could be, but when you factor in how overpopulated the world is and how few enclave targets there may be, it might still be an issue. What do you think?


I think you need 10-20 acres to do it. And at that rate there is a lot of room left around me. When you add in the homes that will be abandoned because people who will need to move to be closer to jobs, then you have even more area available.

I think the number that could make the move is relatively small... factor in the people who would notmove because a spouse would not be on board and the number down even farther. No doubt there will be people who emigrate to the countryside but I do not think of them as a burden or even a threat... they are community.

The concern with starving masses is that they do not contribute but leave the landscape barren as a mass of locusts. As long as the neighbors do not seem to be building a military fortress or seem to be altering their vehicle to look like this,
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Re: Will starving masses roam or stay put?

Unread postby Karlos4 » Wed 18 Jun 2008, 06:53:05

Fascinating debate. IMO, much of what is anticipated here depends on one thing: the ability of the military and police to keep working. As long as they keep following orders, they can distribute food (scarce as it might be), shooting looters, implementing curfew. At the very least, telling people what to do, which is what they would be waiting for.
How long would that work? At a certain point, there would be no gas for police cars or tanks. And when even their depots of food run out, the soldiers would be starving like everybody else. They would have a family too, somewhere, in trouble. When and how would the security forces disintegrate?
I agree that a lot of people would stay, and die, in the city. A lot would not recognize the problem until it's too late.
In Spain, I don't expect the military or police to form gangs. They would keep working until the last minute, then go home. But there would be gangs, I'm afraid following ethnic lines.
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