Donate Bitcoin

Donate Paypal


PeakOil is You

PeakOil is You

Peak Oil - An African American Perspective

Discussions related to the physiological and psychological effects of peak oil on our members and future generations.

Peak Oil - An African American Perspective

Unread postby usncom » Sun 25 May 2008, 14:07:04

Whether you belive in a hard crash or a soft landing there is no doubt that whatever the outcome it will leave severe economic scars among the lower working classes and lower classes of society which just happens to dispriportionately consist of blacks and hispanics.

All one needs to do is to look at the devestating effects that the loss of high paying manufacturing industry had throughout the rust belt in the USA, particularly Detroit. Unemployment skyrocketed, families became unstable as more and more men abandoned them and or turned to a life of crime to make ends meet, and whole tracts of neighborhoods surrendered to decay, abandonment, and the drug trade.

If the service sector of North America is going to take as bad of a beating as peak oil doomers such as Kunstler predicts, then ALL of us are in a world of hurt no matter what your class status or race is. The only difference is the effects on the poor, those without higher education, and minorities will be 3 to 4 times worse.

I can't help but wonder how we will be able to let go of the superficial prejudices and pull together as a country or even as a global community for that matter if we are all fighting over the last few scraps of resources on the planet.

Kunstler touched upon this subject rather humorously in "The Long Emergency". His witty New York sarcasm left no social group spared from criticism whether it was NASCAR fans, clannish Southerners, Country Music fans, or the Hip Hop community. While I disagreed with his conclusions and perceived a cunning and seething hattred of the American Way of life underlying his writing I give him many browny points for brilliantly touching this sensitive subject of race and PO future.

No doubt, in a hard PO crash there are going to be alot of angry, vocal, and unfortunately some violent protests that the American Dream of a suburban house, two car garage, and a Chevy Suburban parked out in front. Trust me, blacks aren't going to be the only one violently protesting in the streets in this scenario. The blame game will fire up public vocal emnity with conservatives blaming liberals, liberals blaming conservatives, whites blaming blacks, blacks blaming "the man", and whites, blacks, and everybody in between blaming hispanics(for taking jobs) and Muslim countries(for hoarding oil). Hopefully a long protracted soft crash will mitigate these ill social aftershocks.

I want to hope for a bright future and that we will all just hold hands into the post peak oil sunset singing Kumbaya but some of the doomer posts I've seen on the "other PO site" give me grave doubts.

Just my perspective.
User avatar
usncom
Wood
Wood
 
Posts: 36
Joined: Sun 04 May 2008, 03:00:00

Re: Peak Oil - An African American Perspective

Unread postby Ayoob » Sun 25 May 2008, 14:37:12

God forbid you should just help out instead of bitching and crying and rioting.
User avatar
Ayoob
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 1520
Joined: Thu 15 Jul 2004, 03:00:00

Re: Peak Oil - An African American Perspective

Unread postby Windmills » Sun 25 May 2008, 15:09:39

Bitching and rioting are the price of ignorance and a lack of education. Students often ask, "when are we ever going to use this science and math?" I usually have a thee-part speech prepared in response. "Right now," would suffice as a short answer these days. If people had a better understanding of some basic math and science, such as exponential curves and the laws of thermodynamics, we might not have so many ridiculous responses to peak oil. However, since the majority of the world is lacking in a grounded education, we'll continue to see people swallow the MSM conspiracy theories about the causes of depletion and therefore react angrily and in a variety of unproductive ways. More in line with this thread, there's an increased chance for our superficial differences and divisions to become deeper as a result of our ignorance and fear.
Windmills
Tar Sands
Tar Sands
 
Posts: 547
Joined: Tue 11 Oct 2005, 03:00:00
Location: Arizona, USA

Re: Peak Oil - An African American Perspective

Unread postby usncom » Sun 25 May 2008, 15:32:38

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ayoob', 'G')od forbid you should just help out instead of bitching and crying and rioting.

I'm assuming you are directing this at the masses and not me, since it is obvious I'm trying to learn as much about this topic as I can having just discovered PO a little under a month ago. Despite your "EXPERT" tag I doubt you were born PO aware.

As for the masses bitching and crying, thats a natural human response if they don't know and the little bit they do know is intentional misinformation.

Even the intelligent and supposedly informed have no idea of PO and think that ANWAR will make us energy independent.
Last edited by usncom on Sun 25 May 2008, 16:50:38, edited 1 time in total.
User avatar
usncom
Wood
Wood
 
Posts: 36
Joined: Sun 04 May 2008, 03:00:00

Re: Peak Oil - An African American Perspective

Unread postby Cashmere » Sun 25 May 2008, 15:33:35

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'H')is witty New York sarcasm left no social group spared from criticism whether it was NASCAR fans, clannish Southerners, Country Music fans, or the Hip Hop community.

Really? Please cite the section where he blasts Jews, and specifically Zionists - I couldn't find it. Maybe he could rerelease the book with a section about Joe Lieberman's attempt to militarize the U.S., lock down U.S. citizens, and provoke a war with Iran to help prop up the racist Israeli regime. No?

As for "Peak Oil" from an "African American" perspective, two things are going to be made very clear in the next 10 years . . .

Black Africans are doomed. Those who haven't already returned to a barely-living starvation lifestyle are going to be there soon. The horrible ethnic violence that plagues that continent will get much worse. Any small pockets of humanity resembling civilization will be gone.

As for Black Americans, what is their current state?

After having endured the worst brutality that a people can endure and coming out of it, by force of will and leaders like King, blacks in the U.S. have chosen to re-enslave themselves.

While in 1965 it may have seemed that blacks had a chance to finally throw off the shackles of slavery and make a run for normalized integration into American society, where did they end up?

1 in 4 black males incarcerated.

In 1940, black illegitimacy rate was about 14%.
Now it's about 70%.

70%!

Black culture is predominantly defined by thug/gangsta culture, which idolizes idiots and degenerates and debases women.

Education is considered a sell out.

And on and on.

The statistics are unbelievable.

Blacks in America have re-enslaved themselves, and they will soon return to the state that they existed in pre-civil rights . . .

poor, uneducated, employable only at the lowest level, second class citizens through and through.

When the welfare starts to get cut off, blacks will be hurt the most.

And only Bill Cosby appears to want to speak up about where the blame really lies - the rest of the black "leaders" are too afraid to call a club a club and call out their own people.

Can you imagine the response if JJ or Al Sharpton came out and said, "our own music is a plague, and we need to boycott all black musicians producing violent, misogynistic music."

You know what the communal response to that would be?

"Say whaaaa, nigga?"

As you watch Africa struggle and you watch blacks in America handed opportunity after opportunity only to internally sabotage themselves, you have got to the figure . . .

blacks as a race are doomed to occupy the economic cellars of the world for at least the next 100 years.
Massive Human Dieoff <b>must</b> occur as a result of Peak Oil. Many more than half will die. It will occur everywhere, including where <b>you</b> live. If you fail to recognize this, then your odds of living move toward the "going to die" group.
User avatar
Cashmere
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1882
Joined: Thu 27 Mar 2008, 03:00:00

Re: Peak Oil - An African American Perspective

Unread postby KingM » Sun 25 May 2008, 15:39:39

Cashmere,

Maybe you should debate usncom's ideas instead of looking over his shoulder to attack his entire race.
User avatar
KingM
Tar Sands
Tar Sands
 
Posts: 732
Joined: Tue 30 Aug 2005, 03:00:00
Location: Second Vermont Republic

Re: Peak Oil - An African American Perspective

Unread postby dsula » Sun 25 May 2008, 15:46:43

Cashmere:
Couldn't agree more. Thanks for the post.
User avatar
dsula
Tar Sands
Tar Sands
 
Posts: 982
Joined: Wed 13 Jun 2007, 03:00:00

Re: Peak Oil - An African American Perspective

Unread postby vision-master » Sun 25 May 2008, 15:52:18

One things for sure. They will riot. History has proven this. After they riot, they will be shipped out to the "work camps". Yes work camps, they are already in place, just a waiting.
vision-master
 

Re: Peak Oil - An African American Perspective

Unread postby RedStateGreen » Sun 25 May 2008, 16:33:06

Welcome, usncom. Your analysis seems fairly accurate.

This is going to be a class issue more than a race issue, IMO, as people are priced out of buying what were once seen as 'necessities'.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('efarmer', '&')quot;Taste the sizzling fury of fajita skillet death you marauding zombie goon!"

First thing to ask: Cui bono?
User avatar
RedStateGreen
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1859
Joined: Sun 16 Sep 2007, 03:00:00
Location: Oklahoma, USA

Re: Peak Oil - An African American Perspective

Unread postby usncom » Sun 25 May 2008, 16:42:46

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Cashmere', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'H')is witty New York sarcasm left no social group spared from criticism whether it was NASCAR fans, clannish Southerners, Country Music fans, or the Hip Hop community.

Really? Please cite the section where he blasts Jews, and specifically Zionists - I couldn't find it. Maybe he could rerelease the book with a section about Joe Lieberman's attempt to militarize the U.S., lock down U.S. citizens, and provoke a war with Iran to help prop up the racist Israeli regime. No?
As for "Peak Oil" from an "African American" perspective, two things are going to be made very clear in the next 10 years . . .
Black Africans are doomed. Those who haven't already returned to a barely-living starvation lifestyle are going to be there soon. The horrible ethnic violence that plagues that continent will get much worse. Any small pockets of humanity resembling civilization will be gone.
As for Black Americans, what is their current state?
After having endured the worst brutality that a people can endure and coming out of it, by force of will and leaders like King, blacks in the U.S. have chosen to re-enslave themselves.
While in 1965 it may have seemed that blacks had a chance to finally throw off the shackles of slavery and make a run for normalized integration into American society, where did they end up?
1 in 4 black males incarcerated.
In 1940, black illegitimacy rate was about 14%.
Now it's about 70%.
70%!
Black culture is predominantly defined by thug/gangsta culture, which idolizes idiots and degenerates and debases women.
Education is considered a sell out.
And on and on.
The statistics are unbelievable.
Blacks in America have re-enslaved themselves, and they will soon return to the state that they existed in pre-civil rights . . .
poor, uneducated, employable only at the lowest level, second class citizens through and through.
When the welfare starts to get cut off, blacks will be hurt the most.
And only Bill Cosby appears to want to speak up about where the blame really lies - the rest of the black "leaders" are too afraid to call a club a club and call out their own people.
Can you imagine the response if JJ or Al Sharpton came out and said, "our own music is a plague, and we need to boycott all black musicians producing violent, misogynistic music."
You know what the communal response to that would be?
"Say whaaaa, nigga?"
As you watch Africa struggle and you watch blacks in America handed opportunity after opportunity only to internally sabotage themselves, you have got to the figure . . .

blacks as a race are doomed to occupy the economic cellars of the world for at least the next 100 years.

I get the jist of what you're saying cashmere. Black intellectuals have been discussing the issues you raise here ad nasuem behind closed doors.
Let me just provide my perspective on a couple of specific points.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')lack culture is predominantly defined by thug/gangsta culture, which idolizes idiots and degenerates and debases women.

This is how the mainstream media has defined black culture. I can't begin to describe the emnity that the likes of BET with its outrageous and demeaning caricutures has created within the black eductated middle class. I think you know what I'm getting at here. If the mainstream media can't be completely trusted to deal with the PO issue don't think it can be completely trusted to deal with fair and unbiased perceptions of race (or gender for that matter) either.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '"')Can you imagine the response if JJ or Al Sharpton came out and said, "our own music is a plague, and we need to boycott all black musicians producing violent, misogynistic music."

At the risk of sounding like an Al Sharpton apologist let me state the facts. I have heard Al Sharpton repeatedly call out these artists that go along with MSM's promulgation of this gangsta thug culture. REPEATEDLY. He has organized protests against the corporations that produce and distribute it. Jay-Z even made a song taking pot shots at Sharpton for it.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')nd if Al Sharpton is speaking for me
Somebody get him the word and tell him i don't approve
Tell him i'll remove the curses
If you tell me our schools gon' be perfect
When Jena 6 don't exist Tell him THAT's when i'll stop saying bitch---BIIITCH!

I understand things are dire in these communities. However, on the bright side, the black middle class is bigger and more educated than its ever been and we have a African American with a good shot at being president so I can't say "America handed opportunity after opportunity only to internally sabotage themselves."

I definately agree these doomsday PO scenarios are enough to erase all the social progress that has been made thus far.
User avatar
usncom
Wood
Wood
 
Posts: 36
Joined: Sun 04 May 2008, 03:00:00
Top

Re: Peak Oil - An African American Perspective

Unread postby Darkwinism » Sun 25 May 2008, 17:27:44

USNCOM,

an Afro-American perspective on Peak Oil...hmmm

1.There are 100 majority African-American counties and about 20 major cities with majority black populations. So, black voters can organize and force their 120+ black mayors and county officials to form a consortium and go to the French, Russians, Japanese, Koreans, Indians, Israelis, Germans, South Africans, etc. and see how much it costs to build 150-200 nuclear power plants. Go into debt, use city/county infrastructure as collateral, the biggest lender wins the bid to build. Gather retired black navy vets that have worked on nuclear powered ships and every laid off black auto worker and have them build it under foreign management (until they are able to run plants independantly). Once we have reliable electricity we have a good shot at avoiding the worst.

Or

2. Learn Spanish. Talk to your Latino neighbors about gardening. Visit Cuba - when it becomes legal. Talk to some of those millions of black Cubans that have experienced "peak oil" via our trade embargo. Study Cuba and their solutions. Talk to your Central American, Vietnamese, Korean, and Russian neighbors about economic colllapse and political chaos. Learn why so many people that have posted on this board sound like crazed animals and how that will affect you.

And

fight to preserve your little portion of civilization. Good luck.
User avatar
Darkwinism
Wood
Wood
 
Posts: 1
Joined: Sun 25 May 2008, 03:00:00

Re: Peak Oil - An African American Perspective

Unread postby vision-master » Sun 25 May 2008, 17:40:24

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') understand things are dire in these communities. However, on the bright side, the black middle class is bigger and more educated than its ever been and we have a African American with a good shot at being president so I can't say "America handed opportunity after opportunity only to internally sabotage themselves."

Fixed: I understand things are dire in these communities. However, on the bright side, the black middle class is bigger and more educated than its ever been and we have a African American with a good chance of getting shot [s]at being[/s] as president so I can't say "America handed opportunity after opportunity only to internally sabotage themselves."

Just what 'White" elites are planning to do. A perfect reson to implement Marshal law. Yup Obama, another JFK.
vision-master
 
Top

Re: Peak Oil - An African American Perspective

Unread postby killJOY » Sun 25 May 2008, 17:46:47

usncom, you are about to find out the hard way that PO.com is populated with a veritable WASP nest of afro-haters.

Don't let them drive you away.
User avatar
killJOY
Intermediate Crude
Intermediate Crude
 
Posts: 2220
Joined: Mon 21 Feb 2005, 04:00:00
Location: ^NNE^

Re: Peak Oil - An African American Perspective

Unread postby sharewill » Sun 25 May 2008, 17:55:05

So clearly written, and it is clear that the days of what you describe are near. A few years ago, I wrote three stories (fiction) of the times you describe -- I was aware of something happening, but I didn't know exactly what. Although I was aware that while the stories were 'fiction' they were in fact a bell ringing in a tower, calling all those who hear to 'be prepared'.

I wondered why the USA was not found in the listing of the nations in the book of Revelations - and now it is clearer as to the reasons and the way it happens. Thanks for your insight, and you are right, the point and blame game that poured into the USA when the Soviet Union fell (at least the old structured gov't) the society of 'tellers' has taken root and bloomed using the very liberties that were established to protect us from them and any other destructive intent. Amazing, we the people become the target and the weapon of destruction.

Thanks for your info. I'm almost overwhelmed, but I will breathe deep and step on.
Sharewill

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('usncom', 'W')hether you belive in a hard crash or a soft landing there is no doubt that whatever the outcome it will leave severe economic scars among the lower working classes and lower classes of society which just happens to dispriportionately consist of blacks and hispanics.

All one needs to do is to look at the devestating effects that the loss of high paying manufacturing industry had throughout the rust belt in the USA, particularly Detroit. Unemployment skyrocketed, families became unstable as more and more men abandoned them and or turned to a life of crime to make ends meet, and whole tracts of neighborhoods surrendered to decay, abandonment, and the drug trade.

If the service sector of North America is going to take as bad of a beating as peak oil doomers such as Kunstler predicts, then ALL of us are in a world of hurt no matter what your class status or race is. The only difference is the effects on the poor, those without higher education, and minorities will be 3 to 4 times worse.

I can't help but wonder how we will be able to let go of the superficial prejudices and pull together as a country or even as a global community for that matter if we are all fighting over the last few scraps of resources on the planet.

Kunstler touched upon this subject rather humorously in "The Long Emergency". His witty New York sarcasm left no social group spared from criticism whether it was NASCAR fans, clannish Southerners, Country Music fans, or the Hip Hop community. While I disagreed with his conclusions and perceived a cunning and seething hattred of the American Way of life underlying his writing I give him many browny points for brilliantly touching this sensitive subject of race and PO future.

No doubt, in a hard PO crash there are going to be alot of angry, vocal, and unfortunately some violent protests that the American Dream of a suburban house, two car garage, and a Chevy Suburban parked out in front. Trust me, blacks aren't going to be the only one violently protesting in the streets in this scenario. The blame game will fire up public vocal emnity with conservatives blaming liberals, liberals blaming conservatives, whites blaming blacks, blacks blaming "the man", and whites, blacks, and everybody in between blaming hispanics(for taking jobs) and Muslim countries(for hoarding oil). Hopefully a long protracted soft crash will mitigate these ill social aftershocks.

I want to hope for a bright future and that we will all just hold hands into the post peak oil sunset singing Kumbaya but some of the doomer posts I've seen on the "other PO site" give me grave doubts.

Just my perspective.
sharewill
Wood
Wood
 
Posts: 2
Joined: Sat 24 May 2008, 03:00:00
Top

Re: Peak Oil - An African American Perspective

Unread postby vision-master » Sun 25 May 2008, 17:55:11

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('killJOY', 'u')sncom, you are about to find out the hard way that PO.com is populated with a veritable WASP nest of afro-haters.
Don't let them drive you away.

    Government Worker

    Located in the poor mainly black community

    Me, white boy

    90% of the workers - black

    It sucked - I've never seen such HATE towards "Whitey".
vision-master
 
Top

Re: Peak Oil - An African American Perspective

Unread postby Cashmere » Mon 26 May 2008, 16:24:05

I'm sorry, did something I wrote come across as racist?

I apply my reasoning to race just as I do Peak Oil.

I didn't make the illegitimacy rate in the black community "70%".

I didn't encourage urban blacks to speak some language that is only tangentially related to English.


Don't call me a racist.

I hold blacks to the same standard I hold everybody - if you fuck it up, I'll point at you too.

Blacks have fucked it up.

As for the OP's position that the MSM is responsible for propagating black ghetto culture, I completely disagree.

Blacks, in large part, DO NOT WANT to be like white people.

Hey, I don't blame them for that - with the amount of shit they've put up with for 300 years.

But the thing that drives me nuts about this issue, and with every other human issue, is that blacks, as they continue to shoot themselves in the foot, refuse to see their own blame.

It's not a black thing, it's a human thing.

So if calling out people for screwing up is racist, then I'm a racist.

Just like . . .

If calling out a country for being racist and warmongering is anti-Jew, then I am anti-Jew.

Hey, this is the old - give em enough rope . . . thing.
Massive Human Dieoff <b>must</b> occur as a result of Peak Oil. Many more than half will die. It will occur everywhere, including where <b>you</b> live. If you fail to recognize this, then your odds of living move toward the "going to die" group.
User avatar
Cashmere
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1882
Joined: Thu 27 Mar 2008, 03:00:00

Re: Peak Oil - An African American Perspective

Unread postby usncom » Mon 26 May 2008, 17:22:17

Do you have any close black friends Cashmere? Balance can be a good thing ya know?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '"')As for the OP's position that the MSM is responsible for propagating black ghetto culture, I completely disagree.
Blacks, in large part, DO NOT WANT to be like white people."


Viacom, Time Warner, and any other major media conglomerate you want to name last time I checked aren't being controlled by a bunch of black ghetto rappers. If MSM can be held responsible for whitewashing and covering up the whole Peak Oil debate I think its reasonable to assume that these companies are collectively catering to the lowest common denominator when it comes to this thug image thats put out there.

Also, lets not forget that class plays into this as well. RedStateGreen was on to something when he said this will be more of a class issue. There are some outcasts and throwaways in white culture as well who do not want to be like white people either. Some of the hardcore dieoff survivalists on here who would be celebrating in their rural bug out hideaways as SUV driving soccer moms, status seeking yuppies, wall street bankers, fundamentalist Christians, neocons, and etc. are falling away in some bleek post peak oil dystopia come to mind as not wanting to be like white people either.

Furthermore, I don't dispute your statistics Cashmere but just about all the black people I know want the same things that we all want. They want good heathcare, safe neighborhoods, oppourtunities for our children, and etc. The difference between you and me Casmere is that I don't get my whole perception of a whole race based on statistics and MSM.
User avatar
usncom
Wood
Wood
 
Posts: 36
Joined: Sun 04 May 2008, 03:00:00
Top

Re: Peak Oil - An African American Perspective

Unread postby Ayoob » Mon 26 May 2008, 18:06:34

Any particular reason you're not pointing to the obvious benefits that black people bring to any community? Why is it a foregone conclusion that blacks will be excluded, or will be less successful as time goes by?

The "Muslim Perspective" thread showed how Muslim philosophy has something to add to the world.

Why don't you sell us all on the benefits that black people bring to a community of non-blacks?
User avatar
Ayoob
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 1520
Joined: Thu 15 Jul 2004, 03:00:00

Re: Peak Oil - An African American Perspective

Unread postby mgibbons19 » Mon 26 May 2008, 18:27:58

Hey unscom, welcome.

I have to say I'm glad someone is willing to try and argue the "black" perspective. There is enough "anti-black" here that I think it detracts from the credibility of the site honestly.

I also agree that this is going to be more about class than race - which of course correlates with race in many ways.

I think also, from my own studies, that the 'mainstream' perspective on black americans is pretty foolish, treating them as if they are one big consistent demographic group. However as a white american, I can't imagine someone amalgamating everything from the worst stereotype of the white working class to paris hilton, and throwing me somewhere in there. I'm sure black americans feel similarly.

In short, thinking about this in terms of race brings in some interesting complications to an already complicated issue. I would agree that since this is going to harm minorities in sum more because of the class correlations. At the same time however, because the truly poor are so poor, they are already living with spotty transportation abilities, economic isolation, and debilitating chronic health issues.

Interesting times.
mgibbons19
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1105
Joined: Fri 20 Aug 2004, 03:00:00

Re: Peak Oil - An African American Perspective

Unread postby swingbolder » Mon 26 May 2008, 19:01:31

Welcome unscom, I've been on PO for a coupla years although I rarely post anymore. Yeah there are a lot of people around here who hate on us black folks and that gets tedious but there's a lot of good info to be had so that's why I stick around. I basically don't bother with the racists. There are also lots of cool people here too who are more open-minded and that tends to balance things out. Also, sometimes the racists have good information to share as well. . .

Regarding the thread topic, I think the impact that PO will have on race relations will vary based on region. In parts of the country that are already segregated you'll just see more of that. In more diverse places where folks are used to being around different races/ethnicities besides their own you'll see more cooperation/interaction across ethnic lines. Other variables too will come into play affecting how communities cope, in terms of whether people turn on each other or whether they pull together for the common good.

I live on the outskirts of a very small city in upstate NY. We relocated here from NYC a few years back with the thought in mind that this will be a good place to be if TSHTF. There're lots of farms nearby, we're near a train line and have an active waterfront. Plus it's a walkable community.

The only other black person I know who is aware of peak oil is my husband. We bought a small farmhouse on 3 acres of land and have been working to get more prepared these past few years. Planting tress, gardening, paying off debt, investing in firearms & ammo, learning new skills (carpentry, bee-keeping, sewing, bike repair), being frugal, etc.

When I first learned about peak oil I tried to tell other black folks about it, like at my church, and basically everybody thought I was nuts so I just shut up about it. I thought about organizing a church group to learn about basic preparedness and maybe buy food in bulk together but no one was interested. I didn't frame it within the subject of PO; I basically presented the idea as one that made sense in a rainy day way, like, if someone gets laid off in your house wouldn't it be great to have stores on hand and not have to worry about the food bill for a few months. All I got was jokes and weird looks, so as I said before I just dropped it.

There is the general feeling out there that they will be taken care of somehow. This is a low-income community, with many people having grown up with the tradition of collecting gov't checks on and off so there does not exist the culture of self-reliance that will be increasingly necessary IMO as the economy tanks.
User avatar
swingbolder
Peat
Peat
 
Posts: 66
Joined: Wed 24 Aug 2005, 03:00:00

Next

Return to Medical Issues Forum

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest

cron