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by LinuxBender
441 days ago
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No offence meant, but this sounds like those doomsday prepper fantasies where they store chainsaws and crossbows in the garage because they think they’d thrive in a zombie apocalypse. I think that's a bit harsh. Past generations thought of these things and incorporated solutions into their lives that today would be called emergency preparedness. The silent and great generations did just dandy off-grid for years at a time very far from towns. Manual saws, axes, machetes, rope can get a lot done and keep someone strong. There are some nutty preppers, some fear-porn youtuber preppers that scare people into buying things but then there are the rest of us that just accept things can go sideways. Anyone that has been watching fringe less-than-censored media have seen the massive fleets moving towards Iran. It's about to get real and when it gets real then it's too late to incorporate most off-grid solutions. I think it's great they are at least asking questions and thinking about options. |
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Something which causes a whole continent to lose electricity for a year needs to be a catastrophe of epic proportions, it’s not a mere emergency.
> The silent and great generations did just dandy off-grid for years at a time very far from towns.
They didn’t live in an always connected world where everything runs on electricity and systems are explicitly designed to only work that way. There is a canyon of difference between living in a world where a technology doesn’t exist and one where most of society depends on one thing you suddenly lost access to.
> I think it's great they are at least asking questions and thinking about options.
I’m not saying they shouldn’t prepare. Being prepared is a good thing. I’m saying their scenario is unrealistic to the point there’s no proper helpful answer, like asking how to prepare for a meteor strike. If something like that happens your beans aren’t going to save you.