The world continues apace.
Itās hard to know whats ārealā and whatās just clickbait-generating hype these days in regards to to āshortagesā and āsupply chain disruptionsā. Oh, thereās no doubt that thereās shortages going on with factories unable to get their materials, store shelves with big gaps in them, and that sort of thing. Iām just not 100% sure why we have them. We had Wuhan Flu and itās restrictions for all of 2020 and we didnāt see this sort of thing. I suppose you could argue that there were already plenty of things āin the pipelineā and that itās only now that itās catching up to us. Or perhaps it took this long for the disruption in Chinese manufacturing to take hold. Or maybe longshoreman and dockworker unions have decided this is the perfect time to hold up management for more money. Orā¦orā¦orā¦
The reasons, to me, are somewhat irrelevant. I donāt care which iceberg hit the Titanic, all I care about is getting my lifejacket on. I suppose the smart thing to do would be to go and buy an extra set of ..wellā¦everything. Thus far my experiences in āwhaddya mean youāre out of [XXXX]ā have been limited to canning lids, ammo, certain guns, and satisfactory postal service. But I suppose its only a matter of time before a bearing in power turbine somewhere craps out and, surprise, the German company that made it canāt get partsā¦or a ship to carry itā¦or someone to unload that shipā¦or a truck driver to haul it from the docks. It doesnāt take a lot to throw a wrench into thingsā¦thereās plenty of potential failure points along the way.
Me, Iāve been kinda sortaĀ preparing for this thing for a long time. Longer than some of you have been around, actually. Iām expecting, for me, some direct inconveniences but nothing too dramatic. What Iām worried about is people who should know better clamoring for .gov to ādo somethingā and, Crom help us, thos idiots actually do something.
At the moment, the current plan to āfixā things involves spending more money than actually physically exists and creating a debt that is mathematically impossible to payoff unless you go Zimbabwe, have World War III, or literally just renounce the thing like a $50 credit card bill thatās followed you since college. It seems like for all intents and purposes the notion of national debt has become meaningless except as a scorecard to see what country is in the lead for the race to the bottom.
What to do? Same as always, man: keep cash, metals, land, food, guns, meds, fuel, and that sort of thing. The same thing youāve been doing to get ready for the boogaloo, the Rapture, the UN invasion, Xenuās arrival, or Great Depression Mk II. From a disaster preparedness standpoint, having precious metals, money, food, fuel, and guns never goes out of style. Being outta debt helps too.
I wish I had a good track record of predicting the future but, alas, I do notā¦thatās why I have a basement full of food and ammo. But, I think it doesnāt take a lot of foresight to figure that as society starts to fray around the edges thereās going to be more occasions of violence that come into our lives. Whether its increasing amounts of deranged homeless wretches wandering the street aggressively panhandling and doing opportunistic burglaries, or itās mob violence as some disaffected-group-of-the-moment decides that your āprivilegeā is an affront to their dignity, it seems reasonable to see things getting a good bit more dangerous out there.
Price increases, ridiculous taxes, consumer goods shortages, racial violence, a renewed push towards socialism, and who knows what else is on the horizon. Is it any wonder weāre buying canned goods and 9mm?