236 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
236 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
SURVIVAL THINKING by Kurt Saxon (c) 1979
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On page 617, Dave Font asks for an article on how to think; or
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how to put together all the confusing issues working up to the
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crash into a set of workable rules. Throughout the letter columns
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many have expressed confusion over how to handle all the
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conflicting attitudes between survivalists and standing up to the
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scoffing of non-survivalists.
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So many have said they felt alone in their thinking until they
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read my works or those of other professional survivalists. Others
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told of the walls they ran up against when they tried to convince
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friends that civilization was in real trouble.
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What I'm going to try to do in this editorial is set up a
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system of ideas which will give the survivalist a feeling of
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rightness in his stand. I'd like to establish a kind of
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belongingness among individuals who are widely separated.
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No one likes to feel he is alone in his thinking, unless he is
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a paranoid fantasizing that he's the only one who has the truth.
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Paranoids in the field just stumble on it. Without survivalism,
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they would just as likely have fancied themselves in contact with
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beings from outer space who would take them off the planet at the
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last minute.
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But normal survivalists need a set of common sources of
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identification so they will not think they are paranoid. Also, such
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an identification would be useful in keeping the survivalist from
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getting discouraged when people scoff at his preparations.
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Well, the survivalist is a loner by necessity, now. There are
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no real groups to join, no armbands to wear, no dues to pay, no
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demonstrations to participate in. So a survivalist can easily feel
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very different from those around him without being able to focus on
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an identifiable organization sharing his thoughts and ideas. This
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can make one lonely, indeed.
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But there is no need for loneliness. There are more potential
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survivalists around than you think. In fact, just about everyone
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with any sense shares your fears, but has not as yet seen a reason
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for optimism in the face of increasing adversity. This optimism is
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what sets off the survivalist from the non-survivalist.
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Let me first explain to you that you are not alone in your
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anxieties about the future. I will also point out why your scoffing
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neighbor is even more afraid of the future than you are. I'll
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describe him in an analogy which will let you know how afraid he is
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and why he finds a kind of refuge in scoffing at your preparations.
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Let's say that your neighbor bought a plot of land and built
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his dream home on it. When it was finished he believed his security
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was assured. Then he went to get it insured.
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The insurance agent looked at a geodesic survey map of that
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area and found the house to have been built on a major earthquake
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fault. No insurance. No fire insurance, lest a tremor break a gas
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main or cause an electrical short and cause a fire. Anything that
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might happen to the house, except something like a burglary, could
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be blamed on a tremor. The agent went on to explain that the area
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is due for a quake any time. Maybe in a month, a year, three years
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at most, since geologists have kept records of periodic quakes in
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that area.
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So what does your neighbor do? He has sunk all he has in that
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doomed home. He can't afford a new plot or the price of moving the
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house to it. he can't sell it since anyone with the price would
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also have the sense to ask why it wasn't insured.
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If he were a survivalist, he would sell the house and fixtures
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to a salvage company or to a party who had another plot of land and
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the money to afford moving it, either at a terrible loss. Then he
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would take what little he had, move to a safer place and build a
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shack. But he is not a survivalist so he rationalizes that a quake
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will not hit in his lifetime. He develops an ulcer, takes up
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bedwetting, gets a prescription for valium and says, "This is the
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best of all possible worlds."
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Don't you realize by now that the average person who has given
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you the horse-laugh has built his house on an earthquake fault? How
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many of those scoffers have everything they own, their lifestyles,
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their jobs, sunk in this floundering system?
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They know what's going on. They watch TV the same as you, read
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the same headlines, pay the same inflated prices for food and
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everything else. They just lack the guts to get out of the trap,
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even if, like an animal, they may have to chew a leg off to get
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free. Can you blame them for looking for pie in the sky, rather
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than sacrificing all they now hold dear to survive the coming crash?
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Of course, I've pointed out in previous editorials that the
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change need not be so radical. But too many non-survivalists seem
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to believe that facing the whole picture would be too frightening
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and find it easier to hope for relief from sources outside
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themselves.
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My northeastern subscribers know many who had to dig their
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cars out of record snows. The changing weather patterns have wiped
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out the properties of hundreds of thousands of families in America.
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Even Carla Emery's entire farm was washed out of existence by a
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recent flood. But Carla toughed it out and is on her way back. How
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many thousands are still living in government supplied trailer homes?
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Everyone knows that the surplus population, the increasing
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government and technological incompetence, Moslem fanaticism in the
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Middle East, communist crap-stirring worldwide, etc., is bringing
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world civilization down. They know this, but refuse to admit its
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application to their own futures. Any guy you meet in a bar, after
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a few beers, will say the world is going to hell in a handbasket.
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But the next day, he'll go on whistling in the dark, as usual.
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The only difference between a non-survivalist and you, is that
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the non-survivalist lacks the confidence to prepare. He will scoff,
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rationalize, call you paranoid and then fall on his knees before
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the TV evangelist and ask Jesus to save him.
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Barring that, he might join a political extremist group and
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set out to save the world by bombing a politician's flower box. He
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might lose himself in drink or drugs. In his anxiety and
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frustration he might batter his child. He may go into a mom and pop
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store, shooting the old couple and taking $50.00 from the register.
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He may turn to mugging. Losing himself in degeneracy, he might try
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to crash the Guiness Book of Records by scoring the most rapes in
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his area. You'll also find him in a leather club, beating or being
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beaten. He may sexually abuse children. The fag bars are also
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filled with people who say you're full of baloney. These are the
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self-doomed, the damned and the undisciplined. They know the end is
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near for their kind and before they go, they're going to indulge in
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every primeval, infantile fantasy they've ever entertained.
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In short, the people of this planet are going mad through
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anxiety over situations they can't cope with. Oh, you're not alone
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in your anxieties. Your special kind of aloneness simply manifests
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itself in facing reality, while those around you are going
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collectively mad.
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A bit of Black Humor I like is the idea that the only one who
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keeps his head while those around him are losing theirs is the one
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operating the Guillotine. You've got to be in control. You've got
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to approach everyone worthy within your sphere and tell them they
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can ride this out.
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Don't preach at them or argue. If they can't handle the
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situation, you're wasting time best spent on someone else. Instead
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of making a debate of the issue, show them that you have a plan
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which helps you to face the same problems inflicting them. Compare
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your respective situations and show them they are not alone and
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there are answers.
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I remember joining the John Birch Society in 1964. They would
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create chapters made up of citizens who met in the members' homes
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regularly. There they would discuss many of the problems which have
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since grown into major concerns today. They talked over coffee and
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made it like a cordial little party.
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The only thing wrong with them was they blamed all the
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approaching troubles on the communists, especially the Russians. It
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seemed that every bit of international and domestic skulduggery,
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all economic woes and even teenage acne were caused by the
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Russians. (I still get bulletins from various alert patriots
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explaining how the Russians are behind the bad weather, even though
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Moscow is being mobbed by peasants coming in from the countryside
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for meat. Russia's weather has been worse than ours, causing major
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crop losses. Dumb Russians for ruining the world's weather and
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thereby starving their own people).
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The Birchers finally went out of business; at least, I haven't
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heard of them for years. They told what was wrong, and quite well.
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But they offered no solutions except to write letters of complaint.
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Also, they blamed the communists for everything and our own system
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for nothing.
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Even so, their ideas of local chapters where concerned
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citizens could get together was good. Survivalist chapters might be
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the answer to the need for community preparation for harder times
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ahead.
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If you would like to start a survival chapter in your area,
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I'll give you a few pointers on how to get started. First, put a
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classified ad in your local newspaper. Such ads cost very little.
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Put it in the "Personals" column and keep it running until you have
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the group you need. You might word it like this; "Survival Seminar.
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If you are worried about inflation, government bungling, job
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security, the decline of the world's systems, etc., call --------".
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Of course, before putting in such an ad, you must have a home
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suitable for such meetings. The Birch meetings I attended were in
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middle-class homes with plenty of couches and easy chairs. The
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refreshments were coffee, cake and cookies and general goodies
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served guests dropping in for a little talk. Nothing fancy.
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When people call up to enquire you can tell them it's just a
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non-political get-together to discuss individual and group
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preparation to make it through the worsening conditions facing the
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community. The discussions will deal with saving money on foods,
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starting home businesses, storing commodities soon to be in short
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supply, etc.
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If they seem interested, tell them your address and the
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evening of the meeting; Fridays are best. If a caller begins to
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argue and tell you everything is fine, you're talking to a boob who
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is so locked into the system he can't consider an alternative. He
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called because he's afraid and hoped you were some sort of phoney
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who would reinforce his hopes that his fears were unfounded. He's
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too far gone. Tell him politely that he must have had something
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else in mind and wouldn't enjoy the group and then hang up.
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The ones who have the guts to act will be receptive. They are
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the ones you can count on for a good discussion. They may not
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accept all your ideas, nor you theirs. But such discussions will
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consolidate the worries your visitors have in common. Then you and
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they will learn to think concerning those survival issues
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confronting those in your area.
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You wouldn't need to begin your first meeting with the rougher
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aspects of survival. You could emphasize the logic of learning
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alternative trades, dozens of which are in the four volumes of THE
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SURVIVOR. Not one of the visitors could reject them all.
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You might also emphasize buying in volume or even creating a
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food cooperative. The way this works is for everyone to list what
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they regularly buy. Then you could arrange for a visit to your
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nearest food wholesaler. Upon getting the wholesale prices for all
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the week's order, you could collect each member's share for what he
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will take. That way, the group would get all their food at
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wholesale rates. There are thousands of such community food
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cooperatives around the country and that's the best way to start a
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survival group.
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You could also broach the idea of buying commodities by the
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case or the gross to resell or barter later. About three years ago,
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Johnny Carson jokingly predicted a shortage of toilet paper. There
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was nothing to it but a lot of people took him seriously.
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One old lady panicked and bought 1000 cases of toilet paper.
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It finally dawned on her that there was no shortage. However, she
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had the cases stored in an outbuilding. A few months ago she
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decided to sell them back to the wholesaler. She got back over
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twice what she originally paid.
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This system would work with anything and is far more sensible
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than putting money into a savings account. A member might buy 100
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cases of 50 book cartons of matches. Another might buy several
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gross of packets of sewing needles and spools of thread. Razor
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blades, safety pins, office supplies such as ball point pens,
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pencils, erasers, etc., would be relatively cheap by the gross and
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would rise in value over the months ahead.
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You can get such commodities wholesale from jobbers listed in
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your phone book or even from your local stores. The store owner
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would be glad to knock off 10% on cases of canned goods and such.
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And if you use the product regularly, you can be sure the price
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will have risen by the time you had used half the case.
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The above money-saving ideas would immediately interest a
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general survival group and make them more receptive to your ideas
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on the harsher aspects. To get them to accept the harder stuff, you
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could sell survival books to the members. For instance, you can buy
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30 of my books in any selection for half price. You could resell
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them to group members and make a profit or just enough over to pay for
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refreshments. You could work the same arrangement with other
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survival book publishers and your members would assemble fine
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survival libraries and think more your way as the weeks went by.
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In a short time, you'd have a gung-ho survival group, the kind
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of which so many of you have been wanting. Not only will you have a
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fine survival group, but in helping others to think survival, you'd
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be getting your own thinking squared away. You and your group would
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then be the most stable force in the community when the crash
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finally comes.
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