165 lines
9.6 KiB
Plaintext
165 lines
9.6 KiB
Plaintext
FRIENDS OR ALLIES: CHOICE FOR SURVIVAL by Kurt Saxon (c) 1977
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In the 1950's, several thousand people had nuclear fallout
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shelters built, usually in their back yards. At first they met only
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ridicule by those neighbors who considered themselves above such
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hysteria.
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In time, however, it occurred to those neighbors that
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something had changed in their relationship with the shelter
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builders. Often, those who had been friends for years came to
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despise each other.
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It usually started like this: Sam would say to Paul, the
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shelter builder, "Paul, I don't believe there's going to be a war.
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But if it happens, I'll know where to come."
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Paul would say, "But Sam, it's not a matter of belief. If it
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happens, it'll happen, and if it doesn't happen, it won't. Neither
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of us believes our homes will burn down some night. But we both
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have fire insurance. So my shelter is simply my nuclear war
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insurance."
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"What if you had fire insurance and I didn't? If my house
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burned down, without insurance, I could never rebuild. Would you
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allow me to move my family in with you on a permanent basis?"
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Sam might say, "But that's a poor analogy. I'd be glad to put
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you up for a few weeks and even help you to rebuild."
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"But," Paul would reply, "We both make about the same wages.
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What if I bought a boat instead of fire insurance, thinking, "What
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the hell, I'd rather play with a boat than sit around home worrying
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about an unlikely fire. Besides, good old Sam will bail us out.
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He's our ace in the hole."
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"Would you want to be our ace in the hole if we left our
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welfare up to you while we ran around in a damn boat while you sat
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home worrying about a fire?"
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"Harping on the boat again," says Sam. "I said you could use
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it."
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"Forget the boat," says Paul. "The point is, that you
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considered the boat more important than nuclear war insurance. You
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have all kinds of insurance but you don't seem to know what
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insurance is. It's not negotiable. You have hospital insurance and
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I don't and I get sick; tough on me. You buy fire insurance and I
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don't and my house burns down; your insurance company wouldn't
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rebuild my house."
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"Like your life insurance, my shelter is nuclear war insurance
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which covers only my family. If you want that kind of insurance,
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buy it. Don't expect to use mine."
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By now, Sam is seeing that friendship has its limits and he
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resents it. "Okay," he says, "Just suppose your war should break
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out. So I haven't prepared. But we've been friends for years and I
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never put you off when you needed help. And you've always been on
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hand to help us. But now, when it's a matter of life and death, our
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friendship isn't worth a bo-diddly? Is that what you're telling me?"
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"It's not a matter of friendship," says Paul. "My shelter was
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built for my family of five. It's for two weeks; maybe four if we
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absolutely had to stay longer. You crowd your family of five in
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there and we'd all be dead in a week."
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"Maybe so," says Sam, "but the point is, you would just keep
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us out, knowing we would all be sprawled around the door, dead as
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mackerels. (He breaks into sobs.) And my littlest, Jenny, she's
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only five, you know. Before I'd let you close her out, I'd come
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with a gun."
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Such arguments would go on to the point where the neighbors
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were no longer friends. I never heard of a case where, rather than
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break up as friends, the other neighbor built a shelter.
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Telling the improvident their time is running out seldom
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motivates them to prepare. The improvident are the improvident.
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That's their nature. They know their basic helplessness, but will
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seldom admit it. They are more likely to react with hostility to
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survival advice than to begin their own preparations.
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The difference between one who prepares and one who doesn't is
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more important than a difference of opinion. If you prepare to
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survive, you deserve to survive. Those who can, but won't prepare,
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don't deserve to survive and the species would be better off
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without them. If you have the kind of intellect that's geared to
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survival, it may be a matter of genetics. Your neighbor may lack
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these survival genes. Therefore, becoming his means of survival
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could not only doom both of your families to death, but if you
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should make it, you would have enabled a non-survival type to
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further pollute the gene pool. That's a no-no, although you might
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take in one of his brighter children if you really have enough
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room. If you are really in a position to save someone, you ought to
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be selective. But don't be too callous. Without basic human
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compassion, you might not be worthy to survive, yourself. Aside
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from making you seem callous towards others, your preparations put
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you out the Good-time-Charley field and you are seen as a part of
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the establishment. You are then no longer a buddy, but someone to
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use when things get rough. It's hard to explain but it's sort of
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like when you go into business for yourself; your wage-earning
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friends tend to drop away. You have a kind of security they can't
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aspire to. So they either drop away as friends or become actually
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hostile.
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So you see, friendship ends when you establish a permanency
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and security your friends can't aspire to. Maybe they don't care to
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put out the extra effort or money. Maybe they're just lazy or
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stupid. It doesn't matter why they drop away. Just recognize the
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fact that Survivalists are likely to see their friends drift away.
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So don't expect to impress a friend with your preparations.
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It's far better to get him sold on the idea of making his own
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preparations.
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It's verly likely you can't get your friend to exert himself
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to make any survival preparations. Serious preparation would upset
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his whole lifestyle.
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Most neighbors would rather rationalize away the danger than
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do something about it. Say you bought a house on an earthquake
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fault. So a guy comes and tells you you'd better move or get shook
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to pieces.
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So there you are, with everything you have threatened with
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destruction. A survivalist would move, taking his losses in money,
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energy, and time.
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But the average person would rationalize away the danger and
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never bring up the subject again. If he was smarter than average he
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would try to unload the property on some sucker, of course, never
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mentioning the fault.
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So if you broach the subject of survival to a friend and he
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gives you the horse-laugh, just think of him as one who knows his
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house is built on an earthquake fault. He'll give you nothing but
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rationalizations as to why nothing will happen. Best just to ease
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away from him and tell him nothing further of your plans.
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Since survival is the most important subject today, and only a
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few recognize it, you can't waste time with friends who have little
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potential as allies. The time is coming closer when if a neighbor
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isn't an ally, he's highly likely to become an enemy.
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Only those who are working on their own survival programs are
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fit to associate with at this point. I'm not suggesting you snub
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your friends or give up on non-survivors altogether. This would be
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rude and stupid. Besides, an intelligent friend might finally come
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around to your way of thinking as things get worse.
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So just be businesslike when talking survival. It's very
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serious, so the drinking buddy would be more likely to be offended
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than interested.
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In survival programs, an ally is worth any number of friends.
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In the coming months, you will learn to sort out your allies, who
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are aware of the coming crash, from your friends, who think you're
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a nut if you worry about anything but where your next baseball
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ticket is coming from.
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As you come in contact with more Survivalists, you will be
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bored with your old buddies, anyway. And they will be bored with
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you, too. So don't feel panicky at the thought of your old cronies
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drinking without you.
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Of course, your first choice of allies should be among your
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friends, especially neighbors. If you and your neighbor both had a
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roomy, livable shelter, you could link them up with a tunnel.
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Such a setup would enable you to share the burden of buying
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supplies. Tools, books, and the various items of hardware could be
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shared, rather than having to buy two complete sets for two families.
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Linked shelters would also permit visiting for moral support
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and economy. They would also be handy to resist assault. If one's
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shelter were under assault by the mob, the other could go through
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the tunnel and help fight them off. When the mob finally gave up
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and went off to die of radiation sickness, life in the shelters
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could become downright social.
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In this way you can see how a neighbor who is an ally can be
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of great benefit. But a neighbor who depends on you to save his
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bacon is not only not an ally but he could become your worst enemy.
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One way to help a neighbor to become an ally is to introduce
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him to other Survivalists. Then he will feel that you're letting
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him in on something. Also, if you have three or four guys in your
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home talking survival, your neighbor will feel he's the isolated
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minority in his stand that this is the best of all possible worlds.
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Even if your area is an unlikely target for a nuclear bomb and
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underground shelters are not in your plans, the ally principle is
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still very important. You just can't waste time with a friend who
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is of no use in your survival plans.
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An ally can be a person you don't even like socially. But if
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your ally shares your enthusiasm for survival, he will be far more
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useful to you than a friend who agrees with you on everything but
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survival.
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