Thursday, 24 November 2011

SHTF: The problem with neighbors

 


Something has been stuck in my craw lately which comes up frequently and bugs me to know end. Read this:
"I am not to worried about my neighbors. This is a semi-rural area and most of the folks around here are good people. Lot of blue collar types, gun owners, a fair number of vets. We have never talked about it, but I am sure most have the same mindset we got if the SHTF..."
Heard that before online, maybe in the forums you frequent or even in some bit of prepper-inspired fiction?
Nothing could be further from the truth.
Never make assumptions about the people you don't know well and have never had "The Talk" with. That same good natured neighbor next store might be the same one who steals gas from your car or borrows something from your shed in the middle of the night.
Or might be the one who calls the feds and tells them about the nut next door with all the guns and buckets of rice.
Or might be the jerk who decides "those that have (you) need to share with those that don't (him)" and brings the rest of the neighborhood to inventory and redistribute your supplies.
Here's the way it works:
If you want your neighbor to back you up, find out now. If you need an excuse, use the next storm or power outage to feel them out. Do they stock food and supplies? Are they security minded? Do they have a plan if the power is out for an extended time or if the grocery trucks stop running?
In my opinion, there are more FEMA/Big Brother/handout fans out there than not. Do the math.
Nope, don't assume that anyone around you has the same plan you do. Find out or keep a very low profile.
Again, never make assumptions about the people you don't know well.

http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/blogspot/wFVM/~3/FcCZToI7_2c/shtf-problem-with-neighbors.html

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