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In which I share my journey toward emergency & disaster preparedness, desire for relocalized community, sustainable survival, and more than a little basic paranoia.

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Local Access Peak Oil

May 31st, 2007 by prep

The amazing Jean Arnold, hub of Post Carbon Salt Lake, has compiled a great slide show to introduce audiences to the idea and implications of peak oil. The one-hour version was shown recently on SLC-TV Channel 17 (public access) — shown again today, Thursday, May 31, 1:30pm.

This one-hour presentation is a good introduction for those new to the whole Peak Oil subject, and sufficiently in-depth for those already familiar with the topic.

You can also watch online or order a free DVD. Send your name and address to:

Bill Haight - Bill.haight@slcgov.com
Technology and Software Support Manager
Salt Lake City - Information Management Services
801.535.7977 Office - 801.535.7634 Fax

Members of Post Carbon Salt Lake are learning to present this show to take it on the road. They will be listed with local speakers’ bureaus soon.

Posted in Community, Resources, Energy, Review | No Comments »

Now Worry about Asteroids

April 7th, 2007 by prep

Life As We Knew ItWhen I’m contemplating the many ways civilization, and even humanity, might collapose, it doesn’t help to be nudged along by NASA scientists telling me I’d better freak out about the likelihood that one of about 20,000 asteroids will fall to Earth and destroy a major city. (Is that all?) They spend more than $4 million a year at NASA already looking for asteroids, but they want at least a billion dollars to find them all by 2020.

Robert Reich’s article in The American Prospect on NASA’s asteroid report is very well timed, since I also happened to have just finished reading the latest in my series of apocalyptic novels this week — a newish young adult novel by Susan Beth Pfeffer called Life As We Knew It.

See that looming moon on the cover? In the fictional world of the book, scientists told the people of Earth that an asteroid would hit the moon, but they made a little miscalculation.

Last Fall I read another novel of teen post-apocalyptic survival, Into the Forest by Jean Hegland. Life As We Know It is nowhere near as bleak, if that can really be said of such a desperate situation. Through the main character Miranda’s diary, we see her make the gradual switch from superficial teen focused on boards on a fan site to becoming an essential member of her own family as they work to survive a nearly impossible situation.

A lot of reviews of Life As We Know It mention that the readers want to run out right then to buy canned soup and collect firewood. The focus on remaining resources definitely makes it clear that planning helped some survive. Whatever it takes to get people to prepare themselves for catastrophic disaster or more common emergency.

I am keeping my library account on notice to find the companion novel recently finished but yet to be published.

Posted in News, Paranoia, Apocalypse, Art, Review | No Comments »

There is no later, this is later

January 2nd, 2007 by prep

Cornac McCarthy, The Road

In order for you to prepare for potential futures you might face, you need to be able to imagine yourself in that future. I am not sure most of us could let our imaginations go quite that far.

Fiction might push you a lot further down that road of imagination than you intended. Cormac McCarthy’s The Road took my breath away. The stark dialogue between father and son and the stark choices they made to survive their reality make so much of what we do seem irrelevant. Yet, the love and devotion shines even in this context as the child learns to be “one of the good guys,” the ones “carrying the fire.”


Reviews

Posted in Disaster, Children, Apocalypse, Art, Stories, Review | Comments Off

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