Tuesday, June 27, 2023

What might a SHTF event look like?

 

Following a few articles in these pages over the past month on aspects of emergency preparedness, I've been exchanging e-mails and messages with a few readers who wanted to know what might precipitate a life-changing, society-changing emergency for which all our preparations would be needed.  I hastened to inform them that it was unlikely that any single event would do that.  What we're seeing all around us is a gradual, slow-motion decay that's leaching the life out of our businesses, our infrastructure, and our economy as a whole.  (See, for example, our recent discussions about competence and its absence.). This decay has been happening for several decades, and the pace appears to be accelerating.  Could it "go critical" overnight?  Yes, given a few very dangerous circumstances, but the odds are greater that it'll continue to deteriorate until enough things break down that the overall "system" simply stops working.  It collapses under the weight of its own inertia.  (Of course, if our politicians and other leaders came to their senses, things could be reversed and our problems fixed before that becomes inevitable.  If.  Insert hollow laughter here.)

There are individual, sudden, catastrophic events that might cause havoc.  In his novel "One Second After" and its sequels, author William R. Forstchen tried to describe the impact of an electromagnetic pulse strike against the USA.  He did it rather well, I think.



If such an attack were to happen (or an equivalent natural disaster such as another Carrington Event), it would almost certainly destroy this country as we know it, removing at a single stroke all electricity, all electronic communication, almost all electronic equipment, shutting down air travel and most road travel, crippling food production, and so on.  In such a scenario, survival is doubtful for most of us, no matter how well we've prepared for emergencies, because almost everyone is going to be desperate enough to attack everyone else to get what they need.  Preppers will stand out because they're clearly, visibly well equipped and not starving.  That alone will make the "haves" into targets for the "have-nots" within a very short time.  Only those living in sufficiently remote places are likely to survive that, and those in communities that come together to protect and support each other - and casualties in such communities are likely to be devastating in the medium term, even if they succeed.  (If you haven't read "One Second After", I highly recommend it.  It's very thought-provoking.)

However, most threats to our societal continuity are likely to be an accumulation of failures.  Take, for example, the recent fire that destroyed a bridge supporting I-95 in Philadelphia.  That Interstate highway is the main north-south road transportation artery along the entire east coast of the USA.  Its closure threatened delays and disruptions to the supply chain for every business and every community it served within a couple of hundred miles from the fire.  Fortunately, thanks to heroic efforts by contractors, a partial repair has reopened the highway to some traffic (about 50% of capacity, I understand), which has eased the strain:  but it'll still take much longer (months, possibly a year or more) to rebuild the road to cater for its former full capacity.  That was a major disaster that was narrowly averted . . . but what if it had not been averted?  What if traffic had remained snarled up and down the east coast for the rest of the summer and fall?  The cost in terms of delayed and missed deliveries alone would have been measured in billions of dollars.  Add to that things like train derailments, air traffic snarl-ups, delays at maritime ports, and so on (all of which have happened recently, and will undoubtedly continue to happen), and it's not hard to envision a cascading failure affecting the entire US transportation system.

Add to that:

  • Labor shortages (particularly skilled labor) that prevent companies from producing the goods and/or doing the work their customers want;
  • Supply chain shortages and logjams that prevent needed parts, medications, etc. from being available when and where they're required;
  • Weather such as storms, droughts, floods, etc. that can affect cities and towns where companies produce and/or distribute goods;
  • Soaring crime rates that force businesses to close their stores in more dangerous areas, thereby restricting the supply of essential goods and services to the general population in the area;
  • Government policy that's intended to focus on "green" energy, but in the process restricts the supply and availability, and increases the cost, of conventional fuels that are currently indispensable;
  • Dependence on government aid to survive (i.e. welfare, Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, food stamps, etc.) - if that aid is cut back, those dependent on it will not be able to survive.
Put those and other concerns together, and you have a whole host of issues that can cause major problems, particularly if they happen at the same time and/or in the same area.  It's not hard to envision a situation in which such factors combine to bring society to a standstill for an extended period.  We've seen such situations in specific areas before after extreme weather events such as Hurricane Katrina in 2005, or the Great Flood of 1993.  The effects of those natural disasters took months (in some places, years) to ameliorate.  What if such collapses became regional, rather than just local?  What if they affected several states, particularly during periods when getting aid and supplies to them became very difficult (as in, say, the northern Midwest during midwinter, when snowstorms and blizzards are often severe?)  A major earthquake, or prolonged winter storm, or coronal mass ejection (such as the Carrington Event) affecting our power supply, could induce such prolonged effects.

Finally, there are economic issues that might blow up into a major destabilizing event.  Examples:

  • Poverty in our inner cities is rampant, and there's very little anyone can do about it, because the scale of the problem has grown so large that there simply isn't enough money available to fix it.
  • Millions of illegal aliens flooding across our southern border are only escalating the problem, because they're competing for what little work is available with those already here.
  • Rising crime and deprivation are guaranteed to result, and if they grow widespread enough, they're going to provoke a backlash from those who are simply not prepared to see their safety and security threatened like that.
  • Most supermarkets and food stores have enough supplies on hand for only one or two days, relying on constant shipments to replace them as they're sold.  If those shipments are delayed or cancelled for any reason, a lot of people are going to get very hungry, very quickly - and very desperate, too.  (See "Nine Meals from Anarchy".)

Any of those factors could provoke and/or exacerbate others, so that a combination of them could easily spiral out of control.

As I said earlier, I don't think it's very likely (although it's certainly not impossible) that everything will collapse in one swell foop, and precipitate a long-term disaster.  I think it's more likely that we'll see a continuation of the slow, steady deterioration of our economy and society, as we've seen for the past couple of decades.  However, that deterioration is becoming more rapid, and more widespread.  By now it's international in scope, not just national;  Western Europe is no better off than North America.  If that trend continues, it may not be long before a combination of problems causes a rapid local or regional collapse, affecting one city or part of a city.  If that's not addressed at once, it can and will spread like a cancer.  I've seen that happen in the Third World more than once, and it'll be no different here.

Preparing for emergencies means having one's eyes open to the reality of life around us in these United States, assessing the risks that may affect us, and trying to plan ahead to deal with them.  Some things are feasible for individuals and families;  others less so, needing a team, or tribe, or clan, or other community to survive them.  The time to prepare is now, while resources are still available to do so.  By the time they aren't - or if they become too expensive to be affordable - it'll be too late to do much about it.

Of course, if you don't want to prepare, there's always this approach . . .





Peter


21 comments:

Dan said...

The Competency Crisis. What happens when systems and technology get more and more complicated but the people tasked with installing, maintaining and operating those systems and that technology get stupider and stupider.
It's playing out right before our eyes.

Michael said...

EMP and Solar Flare is the quick ones. One second after style.

My concerns about our nation like a drunk staggering down a long stairway of decline is historical (aka Rome and such) where we COULD have DONE SOMETHING here and there to arrest the fall somewhat.

I suspect that the MOBS of Rome once somewhat soothed by Bread and Circuses that led by demagogues forced Roman Senators to obey are in control right now.

SNIP:

Demagogues have appeared in democracies since ancient Athens. They exploit a fundamental weakness in democracy: because ultimate power is held by the people, it is possible for the people to give that power to someone who appeals to the lowest common denominator of a large segment of the population. Demagogues have usually advocated immediate, forceful action to address a crisis while accusing moderate and thoughtful opponents of weakness or disloyalty. Many demagogues elected to high executive office have unraveled constitutional limits on executive power and tried to convert their democracy into a dictatorship, sometimes successfully.

And demagogues often lose power when the madness of the mobs WITHOUT their Bread and Circuses run destructively amuck.

See Various "Mostly Peaceful Riots" of Gimme Dats.

9 meals to Anarchy scenario when the EBT cards FAIL to feed the Mob.

There is a REASON Our Founding Fathers ESTABLISHED a Republic Vs a Democracy. They saw the dangers of Mob Rule.

Or as Orwell said so well in 1984:

“Now I will tell you the answer to my question. It is this. The Party seeks power entirely for its own sake. We are not interested in the good of others; we are interested solely in power, pure power. What pure power means you will understand presently. We are different from the oligarchies of the past in that we know what we are doing. All the others, even those who resembled ourselves, were cowards and hypocrites. The German Nazis and the Russian Communists came very close to us in their methods, but they never had the courage to recognize their own motives. They pretended, perhaps they even believed, that they had seized power unwillingly and for a limited time, and that just around the corner there lay a paradise where human beings would be free and equal. We are not like that. We know that no one ever seizes power with the intention of relinquishing it. Power is not a means; it is an end. One does not establish a dictatorship in order to safeguard a revolution; one makes the revolution in order to establish the dictatorship. The object of persecution is persecution. The object of torture is torture. The object of power is power. Now you begin to understand me.”
― George Orwell, 1984

Protect your family and trusted friends.

Peter said...

"One Second After" and subsequent books will scare the bejesus out of you! The possibility of an EMP attack and Chinese arrival to "assist" is all too plausible. Why destroy a nation when you can come in and take over without a fight?

Anonymous said...

On the way home from work yesterday, I saw my gas gauge approaching half a tank and decided to fuel up. Not one but TWO gas stations were out of gas and had their pump handle bagged. I'll admit a bit of panic welled up, but the next gas station had me covered.

Gasoline - diesel is required for modern living. Not many people live in walking or even biking distance from their employment and even grocery stores are off in the distance. Most Mom & Pop grocery stores (vs. Stripes and similar) are still around in neighborhoods.

Couple this with hardly any monetary 'emergency' fund and you can find yourself in a heap of trouble.

Eaton Rapids Joe said...

The simple phrase "...cascading failures..." speaks volumes.

Anonymous said...

In the province I reside in we had a power emergency on june 12th. The smoke had the solar plants at near zero output and the wind was still. The previous lefty government shut down a bunch of coal plants as well, so we found ourselves in a position of having to 'shed' large industrial users to keep the grid from browning out. Work was very quite when the province shut our power feed down and all the pumps stopped.

Exile1981

Anonymous said...

I read another novel about planned terrorist strikes on a hydroelectric dam and several large capacity power stations in 3 or 4 parts of the country. It was a believable scenario, and the novel described the breakdown of supplies and power supply. It was eye-opening to realize how interconnected the grid is. One Second After was excellent.
Southern NH

Mind your own business said...

The people trying to implement the Great Reset are the kind of people who, if they are unable to rule, will burn everything down.

What they fail to appreciate is that there are those of us who, if we are unable to prevent those people from ruling, will also burn everything down. Better anarchy and chaos than let the Davos socialist crowd have access to the controls.

They are such delusional narcissists that they already think they created everything and are responsible for the successes of the civilized world. They are wrong. And now they think it is their destiny to command and control the future.

Skyler the Weird said...

Since I've been hiking at Black Mountain NC, One Minute After was very real to me. Let's hope it never happens.

Skyler the Weird said...

The 'What's Left of My World' series by C.J. Rudolph follows a similar scenario from the point of view of a family in Virginia. Fortunately Dad who is lost in D.C. when the event happened was a survivalist and taught his daughter well. In this series it wasn't Norks or Chinese that unleashed the EMP but the Woke contingent of the Fed's so it's conspiratorial.

Anonymous said...

I think the slow decline causing some sort of Mad Max scenario is fiction. I think events cannot work out that way. Here is my take on some of the underlying assumptions:

Government does not retain its ability to project force and impose policy after it destroys its tax base and means of tax collection of food and fuel for its enforcers. Logistics is reality.

The rurals are insufficiently infected with the brain computer virus of self-loathing to lie down passively and be destroyed. Urbans might obey and get on the boxcars, but not rurals.

The mostly unarmed city dwellers cannot overrun the highly armed rurals. Any march of human locusts would be met with roadblocks, encirclement, and flamethrowers.

Urban street gangs cannot overrun the highly armed rurals. Picture five carloads of a street gang with face tatoos driving up to a rural community full of people who know how to use rifles from beyond pistol range. The gangbangers will be lynched.

Government presently has the enforcement ability to prevent self-defense that would block school shootings, carjackings, home invasions, and crimes by the urban underclass. But as soon as government loses the ability to prosecute non-self-loathing persons for self-defense, those career criminals will get shot and thus stop committing crimes.

Unlike the slow decline of Rome, all the knowledge isn't being lost. See all the home machine shops. See youtube full of people doing stuff. No, there is no heavy industry steel refinishing going on in the home shop. But for the first time we have videos of biggest-in-the-world factories.

Nobody needs paper fiat currency to use for money. There are plenty of silver and gold coins around already.

Nobody needs their fiat currency savings. Wealth is in land and machinery and know-how anyway. Middle class secure retirements are fiction due to currency inflation and the baby boom. Hyperinflate the dollar and you get a debt jubilee, where mortgages and car loans and tax collection disappears. This massively helps the middle class.

I think government is destroying its own power projection capability faster than it's destroying rural lifestyle. Soon, government collapses and freedom blooms.

Magson said...

Walter Jon Williams' "The Rift" is another excellent one, in the case of that book it's the New Madrid fault popping off with the biggest earthquake ever as the opening, then the rest of the book is a possible future in the aftermath. I found it a quite fascinating book.

Sherm said...

One of the things that bothers me is what I don't know.

For example, less than an hour away a railroad bridge failed, dumping half a dozen cars into the Yellowstone River. That made the news. What no one pointed out is that failure effectively shut down rail traffic across southern Montana. I certainly didn't learn that on the news.

What is the impact of that failure locally and regionally? What other glitches, not worth mentioning, are spread across the country? Their impact?

Anonymous said...

EMP doesn't discriminate. If it makes the bottom drop out "here", then the bottom will drop out in China (directly or indirectly).
Ain't no ChiCom invasion coming to an endarkened USA

Peter said...

@Anonymous at 11:59AM: Not so. An EMP ultra-high-altitude burst will spread its effects to the visible horizon, but they'll be attenuated by distance the further you get from the explosion. A thousand miles in all directions? Sure. Two thousand? Not so much. China is far enough from the USA that an EMP burst over (say) Kansas) would not affect it very much at all.

Of course, if one major power is affected by an EMP event, we can take it as read that the surviving nuclear forces of that power will do their best to make sure that any other major power suffers the same fate...

Anonymous said...

Just imagine the vehicular bridge and railroad bridge at Baton Rouge dropping and blocking the Mississippi River...
The "Home" series by Angry American". DHS are the bad guys in that scenario. Still, very good survival info.
And for anyone who thinks most of the military are on the side of the people, I recommend "Police Battalion 101 and the Final Solution In Poland". Sobering. And I say that as one who served decades in the military. Very few make the moral decision...
I like what you write, Peter. I missed an opportunity to meet you in person in Amarillo several years ago. I hope one day I have the opportunity. I'll try not to squeal like a little girl. 🙂🙂 ;-)

Anonymous said...

Agreed. Certainly woke me up and got me prepping. It's the absolute worst case scenario. If you prep with this in mind, it effectively covers alot of lesser scenarios.

- Jonesy

lynn said...

Also take a look at "Going Home" by A. American. The protagonist is 400 ? miles away from home in Florida when three EMPs are exploded over the USA. His car is dead, all modern computer based cars are dead. He grabs his backpack and walks home in a complete disaster with many crazy things happening.
https://www.amazon.com/Going-Home-Novel-Survivalist-American/dp/0142181277/

I disagree that all modern computer based cars will be dead. Computers in cars live in a horrible electronic nightmare and are well protected against permanent harm. I suspect that most computer based cars will lock up during the EMP and will probably restart after the the EMP is over. Most of them will probably get their long term memory scrambled and go back to their initial programming that will be updated over the next 50 miles or so.

Michael said...

Even IF modern cars don't get crippled by EMP the GRID and thus the fuel pumps ARE gone. Even if you were lucky to start with a full tank just how far can you drive?

Kowing how far most folks get driving away from a Hurricane, that range might be far less than you think. Lots of freaked out people, accidents, REAL ROAD RAGE and so on.

Given how fragile hybrid cars are and the number of fires now from them and e-bikes-scooters and such I WONDER how many really exciting fires will occur thusly.

You might want to read Soviet EMP test 184

A snip:

For one of the K Project tests, Soviet scientists instrumented a 570-kilometer (350 mi) section of telephone line in the area that they expected to be affected by the pulse. The monitored telephone line was divided into sub-lines of 40 to 80 kilometres (25 to 50 mi) in length, separated by repeaters. Each sub-line was protected by fuses and by gas-filled overvoltage protectors. The EMP from the 22 October (K-3) nuclear test (also known as Test 184) blew all of the fuses and destroyed all of the overvoltage protectors in all of the sub-lines.[17]

Published reports, including a 1998 IEEE article,[17] have stated that there were significant problems with ceramic insulators on overhead electrical power lines during the tests. A 2010 technical report written for Oak Ridge National Laboratory stated that "Power line insulators were damaged, resulting in a short circuit on the line and some lines detaching from the poles and falling to the ground".[19]

Freaking power line insulators failed dropping power lines all around. Remember the Cali Forest fires? Home fires happened as even with main breakers OPEN the charge JUMPED the gap melting wiring.

The Soviets literally EMP'd one of their towns, rebuilt it, EMP'ed it again and rebuilt it.

Anonymous said...

I want to clarify that a Carrington type event is not like an EMP. An EMP is an intense pulse of electromagnetic waves caused by the Compton effect (momentum conservation) in the upper atmosphere. This would fry anything electronic that isn't shielded or hardened. On the other hand, a large geomagnetic storm is a strong in Earth's magnetic field. This can induce currents in large conductive structures like power lines and oil pipelines, causing fires and transformer explosions, potentially knocking the power grid for a long time. However, cars will still start (if you can find fuel) and electronics that weren't plugged in will still work.

Incidentally, the Sun emitted a large CME in 2012 that, if it had come our way, would have been worse than the Carrington event. https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/swe.20097

Anonymous said...

I read all those books as they came out in paperback. Also, founder of survivalblog, John Wesley Rawles, wrote some similar fiction books to one second after.