[ENER] Fiction: Rioting in Arabia & the oil stops flowing

von Koehler

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Here's a fictionalized version of today's(?) headlines.

Flavius Aetius

<b>Note from Dennis - Libertarian has started a commentary thread in the Member's Stories forum if anyone wants to comment on the story thus far.

<I>Commentary thread:</I>

http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/showthread.php?s=&threadid=99419
</b>


60 DAYS NEXT YEAR
by C. Haynes, Clearwater Florida

You'll have to excuse me, but I don't usually keep a diary.

These events began before I understood what was happening, and where it was all headed. It was only later, after it was all going on, that I thought that maybe I should be keeping some sort of record - as if no one else was. We live in The Information Age, or did. Now it'sjust The Dim Ages. Welcome to my world.

June 14- It all started (for me) with just a small item on an
Internet news page, "Trouble in the Kingdom". I thought they
were talking about Disney World (the Magic Kingdom) so I clicked on
it. Turns out they were talking about "the repercussions of
curtailed social services in Saudi Arabia". (Insert a big
yawning noise here.) So their kids don't get free day care? Big
whoop. I scanned the article for any mention of M. Mouse and then
went on with my life. My mistake. No biggie. Really.

June 15- Yesterday's headlines are still today's news? I
guess those folks in the sand are really upset about something- it
was in all the papers today. Sounds like the Saudi government is in
for a tough time trying to rein in a runaway budget- and the locals
don't like it one bit. Now their capital (Riyadh?) is a mess with
people getting ugly in the streets. Yeah, yeah, yeah, no more
subsidized housing. Deal with it, people. Get a job.

June 16- I saw the news today, oh boy. Three Saudi cities are up in
flames, people with big guns are going nuts and everyone that can
find a plane is leaving that country in one big hurry. It's like
Saigon in a sand box. (Not that I actually remember Saigon.) Local
news guys are talking about what it means to us- and our oil. Maybe
I'd better go fill up the car before everyone else does. I hate
being stuck in long lines.

June 17- Almost forgot to top off my tank. Would have forgot
completely if I hadn't heard the guy talking about it on the
radio on the drive home from work. The gas station was busy, but not
bad. Of course they'd already raised their prices. The creeps.
Some people will try to make a buck off of anything. The radio guy
said something about us sending in the Marines. Sure. Why not? How
many countries can we invade at once?

June 18- No work today, so it's grocery shopping and errands.
Good thing I topped off the car's tank yesterday. The gas station
was mobbed this morning when I drove by- and I think the price was
even higher today. Geez. Even the grocery store seemed crowded.
What's with these people. Is there a storm coming or something? I
bought what I needed and headed for home. The errands can wait. Who
needs this?

June 19- Ok, ok- I get it now. The Saudis have the oil, we buy the
oil. The Saudis get our money, we use their oil. Big circle of life.
Yadada, yadada. Huge article on it in the newspaper today, and it was
easier to stay home and read the paper than try to go out and fight
the crowds. If I'm lucky, this will all blow over before I have
to go back to that gas station and deal with it any more. I'm just
going to settle in and read the paper.

June 20- Back to work today. Kinda edgy on the drive in this morning.
What's up with that? We have Marines all around our embassy in
Riyadh now, and everyone else is bailing out of that country like
rats from a sinking ship. I guess a bunch of big companies are
shutting down and getting out. What's that going to do to the
price of gas? Nothing good, I'll bet. Glad I've got a small
car,
even if it was all I could afford. The evening news is really fixated
on this one. Maybe I watch too much TV, but what else is there?

June 21- Ok, enough already. I don't mind having to work a little
to ignore the news evenings and weekends, but now it's all my
co-workers want to talk about. Please. There must be something else
to talk about. Sure, it's a big deal- on the other side of the
world. But we're over here. What's the problem, people?
Don't we
have our own gas? Why is this such a major deal? Suck it up, folks.
Get on with your life! (And stop bugging me about it. I don't
care.) Ugh.

June 22- Oh, fun, fun, fun. Saudi Arabia is mostly on fire, I think.
Something about their "port facilities and oil storage areas"
being sabotaged yesterday. The oil tankers that were in port all
left, some with oil, but most without. The US embassy in Riyadh was
shut down yesterday as well, with the last one out bringing the flag,
as they say. It was a little annoying to see the news footage of the
locals dancing in the streets over that. (And let me tell you: They
can't dance.) By the way, where do all those bullets go when they
fire those guns in the air? Isn't that kind of dangerous?

June 23- I had to laugh over the evening news tonight: They were
actually tracking "the last oil tankers to leave Saudi
Arabia". Where they were, how much oil they had, and when
they'd get
where they were going. Not all of them were headed for us, but ours
had the longest trip to make. Forty-five days? Something like that.
There wasn't much news about the Saudis, and I guess that's a
good thing. I've heard too much already. And the price of gas
keeps going up, of course. I've still got over half a tank, so I'm
doing ok. I'd say I feel bad for people with big cars and SUV's,
but hey- They bought `em! Ha!

June 24- Weird drive in to work today- saw cop cars at the local gas
station. Did they get held up so early in the morning? The lines at
the gas station are longer now, and of course do I even have to tell
you the price is still going up? Maybe someone got mad and they
called the cops on them. I'm going to avoid the gas station for
as long as I can. I've still got plenty of gas, and all I need to
do is get to work and back. I think I'll spend my days off not
driving, though- just in case. Time to dig out the sneakers. Sure
glad this is June- and not December!

(I have added the rest of the essay, as a "seed story" - Dennis)

June 25
I gave that walking thing a shot today. Made it all the way to the grocery store, but had a miserable time hauling the groceries back home. Those thin little plastic bags were not meant for that. Next time, I'm driving! With any luck at all this will all be a dull, throbbing memory by the time I have to go back to the store (next week). Found out about the cop cars at the gas station, though: some guy tried to cut in line and got beat up. Whoopsie! His bad! Bet he won't do that again!

June 26
Gas rationing? What's that? Now there's only special days I can go to the gas station? Good grief. Even numbered tags on even days, odd numbered tags on odd days? How silly is that? One more annoyance. Do they really expect this to be a problem? Well, any more of a problem than it already is? I am so over this. Still, if I do this right, I can go another week or so before I have to play that stupid reindeer game at the gas station.

June 27
AAARRRGGGHHHH!!!! Somebody stole my gas!!! I went out to get in the car to go to work this morning, and someone had pried the little flap off the side of the car to get to the filler cap (which, by the way, is long gone). I had less than a quarter tank of gas left. Drove to work anyway, but it stunk. Why does gas have to smell so bad, anyway? Made it to work and back, but I was in no mood to be trifled with today. No gas in my car? This is serious. And now I need to get a gas cap before I fill up the tank--AND fix the stupid bent flap.

June 28
I stopped on the way home from work last night and got a locking gas cap. (The last one they had, apparently.) Spent almost half an hour in line at the gas station. (Lucky me--it was my special day!) Spent entirely too much to fill the tank, but that should keep me until this mess settles down. Backed the car in to the driveway so the filler cap faces the window. Like that might help. I hope whoever stole my gas got sick on it.

June 29
You're not going to believe this one: I watched a gasoline tanker going through town with a line of cars following it! Can you believe that? Come to think of it, I think some of the smaller family-owned gas stations are closed now. So maybe following that truck wasn't such a bad idea after all. I wonder where he was headed?

June 30
So the news is that there's no news? Something like that. The Saudis ran all the reporters out of Saudi Arabia. Bad influence, I guess. Makes it tough for them to report the news when no one knows what's going on--not that they let that stop them. Plenty to talk about over here: Gas rationing, long lines and the price of gas is almost double what it was a month ago. It's going to be a long, hot summer. At least I have the Fourth of July off. Big fat whoop-de-do. Hand me a sparkler and stand back.

July 1
An almost normal day, if you don't count having to drive around long lines at every gas station just to get to work and back. And the fact that every gas station now has armed security guards at it, just in case. Ah, well--it least it looks safer, and there's less hassle. I should be able to get through the week without having to fill up. Next week? I may have to face those long lines myself. Not looking forward to it.

July 2
Ok, so I finally wised up and dragged my old bicycle out of storage. The tires were flat, flat, flat--but I found the foot pump and about broke my ankle trying to get some air in those tires. Pedaled the bike to the grocery store. It worked better than walking, but those little plastic bags had to go. Bought a bunch of cloth grocery bags. I can reuse them. Much more better good.

July 3
Spent the morning reading the newspaper, and the afternoon riding my bicycle. Didn't get every far, but I'm getting use to it. Made it to the grocery store yesterday and went out and had lunch on my bike today. Could this be the way to avoid those long gas lines? Any day I don't have to face the insanity at the gas station is a good day. (Time--and money--saved!) I need to get a street map. There's got to be more back streets around here. Bicycling on the main drag is, well, a drag.

July 4
Independence Day! Mostly fun, right up to the end. Then I screwed up and drove out to see the fireworks. Big mistake. In the middle of all the "oooohs" and "aaaahs", some creep stole my license plate off the back of the car! I drove home minus the plate, hoping no cops would pull me over. So far, so good (made it home). Called the cop shop from home, and they said there'd been a lot of that lately--people stealing an extra plate so they could fill up any day they wanted. Man, that's annoying!

July 5
I now know just exactly what the last straw actually looks like: It looks like a dark stain that runs out from underneath your car. My car, specifically. In the midst of all the neighborhood fireworks late last night, someone (the same one?) came back to steal more gas from my car. They pried the little flap thing off again, but found that new locking gas cap. Did that stop them? It did not. They got under the car- and cut the fuel line!!! They got every last drop this time--and now I've got a car with no tag and no gas! How am I going to get to work tomorrow? Oh bother.

July 6
I'm going to call this my belated Independence Day. I called in to work and took a sick day today, then I pedaled my bicycle downtown to the bike shop. Bought a basket and some lights- and a big honking bike lock. (Trust no one.) The car can sit and rot for all I care. I've just about had it with that stupid car. From what little I've ridden my bike around town, I think I can make it in to work. Screw the health club.

July 7
IT WORKED!!! I actually pedaled my bicycle in to work today! It was scary, but it took less than an hour. My co-workers now think I'm a complete freak, but that's ok. I had a tough time not laughing as I rode past the long lines at the gas station this morning. So long, suckers! Not sure what I'm going to do when it rains, though. Get wet, I guess. Still, it felt good.

July 8
Got chased by a dog last night on my way home. Note to self: Bring the pepper spray tomorrow. Need to get gloves, too. My hands are taking a beating. Still, with those long lines at the gas station, this has got to be better, and I'm saving money left and right. According to the news guys, those last oil tankers from Saudi Arabia are still not halfway here yet, but who cares? No news at all out of Saudi Arabia these days, but apparently what ever happened there is rubbing off on the other countries around it--and they're all going down the tubes as well. Serves 'em right. Who needs them?

July 9
Whoever stole my tag has their work cut out for them: Gas rationing just went to once a week instead of every other day! Our local bus service is falling apart from the price of fuel, and now the school board says no busing at all when school starts next Fall! (Wanna buy a big yellow bus--cheap?) I see on the news that truckers are livid, and the Auto Club says for people to stay off the highways and not make the truckers any madder than they already are. Of course the airlines are crying the blues as well. How much longer before they just stop flying? Glad I don't have to go anywhere.

July 10
A slight change in my day-off routine today: Bike shop first, then the grocery shopping. Bought those fingerless "bicycling gloves." What a difference! Also looked at new bikes, but I'll wait. This old one works just fine for now. A lot less produce in the store today. They were out of some other stuff, too. That was odd. By the way, my low-carb diet is history. With all of this bicycling and walking, I'm really craving those carbs. Sorry, Doctor A., but I need lotsa pasta!

July 11
A good day to just sit and read. What would you like to know? This whole mess started when the Saudis cut their social services. They cut social services to make World Bank loan payments. Bad choice--the locals revolted and shut them down completely. They had to make that bad choice because they are running out of oil to pump and sell. Everyone is. The good news is that we can supply about a third of what we need domestically. The bad news is, we just lost that other two-thirds permanently. So much for this being a short-term problem. Maybe I'll buy that new bike. The long term problem isn't transportation, though--it's agriculture. Some people say our food supplies are going to drop dramatically. Makes me hungry just thinking about it. What's for dinner?

July 12
Woke up this morning to the gentle sound of rain. RAIN?? How was I going to get to work on a bicycle in the rain? I took a cab. After work, I took a cab to the bicycle shop and bought a rain poncho thingy. Walked home from there. (Had dinner on the way.) Made up a "For Sale" sign and stuck it on the dashboard of my used-to-be-a-car. I'll save a bundle when I cancel the insurance and stop making those car payments. Enough for a really nice bike. Hope the rain stops.

July 13
Still wet out there, but I rode to work anyway. The poncho worked, but it's a good thing that old bike has fenders! People are starting to get grim about this no-oil thing. It's been almost a month now, and it's sinking in: This is what life's going to be like for a long, long time. I'm one of the lucky ones: I can ride my bike to work. Even the car-pools are starting to run dry and fall apart. So are the buses. It's fast becoming every poor fool for themselves, and I don't like the sound of that.

July 14
Brought in an extra change of clothes to work, just in case. Plus a hair dryer. "Be Prepared" is my new motto, replacing, "Whatever". "Whatever" went right out the window when the gas got tight. Now I have to plan ahead for everything. I've got a vacation coming up, but where would I go? And how would I get there? (And more importantly: Could I get back??) "Why not stay home?" is my other motto. Makes life so much easier that way. I've become quite the homebody.

July 15
I keep looking at my poor old car and wondering what to do about it. I'm still making car payments and insurance payments on a lump of dead metal. Not one person has called about it. No surprise there, I guess. I keep watching the TV news, and it just keeps getting worse. Domestic manufacturing--what there was of it--is slowly shutting down for lack of fuel. The people being laid off are losing their cars and homes since they can't keep making the payments. There's rumor of work out in the country, but who wants to be farm labor? What's cotton picking pay, anyway?

July 16
Scary stuff today: Lay offs at work. I dodged the bullet, but some of my friends are history. What will they do? Move out of town and work on a farm? HA! They wouldn't know which end of a horse to milk. No offers on the car, but someone did try to buy my bike today as I rode in to work. I think they really wanted me to stop so they could steal it. Very disturbing. I'm keeping the pepper spray close at hand from now on.

July 17
A good day off! A friend came over last night and fixed the broken fuel line in the car. (A free dinner works wonders.) I scrounged a gallon of gas from a neighbor's lawn mower can this morning (and made them take money for it). Drove the car out to the dealer and sold it back to them. Got enough to cover the outstanding car loan and a cab ride home, plus a little extra. (My New Bicycle Fund?) I was lucky. I'm starting to see abandoned cars all over town. The city can't tow them all--where would they put them? I am now officially Car Free--for the first time since my 16th birthday. It feels odd, but I think it feels good. So far.

July 18
With all it took to sell the car yesterday, I'm doing my grocery shopping today. And I see now where the new employment opportunities lie: Armed security. They actually had them in the grocery store! (Apparently there had been some unpleasantness.) They still had food, but I have to tell you: there were some blank spots on those shelves. The produce was mighty skimpy, as was the meat selection, and there was almost no milk. What am I going to put on my cereal in the morning? May have to switch to toast. Oh, the sacrifices we make. The good news: Between the bicycling, walking, and this new (forced) diet, I am now officially in shape! Still, armed guards in the grocery store?

July 19
It's been over a month now since it all hit the fan, I'm starting to see some benefits to all of my hard work and sacrifice: Fewer people are managing to make it in to work at their regular times--or at all. I'm one of the lucky ones, which means I get to stay. Even my boss has been asking about my bicycling. Instant Expert, that's me! (And to think I almost sold the thing to make room. Whew. Lucky me.) I am seeing more bikes out on the road these days--and in the office, too. I'm such a trendy trend setter!

July 20
I no longer wonder where those stupid oil tankers are. They can sink for all I care (and take the Saudis down with them). I'm not going to see any of that oil, nor do I need it. The price of gas keeps going up--on beyond Zebra, so to speak. Who can afford to fill up their gas tank? The lines are still long at the gas station, and more people are going armed. (!!!) I've got my pepper spray, but I have yet to really use it. Got a call from my parents in Florida last night. They're laughing about the whole thing. Apparently they just drive their electric golf cart everywhere they need to go. Now why didn't I think of that? Oh, yeah: I don't have an electric golf cart. Very funny, Mom.

July 21
The car dealers are just barely hanging on--selling only the smallest cars they have and giving just about zip for any larger trade-in. The real money makers right now are real estate agents--putting people in houses closer to work! (Whooda thunk it?) It's like a giant shell game all over town, with everyone trying to move closer to work. I'm ok where I am--I've got my daily pedal down to about thirty minutes. Not bad, for a newbie. Now if I could just figure out the best way to ride out to a movie theater.

July 22
The President was on TV last night--FINALLY--to tell everyone what we already knew: That this oil crisis isn't going away. (The oil will, the crisis won't.) He was about as reassuring as he could be, but didn't really offer any great tips for surviving. (Like, hey--RIDE A BIKE!) I guess that would have been a blow to the auto industry. What's left of it, anyway. Maybe he would have done more if this had been an election year? (But what, exactly?)

July 23
I had to treat myself to a night out tonight. Went out to dinner and a movie. The bicycle lights worked well, but the ushers at the theater had to look through my backpack to make sure I wasn't smuggling in a bunch of food. Yeah, right. Like I'm going to pass up that over-priced stale movie theater popcorn. The late-night pedal home was surprisingly relaxing. The moon helped. (Well, that and a lot less cars on the roads these days.) Even the folks at the theater seemed friendlier--I guess they appreciated my business. With the money I'm saving not having a car, this might be a more regular event!

July 24
Day off day already? I got my grocery shopping done early and just went for a bike ride. No reason, no destination. Ended up on the far side of town, and that was not a good thing. Looks like some neighborhoods have suffered more than others. (Or was this side of town always that bad?) Saw some burned out stores that never made the evening news. Note to self: Ride someplace else next time. A quiet evening at home is in order, I think. What's on TV? I'll watch anything but the news.

July 25
Ok, bad news, good news: Bad news, I got a flat. But good news: I don't have to go to work today, so I have all day to fix it. I got out the patch kit I bought at the bike shop awhile back, and skinned a knuckle getting that front wheel off. Must have cut the tire on my adventure yesterday. (We'll have no more of that.) Managed to make a real mess on the kitchen table, but the tire held air--on the second try. Note to self: Buy a better pump. That ankle-biter of a foot pump has to go!

July 26
So now it's the electricity? The latest casualty in this on-going oil thing is our electrical power. Between the actual oil-fired power plants and not having the diesel fuel to dig out the coal, we're now being told to expect "rolling blackouts". I was going ask what that was--until one hit at work today and trashed my computer. How about a little warning, there, Spanky? If this keeps up, we've been told to expect to have to work "flexible hours"--depending on when we'll have power at work. And now there's no guarantee I'll have power when I get home, either. How joyous.

July 27
So here's a clue, just in case you were wondering: When the power goes out (without warning, I might add) IT TAKES THE TRAFFIC LIGHTS WITH IT!!! Man, it's a good thing I can ride my bike on the sidewalk! My ride in to work today became an odd dance with disaster: pedal up to an intersection, wait for an accident to snarl traffic, then pedal around the accident and off to the next intersection/accident. Lather, rinse, repeat. Here's hoping the power goes back on out there before I head back for home!

July 28
Be careful what you wish for. I had power all the way home--all the traffic lights worked--but no power at home! So how do you cook with no power? Bar-B-Que! It worked out pretty good, but took longer, of course. I'd better buy some more charcoal, just in case. Maybe start a little woodpile? Why not? I'm starting to be crafty about this. What do you suppose will go bad next? And how will I get around it?

July 29
What did I just say? No power for the traffic lights this morning--and then it started to rain! Hahahahaha!!! And I STILL made it in to work before anyone else! One of my co-workers was involved in a traffic accident this morning (what with no traffic lights and all), so the boss had to head off to the hospital. Hope they're both ok. I'm starting to see more bums and beggars out there--a new breed of "Nouveau Poor" as a result of this oil crisis costing people their jobs. My luck is holding out so far, but there's a lot of scary people out there these days.

July 30
That less power thing is getting serious. Now we're supposed to cut our electrical use IN HALF? Yipe! How am I going to do that? I've started by turning off all the lights and stuff that I could--even unplugging the computer when it's off. Is that good for it? We're running low lights at the office now. Nice, but dangerous. Lower lights in the work place might make for a higher divorce rate at home. Well, not for me, but for some. Funny how electricity and oil are so closely tied. Never thought of that before.

July 31
I bought a bunch of lower-wattage bulbs for around the house. Part of that "lower your electrical use" thing. Will this really help? Only if everyone else does the same thing. Tough to test them when the power's out, though. Went for a walk this afternoon, just to give the bike a rest. Lunch in the park wasn't so bad, now that there's so much less traffic around the park! Power was back on when I got home. Whoopie.

August 1
Big Adventure Day! Phoned up a friend I hadn't seen in over a month, and we decided to pedal out to meet each other half way. (They live about 30 miles away.) It took me about an hour and a half to ride over to the restaurant where we meet. They took a bit longer--or maybe they left home later. It was good to see them, but odd that a meeting that was so normal not long ago is now such a big deal now. We compared notes--everything's about the same all over. Life has changed, no doubt about it.

August 2
BAD ride in to work today. Some guy lunged out at me downtown, waving his arms and yelling. Was he drunk? Crazy? Or just trying to steal my bike? I hosed him down with the pepper spray and pedaled like mad--never looked back. I was frantic by the time I got to work, but at least we had power. Maybe we need to bike pool? Note to self: Buy more pepper spray. A lot more. Now.

August 3
The first of the last of the oil tankers from the Middle East are starting to arrive in North America. Since those will most likely be the very last--EVER--it is not cause for celebration. Some are only about half full. (Or half empty, your call.) We're on our own now, but so is everyone else. I've stopped looking at the price of gas--it doesn't matter anymore. At least the power is going off less--and I'm seeing a lot more bicyclists out there on the roads these days. (Hard to believe that I'm one, too!)

August 4
I tried something different this evening: I did a bit of mid-week grocery shopping. Swung by the store on the way home from work. That seem to work ok, and I didn't need to carry so much at once. Produce, meat, and dairy is still kind of iffy, so I'm learning to adapt. Also having to buy more raw food and less processed stuff--so I'm actually having to learn to COOK! One big plus: With all of this walking and bicycling, I can eat just about anything. Diets? We don't need no stinking diets!

August 5
Sat in the dark and watched TV. Big special show on how the Amish have managed for years without oil or electricity. (Sure glad they let those TV crews in!) I picked up a few good tips, but I'll keep my multi-colored wardrobe for now. And after watching that show, I'm thankful I don't have to deal with horses. (Bicycles are so much cleaner.) Went for a late-night walk just to relax. Mighty quiet out there. And dark.

August 6
Several people at work are talking about bailing and heading south. They don't want to have to face winter here. Never thought about that. Can I ride my bike year around here? That might be tough. I need to make some choices. Should I move closer to work? Get a job closer to my house? Or bail and go south? Mom says I could come to Florida, but what would I do there? If everybody goes south, will I stand a better chance of making it here? Or will "here" close down completely? Ugh.

August 7
Tough day off. Just wandered around and looked at how many local businesses were closed. Fewer cars, fewer people, and a lot less money being spent anywhere. Even some restaurants are closing for the lack of both food and customers. We've started down a slippery slope. Is there any way back? My job's good for now, so I'd better make sure I keep it. I guess, if worse comes to worse, I could always pedal my bicycle to Florida. HA! How long would THAT take??

August 8
Publicly, most folks are putting on a happy face and a determined act. Elected officials see this mess as a "great opportunity". Yeah, right. Are you riding a bicycle to work, buddy? I didn't think so. (The President has it made--he lives right over the Oval Office!) How many people are out of work now? Too many, that's for sure. What are they going to do? Unemployment can't cover everyone if everyone's out of work. Farms are hiring, but how will the migrant workers get around? It's the heat of summer here right now, but I can already see it's going to be a long, hard winter. I wonder if Mom really does have any room down there? I'm going to need a better bike.

August 9
Looks like a bunch of people did bail over the weekend. No need for lay offs when people just run screaming into the night. I wonder where they went? I'll keep plugging away here, but I can see that I may want to have a Plan B ready--just in case. We still have work--and can still do our job, so I'll hang on here for now. What would I do in Florida? What does anyone do in Florida? Right now, keeping my job is Job One. Keeping informed is Job Two. "Let's make Plan B" is Job Three. You never know.

August 10
Sounds like Venezuela just went down the tubes over the weekend. A huge work stoppage/revolution shut down what was left of their oil industry. We got most of our imported oil from them. With the fall of Saudi Arabia, you can make that "almost all" of our imported oil. But not no more. We are truly on our own. The auto industry is scrambling to find anything Americans might want to buy, while people like me are just happy to see a gallon of milk in the grocery store. I bought some maps last night. Can I get to Florida without having to go through the mountains?

August 11
Ok, work has now become a means to an end. I'll slug it out at work and bank as much money as I can. Spend nothing. Well, spend enough for a better bike, maybe. Work through the winter--if I can make it through the winter here--and try for Florida next Spring. I'm buying heavy winter camping gear now, in case the power keeps going off in the dead of winter. Not looking forward to that. How many people will die from the lack of oil? It's going to be brutal. I think I'll go out and soak up some rays while I can. Sure hope Fall holds off a bit--and takes Winter with it.

August 12
It's been almost two months since I read that first article about the Saudis and their problems. My life has changed totally in the last 60 days, and little of it for the good. (But I'm in great shape, Mom!) Although I still have work while so many don't, I'm still planning on saving my money, and maybe heading south next year. This last oil crunch isn't going away. This is it--our future with not much: not much oil, not much gas, not much food, not much power. The Dim Ages. Welcome to my world.


www.newcolonist.com/dim_ages.html

www.newcolonist.com/ghawar.html

(Thread title changed to better reflect the storyline - Dennis)
 

von Koehler

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Just to show that the truth is stranger then fiction:

http://www.timesofoman.com/newsdetails.asp?newsid=56016

Wednesday, May 05, 2004

AGCC signs pact to fight terrorism

KUWAIT CITY - Interior ministers of the Arab Gulf states signed here
yesterday a counter-terrorism pact calling for concerted efforts to
confront terror.

Abdulrahman Attiyah, secretary-general of the six-nation Arab Gulf
Cooperation Council (AGCC), described the accord as the "most
important" since the AGCC was formed in 1981....

A state of lawlessness in Iraq is adversely affecting the security
of the AGCC states, which requires taking security measures and
boosting the monitoring of borders to prevent infiltrators, Attiyah
said as the ministers met. The signing of the pact "reflects the
determination to combat terror in all forms and shapes ... to
safeguard AGCC security and stability," Attiyah said.

Saudi Interior Minister Prince Nayef bin Abdulaziz warned that the
region could plunge into "complete chaos," as a result
of "political, practical and media campaigns" since the September
11, 2001 attacks in the United States.
 

A.T.Hagan

Inactive
Just had to get it out of my head before it drove me crazy.


North-Central Florida

August 14th, 2005 - Sunday.

Woke up with the sun this morning. It's cooler at dawn which makes it easier to get breakfast ready. Power's out again. Four coal fired power plants and the largest nuclear reactor in the Southeastern United States sixty miles away and we are down to every-other-day power and sometimes not even that. This sucks.

The little make shift cooking area I built on the carport is working alright. It's under a roof so I don't get rained on, stands up high enough that I don't have to squat, and since I don't need it for heat (in August?) I can keep the fire small which also uses less wood. This lets me conserve the LPG for as long as possible because come the winter we're going to need it if the power keeps going up and down and I can't come up with someway to safely use wood heat in the house. Coffee's on and biscuits in the Dutch oven. Gonna have to make bread today for supper tonight. Would like to get some fruit out of the freezer, but don't want to open it until the power comes back on. So far we haven't had a three day power outage so we haven't lost the frozen food, but it may come to that. Haven't put anything new in there in a month and don't plan to. It's either canned or dried now. Another week or two and the freezer will be empty.

Another day in the heat pounding that sand point deeper but it'll beat no water at all if the power goes off and never comes back on.

August 15th, 2005 - Monday.

Called work at 8:00 a.m. No answer. Called at 9:00 and got the boss. She said don't bother to come in - the power's off again and she was only there to pick up some files. How long has it been since anyone constructed a commercial building in Florida that was habitable without electricity? None of the windows can be opened so by 10:00 a.m. the place is stifling hot and without power half of everything we need to do can't get done - assuming you could see to do anything. She said G.R.U. promises they'll have power on tomorrow and that they are getting regular coal deliveries again so expect to be able to stay up for longer periods now.

Of course, with once a week gas rationing and paying $5.26 a gallon I'm not sure how much longer we're going to be able to make it in to work any how.

August 16th, 2005 - Tuesday.

Power's on at the house and at work. Took a luxuriant HOT shower and filled all the barrels and jugs. Took the child into school and we made it to work. Spent half the day trying to recover files lost in the server crash. I.T. says leaving the servers sitting in hot, humid rooms when the power is off is what is causing the flakiness.

Got home to discover someone had broken into the workshop. Thank God Bill next door saw them and managed to run them off so we didn't lose anything. We spent some time discussing this with Marsha and Bruce, our other neighbors. Bill and Marsha are home full time and they agreed to watch over all of our places and the rest of us agreed to help them out with their necessary shopping since they're really having a hard time getting into town now.

August 17th, 2005 - Wednesday.

Dropped the child off at school this morning and got a note stating the YMCA is being forced to cancel their after school program for lack of funding. In ten days they're shutting down. This is a problem.

Heads up at work to expect lay offs. It just gets better and better.

August 18th, 2005 - Thursday.

Vicky told me she was laid off today which is bad news because Geoff can't support them on his salary alone the way things are going. Geoff has a higher priority ration card than any of us so a light bulb went off in my head. D.J. and I talked it over at lunch and broached the idea with them when we got together after work. It's gonna be mighty tight, but they've agreed to move in with us. We'll be cheek-to-jowl in our little house, but I feel better about this that someone will be at home all the time now and with Geoff's higher ration priority we'll still be able to get to work. He has to go right past our work on the way to his job so he can just drop us off. He'll drive my truck as it gets the best mileage.

August 19th, 2005 - Friday.

Well, it may not have been Armageddon, but it was close enough. Got laid off today. In fact, the entire office was laid off. Non-essential we were told. Surprisingly, they paid us off in cash which came to a nice sum since I had so much accumulated leave time. Spent the rest of the day spending it. Damn dollar is plummeting so fast you can just about see it evaporate in your hand. Tools mostly, some consumable supplies. Including good leather work gloves - twelve pairs. I suspect I'll be needing them all by and by.

Guess we have the answer to the after school care problem now. Geoff and D.J. will drop her off on their way in to work and I'll ride the bike into town and get her. Only eight miles or so to the school so it shouldn't be too awful bad - except when it rains. Which it does an awful lot of on August afternoons. Oh, and bought the only three spare bike tires I could find and four tubes. Six weeks pay - more or less - and it sure didn't buy enough stuff to fill up my little truck.

August 20th, 2005 - Saturday.

Power was off all day to day and it's hotter than Hell. Spent most of the day moving Geoff's and Vicky's stuff. A lot of it we'll eventually have to toss, but for now we'll suffer along with the crowding as it's been a tough enough day for them as it is. He and I spent the early evening discussing ways to improve our non-powered cooking situation. Cathy is delighted Vicky will be at home for her to play with.

August 21st, 2005 - Sunday.

Hotter than blazing Hell today. Riots in Miami. Governor sent in the Guard and they shot up a bunch of people from the sounds of it when things got out of hand. Now things are very calm. Too calm. It's a long way to Miami from here and I'm glad of it. Heat's making 'em crazy in D.C. too as the radio says they're having rioting problems there as well.

Spent all but the hottest part of the day expanding the garden for this Fall. The girls raked mulch while I ran the rototiller and Geoff raked it out.

August 22nd, 2005 - Monday.

Some days are ever so much more than others. Felt really strange to see D.J. drive off with Geoff to go to work while I stayed home with the child and Vicky. Radio said there had been shots fired in downtown Gainesville, but no one was apprehended nor did they say why they were fired. Geoff and I talked it over and we put two guns in the truck.

Power seems to be staying on more reliably which is good. Of course, a joker slipped out of the deck with it. Radio announced today the governor has mandated there will be no use of home air-conditioning unless there is a medical necessity for which you must apply for an exemption and prove the necessity. The first offense for being caught will be a hefty fine, the second time they turn your power off. I'm sure that'll go down swell with a lot of folks. Won't affect us much in that regard. The cost of power has gotten so damn high we weren't running it anyway.

Hit water with the sand point at twelve feet. Think I'll take it down another ten and call it good enough. If the water drops below that the pitcher pump wouldn't be able to bring it up anyway. God, I hope it doesn't go that low or we'll have to abandon DunHagan.

August 23rd, 2005 - Tuesday.

Good rain today which we needed. Of course the humidity went sky high and there was absolutely no way to cool off so we all went out and stood in the rain to get some relief. All Hell is breaking loose in Miami now. Federal troops coming down from Fort Stewart - what they could scrape up anyway. The Governor has declared a State of Emergency and wants the President to do the same. No word on whether he'll do that or not. The D.C. riots have spread to Baltimore and Atlanta, but news reports claim local Guard forces will have them under control soon. No sure word on casualties, but apparently they aren't being real shy about the use of force.

August 24th, 2005 - Wednesday.

Geoff said someone tried to carjack a woman in a car right in front of him in Gainesville today. The woman was by herself driving a Mercedes when three men ran out of a hedge to her car. I'll say one thing, that woman was no fool. Her windows were down (who can afford to run air conditioning?), but her doors were locked and when the first fella touched her door handle she put a bullet through his navel right then and there. The other two seem to have decided her gas was too expensive and ran off. He said they drove the rest of the way to work with their pistols under their thighs.

August 25th, 2005 - Thursday.

Still too damn hot, but with two adults home we're really getting the garden in terrific shape, a nice supply of wood gathered up, and no one has tried to break into anything. Two Middle Eastern students at the University were killed today. Radio said some guy just walked right up to them were they were sitting at a sidewalk table at one of them restaurants downtown and shot them both dead. One was from Bangladesh and the other was Pakistani - both medical students. The shooter ran off and hasn't been apprehended yet. D.J. said situation at work is really tense. They ran out of copy paper today. Office supply deliveries have become very erratic.

August 26th, 2005 - Friday.

Earthquake in California today some place near to L.A. Didn't sound all that bad, but it did do some damage. Taking a long time to get in and put out the fires and rescue the injured because of the idiots shooting at the emergency workers. Manpower shortage in the law-enforcement agencies due to cutbacks is slowing down the whole thing. Supposed to go over a hundred in Southern California again today.

August 27th, 2005 - Saturday.

Another good rain today. Grapes are coming in and the pears are starting. The persimmons are looking fine. Got the early Fall stuff seeded into the vegetable garden. Expect to see the first of it coming up late next week. Geoff caught one of those g.d. coons with a snare. We're eating him for supper tonight. Geoff's peeling oak bark off the fire wood and is going to boil it down for tannin. Wants to try his hand at curing the pelt, sorry looking as it is for this time of year.

August 28th, 2005 - Sunday

Dam broke in L.A. today. Seems that quake messed up some of the water distribution in the southern part of the city. Damned idiots shooting at the crews trying to repair the damage until they refused to go into those areas. Now they have very little water and it went over 100 again there today. Riot started over somebody apparently selling water at an inflated price. Wasn't clear, but it sounded like a gang or something came in and shot up the water seller and his bodyguards. Must have got pretty wild there because the LAPD called for reinforcements, the mayor called on the governor and the governor sent in an armored unit of some sort. Can't tell what happened after that other than a lot of people reported cannon fire, only part of the unit made it out again and a big chunk of south central L.A. is in flames now The mayor wants the governor to ask the president for federal troops.

Couple of looters shot dead in Miami. Entire city under lockdown.

August 29th, 2005 - Monday.

Carjackers knocked off a mini-van going into Gainesville this morning. Killed a mother and a twelve year old boy. Father is in critical condition. Infant child was in car seat when they took off with the car - present whereabouts unknown. Sheriff says he hasn't got enough man-power and wants the governor to send in Guard troops to patrol roads. State Guard commander says nearly all the deployable Guard troops in Florida are now in Southern Florida trying to keep the place from turning into a war zone and the troops and fuel he has left cannot be spared for patrolling rural county roads.

Geoff got to talking with some fellas at the gas station (lots of time to talk with those lines) and they're going to start convoying up. They'll meet at the end of the county road each morning and drive in together. Do the same thing at night - meet up in Gainesville and drive home together. Spent some time with D.J, and Vicky tonight on handgun and shotgun use. Home invasion last night in Archer. Elderly woman was killed, no one sure what may have been stolen, but her car was gone.

August 30th, 2005 - Tuesday.

Carjackers got another one today. They didn't get off unscathed - the man driving the car apparently shot two, but they killed him and his wife. Geoff says they were six vehicles strong in the morning convoy run and ten strong coming home and expects there to be more tomorrow. Weather was fairly cool for this time of the year so we had a neighborhood meeting. Bruce is going to start blocking the road with his big stock trailer every night. With six people pushing we can move it back and forth to get it out of the way. Predators can still get in on foot, but they won't just drive in. Everyone sleeps with their windows open so we can hear if there's trouble some place. Bruce put one of his dogs in the stock trailer as an alarm if anyone comes down the road at night.

Another home invasion in Archer, but this time it came out differently. Six local bad boys broke in an elderly couple's home. The old man shoved his wife in the bathroom as they were breaking in his front door. They made it into his bedroom and he killed two with his old bird gun. Killed a third on the way out as they were trying to get away. Sheriff says he's going to start offering home-owners firearms courses. Local loud mouths in Gainesville raised a stink and the sheriff came right out and told them to go to Hell - or Miami, whichever they may choose. May not be much difference now. Citizen militias forming in Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach counties..

August 31st - Wednesday

Massive detonation in the Washington D.C. area at 7:36 a.m. Supposed to have happened somewhere west of the Capitol. Oh God, Jody was probably taking the kids to school just then and may have been in the blast area. Government shut off all news broadcasts from the area within minutes so now rumors are running wild.. Power failed here at 9:35. Geoff and D.J. came home just before noon - said the power went off there about the same time it did here. Some idiot set off an air-raid siren in Gainesville and has scared half the town to death. Radio says people acting crazy. Sounds of gun fire coming from down town. Sheriff has laid down a dusk-to-dawn curfew and anyone moving after dark will be arrested. Six o'clock news from Gainesville didn't come one, just music. Bruce said the television news didn't come on either, just reruns. Bill said the satellite radio in his car isn't picking up any signals.

D.J. said she missed her period. She's always been regular as a clock.

Geoff led the family in prayer tonight.
 

Tessa Blue

Veteran Member
Ooooh, very cool, Alan!

Yours is a bit... grittier than C. Haynes' diary. I quite like it, and it seems more realistic. "Damn dollar is plummeting so fast you can just about see it evaporate in your hand." Very visual!

:)

Tessa Blue
 

Dennis Olson

Chief Curmudgeon
_______________
Ooh! Do I sense another "round-robin" story thread starting up? I love those! Come on everyone, another chance to show yer writing prowess! This time, it looks like a "daily journal" style of story. Kewl.

Topic is what happens to American society when the oil stops, as told on a personal scale.

Let's roll!
 

Dennis Olson

Chief Curmudgeon
_______________
Let me get one in:

Sept 1st, 2005:

Found out that the reason we all seem to be in such a mess is that the rest of the Middle East oil producers have stopped supplying the US. We were told that al Qaeda has them believeing that America was responsible for the demolition of the Dome of the Rock, their holiest shrine. So now, we get nothing from them. Add to that the fact that Mexico stopped supplying us with oil two months ago, unless we totally open the border to their citizens. Our government refused, but only after a major nationwide surge of civic unrest at that proposal.

So I guess we only have the oil that we can get from our own national resources. The radio said last week that oil drilling is commencing all over North America, but it will take at least a year before any of those might even produce the first drops. My thought is that we won't HAVE a society left in a year. The enviro-nuts tried to pickett yesterday over oil drilling but were gunned down by a group in 4wd's. So far, the investigation is going nowhere, as nobody will give up any information on who was in that group.
 
Most excellent- keep it coming. It will help us think thru various situations and we can all plan accordingly. Good info and wonderful entertainment for all the new folks!!
 

A.T.Hagan

Inactive
Got done with those magazine archives early so I banged out a bit more to encourage folks.

September 1st, 2005 - Thursday.

It's been crazed today, but slowly, painfully slowly, the events in Washington D.C. are coming out. Took until yesterday evening for someone in the government to realize that not allowing any factual news to come out of the D.C. area was more destructive than telling the truth as the nation ran wild on rumors. I've never heard of anything happening like this before except for perhaps the morning of December 7th, 1941 when everyone thought the Japanese were invading. Mobs formed in Detroit and burned entire blocks of Middle-Eastern businesses and homes. No one has even tried to give a body count. People just dragged into the streets and murdered. The entire nation lost its mind for a time. Still has lost its mind, but we seem to have peaked last night. I hope we have, anyway. We were all scared it was about to break down into outright civil war.

We got about fifteen seconds of a phone call from Jody last night. She's with friends somewhere in Northern Virginia and she and the kids are safe and not contaminated. That was all we got before the connection was lost. Wasn't until this morning that FEMA did a combined networks broadcast detailing the nature of the detonation and the damage. It's not as bad as we initially feared. It was a radiological, but not a nuclear attack. They're still collecting the evidence but they think it was a semi-truck of some sort on the inner beltway west of the capitol carrying some sort of fuel-air or fuel-enhanced device. A damn big one it seems because it made a very credible mushroom cloud when it went off and leveled quite a large area. Then the radiation alarms began to go off. They're still not sure what they had in that truck, but whatever it was it drifted radioactive cobalt, cesium, and americium over a fair part of the metropolitan D.C. area downwind of the blast and into Maryland. The FBI thinks it may have been whatever stolen radioactive junk they could find and pack around the bomb. The cobalt was in a finely divided state which they said would almost certainly have been lethal for whoever ground it up but I think they're only speculating. It will probably be months before they're sure of anything other than the fact that tens of thousands of people are having to be decontaminated and that it's going to be years before a large part of the nation's capitol will be habitable again. Casualties look to go into the many hundreds, possibly over a thousand since it was morning rush hour when they blew the thing. One talking-head consultant speculated they detonated it when they did because they were afraid they'd be detected by the Feds scanners if they got much closer and they were upwind of the capitol. Who knows?

Whatever it may have done to the rest of the nation it shocked Florida to its core. Two more attempted car-jackings in Gainesville, both defeated when the victims and nearby motorists riddled the carjackers. The gloves have come off I think and anyone even looking like they're going to try to rob somebody is likely to be lynched - if they survive long enough to be hanged. The Feds can't send any more troops, we're out of National Guard troops, so tonight for the eleven o'clock television news the sheriff announced he is resurrecting the sheriff's posse and is calling for volunteers. We held a family council before going to bed and decided that Geoff and I would join.

September 2nd, 2005 - Friday

Geoff and D.J. went back to work. With food distribution logistics as problematic as they are the governor made the state extension service a major priority so D.J.'s job just went way up in importance. She's getting a higher priority gas ration out of it, anyway. They said quite a few people still haven't come back to work and they don't know if they will. Geoff said the morning convoy was twenty cars strong with many rifles openly displayed. Radio news said there had been some shooting last night, but no reported car-jackings or home invasions. Maybe with the guns drawn so openly it will stay that way, but I'm afraid if things don't turn up soon even that won't be enough. News said last night that the Coast Guard is picking up more and more boats out of Haiti and Cuba. I wonder if Castro isn't forcing another exodus to stoke the fire?

September 3rd, 2005 - Saturday

Spent most of the day in the saddle riding one of Bruce's horses. My thighs are on fire and I don't think I'll ever be able to walk right again. When the sheriff said he was reinstituting the posse I didn't realize he meant for it to be horse mounted! Even he can't get enough fuel so the local patrols are doing it on horses. We chased down one burglar. Damned idiot so strung out on meth he tried to break into a local church in broad daylight. Well, he can get off the junk chopping weeds on the county farm. Otherwise quiet in our area. Gainesville seems to be quieting down for the moment though if the food deliveries drop any more we're going to have trouble. Never seen so many people digging up their yards to plant "Victory Gardens" before. Not a canning lid, ring, jar, or canner to be found anywhere. Glad we stocked up last year.

September 4th, 2005 - Sunday

FBI says the Washington attack was definitely Al Queda, though how they can be so certain in just a couple of days I'm not sure. Wouldn't matter if they hadn't done it, everyone thinks they did. Several senior senators and House reps openly calling for nuking Middle Eastern targets. The President told them to stop being stupid, but if the news of the contamination in D.C. keeps on the way it sounds like it is now he may have to change his tune. Got another call from Jody last night. Apparently she was close enough to the blast that the shock wave cracked her passenger windows in the van, but she was upwind of the detonation and she immediately drove away from the area. Said it took six hours to go fifteen miles, but she was upwind the whole time. She's had a bug out kit in the van since we talked about them last year and that's what she and the kids have right now. She didn't even try to go home as it's in the contaminated zone. I think the government may simply seal the area and call it permanently contaminated because I don't see how they're going to get all that cobalt cleaned up. The medical college at the university sent a team up to assist with the decontamination and any radiation poisoning treatments that may be necessary.

Power went down last night for about four hours, but came back on again. G.R.U. said it was a turbine problem and that they're having a hard time getting the necessary parts, but they did manage to get it running again.
 

Libertarian

Deceased
18 Oct. 2005. This marks the second month's anniversary since the power went out. It's been 10 weeks since the last gas station closed. The cooling weather is a mixed blessing. The asphalt is finally solid enough for heavy trucks and the National guard has sent tankers around siphoning any gasoline they find out of cars and trucks. There was a gun fight two blocks down when a homeowner decided we wasn't going to play. He lost his life and his gas. I had none in my car and they didn't dig up the back yard to find the 40 gallons I had buried. I wonder if I'll ever be able to use it?

One benefit of the lack of gas is that most of the looters have stayed away. It has been too hot and too far from the South Side to walk here just to get shot at. I had some neighbor kids raid my fig trees for the last of this years crop. I have to walk over and offer their dad my belt to discipline the kids; either that or a shovel to bury them the next time the come over.

Necessity is the mother of invention. I took my Direct TV dish down and covered it with aluminum foil (shinny side out) It makes a good solar cooker. All that rice and beans I had stored away when I was prepping for TEOTWAWKI have been about all that has keep my family alive. It'll be tough going when the spices and salt runs out. Maybe I can get a few neighbors together and go shoot some armadillos and whatever else we can find that is edible.

25 Oct 2005

Heard a report on the radio that fewer Mexicans are coming north now. it seems that things are better for them in Mexico these days. I hope a whole bunch of their brothers and sisters see the same light and go back home.

We had out first armed incursion last night. A group of gang bangers made it up here and started going from house to house raiding. As soon as we heard shooting all of the neighbors piled on and made Swiss cheese out of the bad guys. The two that survived are now swinging from the lamp posts at the entrance to the neighborhood. We put large signs on them to announce their crimes.

29 Oct 2005

The older couple next door have decided that they can't stick it out anymore and are going to go to a refugee camp near Austin. Everyone tried to talk them out of it but they were insistent. Because I had shared my supplies with them and helped the old man with work around the house, they gave me their two nanny goats. I will give the milk with the local families who have small children. I just want the goats to keep the grass and weeds down to help control the mice. I will annex the old couple's back yard to mine and put in a larger garden. I need to find some chicken wire to keep the goats out of the veggies.

2 Nov 2005

Spent the night outside in a hammock with my girlfriend. Without the city lights to wash out the sky we could see stars that haven't been visible in this part of North America since the middle of the 20th century. I'll have to dig out my star guide and we can spend some time relearning the stars.

Local elections are in a few days. I wonder how the county will get the polls set up and the votes counted? They have no more gas to waste running around than anyone else does. We will have to do something to make sure that or voting rights don't disappear.

4 Nov 2005

Got three chickens in trade for 100 rounds of .223 and a box of .38 spl. With all the grass bugs, I think that they will feed themselves for the most part. I have to find someone who knows about raising hens to see what I need to do to keep them healthy and laying eggs. I converted a tool shed to a hen house. It stinks already and it has only been two days since the hens moved in. Pretty soon I'll need a pair of bib-overalls to go with the new farmer me.

6 Nov 2005

A bad day. I shot one of the neighbors kids last night. He was in the hen house stealing eggs and had one of my hens in his bag. He had killed the bird before stuffing it in. His dad is threatening to burn my house down. I think it is time to have another meeting with the neighbors. That kids was a lead suspect in many thefts of food and stuff for the last month. I'll take a few friends and our pistols along. Perhaps they need to move if they can't cooperate and live with the rest of us.

7 Nov 2005

The Sheriff finally made it by. One of the local hams called him on the radio and told him of the shooting yesterday. He looked over the scene, talked to the neighbors and ruled it justified. He also told the father that he should stop with the threats or he might be joining his son. I dropped of a flyer for the relocation camp the old couple left here. Perhaps he will take the hint.

While the Sheriff was here he told about a group ten blocks over who had a manual well digger. They would come over to put in a new well for all of us if we would swap stuff with them. We will meet to see what we can afford to offer.
 

Coast Watcher

Membership Revoked
"Got three chickens in trade for 100 rounds of .223 and a box of .38 spl."

You got taken. Three chickens at this stage of the crisis shouldn't cost more than 15 rounds of .223! At that time of year, they'll start moulting soon and stop laying until spring. And 15 rounds equals at least eight or nine deer, armadillos, turkeys, or what-have-you for even a mediocre shot.

August 25, 2005

Hot for Maine, even in August. All the mid-season lettuce bolted in three days of 95-plus degree heat, although the tomatoes were loving it and it looks like we'll even get some ripe watermelons this year if we can avoid an early frost. With produce and dairy deliveries so sporadic now, we decided to walk down to the weekly farmer's market and try to pick up some fresh milk and cheese and maybe a few veggies. We got there before 8:30 in the morning and were almost too late. Lots of blank spots on the tables and more appearing every minute as people who had never seen a radish with dirt on it in their lives browsed the stalls.

Local farmers and market gardeners were still making it into town for market days, apparently with some quiet help from the fuel tanks at the town garage. The city council seems to have its priorities straight, at last. The police chief was in obvious attendance, along with two shotgun-toting officers. All three of them had large bags of fresh apples and new corn at their feet, and I'll bet they didn't pay a dime for any of it -- not that I begrudged them the gilt, under the circumstances.

Speaking of dimes, more than a few farmers were posting two sets of prices -- Federal Reserve notes and silver coins. A silver dime was good for a dozen eggs and two quarts of milk. A quarter would fill a big grocery bag to overflowing with almost anything you wanted. I made a note to come prepared next time.

Almost every farmer's stall had a help wanted sign on it. Most were offering room and board for steady workers and their families through the end of November. Several farmers were looking for permanent hands to work the fields and woodlots year-round. To a person, they also required a knowledge of and willingness to use firearms.

I ran into an old high school classmate, Charlie Ellis, a dairy farmer from Searsmont. He had a tank truck full of whole milk and was offering it for $4 a gallon with no shortage of customers. He was desperate for help, offered me a job on the spot. “I got 200 cows out there, and even after drying off most of them and hiring three of the most god-awful farmhands you ever saw and going shares on others with most of the neighbors, it's more than I can handle on any day without power. I'm down to my last 100 gallons of diesel for the generators, and it don't look good for getting anymore before the end of September.”

I turned him down, for now, but promised to talk about it with the family and our neighbors. Tim Russell next door and his wife were both laid off from their telemarketing jobs in late July, and they have two youngsters to feed.

Someone had set up a message board, and it was covered with three-by-five cards offering various services and items for sale, as well as official announcements. Someone had a Ford Expedition for sale -- "Make an offer. Just need to cover the loan, or almost." The local Extension Service was offering home canning classes on Wednesday afternoons and a special market-day seminar on home solar heating strategies. The sign-up sheet for a class on how to make your own biodiesel was already full.

Market day had revived another function -- information gathering and sharing. One farmer solemnly assured us that the tankers from the Middle East would start arriving next week. He'd heard it on one of the short-wave shows. We heard a rumor that Seattle had been nuked, another that it wasn't Seattle, it was Mecca. Seattle had been hit with a 8.9 earthquake. I heard that the governor was about to announce plans to block all the highways leading into Maine from the south and west and limit entry only to Maine residents or landowners. I half-expected to hear that flying saucers had landed in Fenway Park with a magical new energy source that ran on hot air. The stories about firefights at gas stations in Portland were more believable.

We bought three gallons of milk off Charlie and enough sweet corn and new potatoes to fill the Radio Flyer cart. We still had to walk home, and the day wasn't getting any longer.
 

Mark D

Now running for Emperor.
6 Nov 2005

A bad day. I shot one of the neighbors kids last night. He was in the hen house stealing eggs and had one of my hens in his bag. He had killed the bird before stuffing it in. His dad is threatening to burn my house down. I think it is time to have another meeting with the neighbors. That kids was a lead suspect in many thefts of food and stuff for the last month. I'll take a few friends and our pistols along. Perhaps they need to move if they can't cooperate and live with the rest of us.

Time to be proactive... "His dad", needs a sock party at least, and a dirt nap at best. Threats like that can not be tolerated.
 

Tessa Blue

Veteran Member
September 1, 2005

It's so hot! Typical Texas weather, either blistering hot or temps darn near freezing. I wonder what my daughter is doing right now. She's in Tampa, wouldn't listen to me a month ago when I said it was going to get bad. She laughed at me. Laughed! Mom. Kooky mom, to be patronized and ignored.

There have been rumors at work. Some say the entire Heart Association will be shut down. I can't quite fathom it. I mean, there's close to 500 employees here. They just gonna can 'em all? What will everyone do? The smaller Affiliates have already closed, and I can see that, I really can - small offices with only a few employees to begin with. But 500? No. I can't believe that. It'll be okay. I'm sure it will. Still, I'm glad I stocked up on food and water. If nothing else, I'll save some money, living on stuff that would cost me quadruple the price (at least) these days.

September 2, 2005

Okay, I'm stunned. I went to work (thank God it's only a seven-minute walk!) and found a voice mail waiting for me. A voice mail - what a rip! What - he can't tell us to our faces? Our strained, line-etched, worried FACES? Coward!

The voice mail is pleasant, as is ALL the CEO's voice mails, with just the right amount of regret, a sorrowful intonation. "I truly hate to break the news this way, but..."

All 500 employees. In an instant, unemployed. A lot of these folks have driven quite some distance to get here, too, hoping to get another paycheck to pay the exorbitant per-gallon-fuel-charge. That's supposing you could even find a station open. I'm lucky I walk to work.

A couple of my co-workers drop by my cube while I'm packing up my pitiful amount of stuff, wanting to know if I'd heard the message. Like they even need to ask. One look at my face should have told them.

"How can they do this to us?" Marianne asks, face white with strain. "They should have given us more notice! How am I supposed to pay the rent? Buy food? What about my bills? This isn't fair!"

What can you say? In a perfect world, and all that... "Yeah, I guess they should have given us more notice. But - hey, no donor dollars, no administrative salaries, right?"

"But... but... we've never had this problem before! The Association has always squeaked by, no matter how bad the economy was!"

"Ah, the good old days," I offered helpfully as I tossed my collection of stuffed frogs into a Xerox box.

Barbara, the other co-worker lurking at my cube entrance, obviously remembered the "good old days," and looks at me, suddenly, shrewdly. "Remember the asteroid fly-by party?" she asks. "When you brought ice cream for everybody?"

"Yesssss," I hedge, unsure of where she was going with this.

"Do you really store food and water?"

Oh, God. Me and my stupid mouth. Why did I ever brag about emergency preparedness? What was I THINKING? If I wasn't careful, I'd have all 500 Association employees trekking to my apartment, just seven minutes away. Yeah, that was REAL smart. The food would last, what? 20 minutes?

"Um... well," I say, thinking quickly, "I DO have this backpack with food and water." I open the long horizontal filing cabinet drawer and take out my bug-out bag. "Maybe that's what you were thinking of?"

Take the bait. Take the bait.

She does. Thank GOD she takes the bait. I'm so relieved I give her the backpack.

It doesn't take long to pack up my cube. Everything fits into the one Xerox box, and I studiously avoid everyone else in my department, slipping out the side door, hugging the box to my chest as I fairly RUN home. I feel a little bad at having ditched my co-workers, knowing they'd want to go out and grab a bite to eat or something, which is their solution to everything, good and bad. Food.

They really don't have a clue. Anyway, what would I say? Do?

Back at home, I pace the small confines of my apartment. I can't relax. I want my daughter close by, not all the way in Florida. I want to hug my grandkids, and have them irritate me with their incessant questions. I want my daughter to look at me with that exasperated look she gives, that now-what-you-crazy-mom look. What I DON'T want is to be alone. My kids! My grand-kids! Would I ever see them again?

No, I can't think that way. Of course I'll see them! This can't last long.

Loud voices filter their way upstairs. Angry voices. They start loud, and get even louder, although I can't quite make out what they're saying. A shot is fired, and I instinctively duck, then flatten myself on the carpet. My heart pounds so hard I can actually SEE it behind my eyes.

I sidle along the floor to the second bedroom and open the closet door. There. There is my newest purchase. I wasn't even sure WHY I'd bought it at the time. I HATE them! I should feel revulsed, but I don't. Right now it feels good and solid and comforting. I hold it with both hands, my fingers trembling on the cold, hard metal.

I lay on my back and stare at the ceiling, a middle-aged, previously pampered city woman in Dallas, Texas, clutching a 12-gauge shotgun, fear blooming out of every pore of her body. Teeth chatter, and I try in vain to still the movement.

Can I use the gun? Can I kill?
 

Dobbin

Faithful Steed
It's August 20th here in southeastern...

...New Hampshire.

Our diesel VW is fueled "minimally" (in case of siphoning) but it is about the only car moving around much these days. I've told my wife to drive it ONLY in the event of emergency or for purchase of food at the store. Mostly it just sits in the driveway. She's very good about it mostly.

At the end of our street is the "upper crust." Mostly high placed lawers, doctors, and insurance executives, they all live in "trophy homes" suitable for their (former) station in life.

As usual, the McMansion people were among the first to publically acknowledge the oil crisis/resultant economic downturn when it occured. You got to give them credit: those people are not stupid and have gotten to their station in life by virtue of being smart and "adaptable." Almost immediately when the gas stations closed, about half the houses down there went up for sale! I used to gauge the severity of a economic downturn by the number of "FOR SALE" signs down there. With perhaps 40 of these "trophy homes" in a cluster, the downturn of the early 90s saw five houses for sale at once. Now, with the present problems, we have 22 houses with FOR SALE signs on them, and about half of those are currently unoccupied, the former owners having moved somewhere else.

I was invited to a "neighborhood meeting" which included the McMansions. We discussed security and "sharing" among other issues. One of the points of discussion was the "attractive" qualities of these unoccupied houses to the indigent and transient. For now we have boarded up the windows on the first floors with plywood and someone daily checks the houses for entry. We have yet to discuss the disposition of the oil in the fuel oil tanks at these houses other than to remove or lock the outside connections. Perhaps later when heating oil levels drop at the occupied houses we can transfer some oil to those in need.

Those that remained at "McMansions" have all sprouted "victory gardens." We did a good business earlier in the summer with the rototiller. (I also found that once running on gasoline, the 8 hp engine will run on diesel.) In fact we've given some of our excess seeds to a couple of our friends down there. Yes, they're hybrid seed but even hybrid seed will propigate *something* beyond the first year.

Our oil dealer friend is doing well although we haven't bought any oil from him. If you listen to him, he hasn't sold any oil, in fact doesn't have any oil to sell. But he always seems to have money for food and remains one of our garden's best customers. And those guys with the guns on the roof of his building over in Newmarket belie the fact that indeed, he does have oil on his site.

I've talked with my other friend over in Newmarket and he assures me that the oil dealer friend has not had a delivery since early June, before the last of the mid-east tankers made port. Oil dealer is evidently "biding his time" and if you REALLY want it, he's got it to sell. Oh well, if it were my oil, I'd do the same, I'm sure.

Our garden is doing well, although I have to time the watering to coincide with the power outage schedule. We're currently on a schedule of 2 hours on - 2 hours off. I have a battery powered timer setup for watering the garden particularly at night.

Electricity is now 18 cents a kwhr, which is about double the "pre-oil crisis" level. We're fortunate here in NH since our local electrical "wires company" has long term contracts with North Atlantic Energy, i.e. Florida Power & Light, i.e. Seabrook Station. The doubling in price was instituted with approval of the PUC as an effort by the generators to "stretch out" their fuel supplies. As reported, Seabrook under full base load would normally have about 12 months to go before their next refueling but they're hoping to get double that by doubling the electrical price and limiting usage through rolling blackouts.

The 2 hours on - 2 hours off cycle seems to work with our refrigerator and freezer. I have lowered the refrigerator thermostat so that while the power is "on" the refrigerator "runs" as much as possible. We've frozen a few of the more tender things in the refrigerator compartment but I deem that a small loss compared to the loss of the more precious meats and cheeses should we suffer an extended outage. I've also warned my wife to plan on not having the freezer in the near future. We've been eating up as much as possible from this source so we can get beyond the need to have it should that be necessary.

For heat for this coming winter, I still have three cords of wood (a winter's worth) remaining on the property plus enough wood standing for another year beyond that. However, should this situation go beyond the next two winters, we're going to have trouble keeping wood in supply.

Needless to say, everyone and his brother is looking for wood to burn. While I haven't necessarily advertised, a couple of "thinking ahead" people at my church have inquired my opinion to sourcing wood for this coming winter. It's a tough question these days and I tell them so. Best option is to keep their eyes open along the sides of the roads. (Standard Reply)

And one last project in waiting. With wood and fuel and food in generally short supply, those 20 4' x 5' framed glass windows that came previously to build a greenhouse will come in handy. I already had plans to build a greenhouse addition to the house but had deferred due to the property tax hit here in NH. Property tax man be damned! Houses aren't worth anything anymore anyway. We're talking SURVIVAL here.

Best,
Joe
 

A.T.Hagan

Inactive
Sixty Days, Next Year - Florida

<b>If you're new to the story do be sure to go and read the complete original story written by C. Haynes in the first post of this thread. Lot of gradual build up here.</b>

=================================
<b>September 5th, 2005 – Monday</b>

Geoff and D.J, back to work today. When they got home Geoff said he thinks he may be laid off soon. The state is cutting way, way back on its manpower and he’s not sure if he won’t be cut. All we could do was shrug. Businesses and government left and right are laying people off as the economy sinks into the tar pit. Getting hard to be upset about it anymore. D.J., at least, has some job security. My turn today to patrol with the posse. Another burglary but no apprehensions. One assault and battery from two neighbors having a fist fight over stealing from a garden. Let them both go with a warning we’d jail them if it happened again. Not hurting as bad as I did the last time. That trick with the panty hose seems to work.

Manager at the local Winn Dixie offered me a job as a security officer. Got a surprise when I broached the idea with D.J. and she flat out said “NO.” She’s not as happy with me riding on the posse’ as I first thought and she definitely doesn’t like the idea of me maybe getting hurt guarding a grocery store. Got Cathy and Vicky in on it too so all the females were down on me. I’m sure they’ll need security right on so I’ll let it go for now.

<b>September 6th, 2005 – Tuesday</b>

Rained today. NOAA tracking two West African systems inbound and steadily strengthening. One up to tropical wave strength and the other gaining. Both still too far out in the Atlantic to know where they’re going. Whatever else may be happening in the world it’s still hurricane season here.

Beginning to process pears. Shot a coon in one of the pear trees last night. He’ll be stew tonight.

<b>September 7th, 2005 – Wednesday</b>

Vicky’s been reading my Humanure Handbook and wants to try building our own composting toilet for producing fertilizer. I have mixed feelings about this, but allowed as to how we could use the resulting compost for fertilizing the perennial plantings anyway. Geoff and I are thinking of ways to build the toilet using materials we already have on hand.

The Ugly Hen my mom gave me is setting a clutch of eggs. This time I think I’ll leave her and maybe slip a few more under her while she’s at it. Don’t think she can set more than maybe ten or so. She’s an ugly thing, but she’s got good maternal instincts. Going to have to work on conserving that.

<b>September 8th, 2005 – Thursday.</b>

Been pretty quiet for a couple of days now. Don’t know if it’s going to last, but we can hope. I think the country has had a good scare and is maybe shaking off a lot of accumulated crap that we’ve loaded ourselves down with these last few decades. People wearing sidearms openly in town and no one cares.

Rode with the posse’ again today. Sheriff says if things stay quiet and people keep joining up we may be able to go to just once ever five days or so. Henry O’Hannon, owns the H&H Ranch over to c.r. 316 said he’d hire me on as a hand today if I were willing. I told him the horse I was riding wasn’t mine, but he said he’s got horses to spare and not enough hands. I’m no great shakes as a horseman to be sure, but if he’s willing to pay me I’m willing to work. I don’t like being a bum. D.J. just grinned and shook her head like she had been expecting it all along and said “knock yourself out!” I’ll start Saturday. Cathy’s running around telling everyone her daddy’s a cowboy! Yeah buddy.

<b>September 9th, 2005 – Friday</b>

With the rain and the extra attention we’re able to give it we’re getting great germination in the garden. Have to restrain myself from planting any more seed so we’ll have some insurance in case of disaster or something. Power’s been kind of flaky today, but generally has stayed on. A bit cooler today as well. Part of me would like to see an early Fall, but the other half says “just mean a longer winter.”

D.J. is certain she’s pregnant now and that old test-stick we found in the cabinet confirms it. She says my kisses are making her gag again so I guess it’s for sure because that’s the way she got when she had Cathy. Dark time to be bringing a child into this world, but frankly I don’t care. We’re having another addition to the family and I’m delighted!

<b>September 10th, 2005 - Saturday</b>

Think I may be crippled for life. Working as a cowhand is a damn sight harder than riding with a posse’! The rest of the crew hazed me all day, but I was expecting that. The burr under the saddle thing only worked once. Think I earned a measure of respect when I picked the rattlesnake up and threw it back at Billy. I may be a greenhorn on a horse, but I’ve been a Floridian all my life. Gonna take more than a dead rattler to scare me. Henry said we’d take Sunday off as the weather service say it’s going to storm all day. Maybe come Monday I’ll be able to walk upright again.

<b>September 11th, 2005 – Sunday</b>

Still raining. Spent most of morning and afternoon processing pears, pears, and more pears. Being home so much meant not losing as many of the pears this year as we did last year so we have more to put up… and put up…and put up. We’ve canned all the pear products we’re going to. Going to dry the rest. Got to save jars for other stuff as well. All the grapes have been processed. Sure could go for a banana, but Winn Dixie hasn’t had any in a couple of weeks and don’t know when they’ll get any more.

Had the radio on all day. Got tired of NPR so went over to AM talk radio. That old rule about 90% of everything being crap certainly applies there, but once in a while something useful would pop out and it didn’t cost us much of anything to listen. May be there really were some professional agitators working things up in Miami. The heat certainly didn’t help any. So far the Guard and Federal troops are keeping things calm down there, but there’s a lot of folks talking about the roadblocks and house-to-house searches. I’d be pissed off about that too, but the RPGs and full auto AK’s that are turning up are putting the wind up me too. How long has that stuff been coming into the country? Used to be a lot of old-line Cuban militia down there training to overthrow Castro, but they’d all be too old for that stuff now. This sounds like something else. Of course, it’s also talk radio so who knows how much real truth there is to any of it?

Today being the fourth anniversary of the WTC attack I tried logging into the TB2K board and wonder of wonders not only was my unreliable ISP up, but I got onto the board! Lot of new names, lot of old names I didn’t see. Strong underlying theme of fear too. Some oblique references to posts that seem to have been deleted that were kind of scary. Went back to show them to D.J. to ask her what she thought and couldn’t find them again. No one has heard from Dennis in days.

.....Alan.
 

Blinker

Senior Member
August 2005

On that day in August of 2005, Lancaster Co., PA was better off than many areas. Less than 20% were unemployed and the united relief efforts of the area churches helped keep a lid on things in our one city, also called Lancaster. The Amish had become the poster people of the new America and old timers were finding young apprentices to teach almost forgotten skills. As people looked to the ways of the past, they were still thankful for the Susquehanna River Valley nuclear plants and well as the small hydroelectric facility.

Of course like others areas, we had our growing unofficial refugee camps which were called Hoovervilles by the old timers who complained that things were worse in many ways than during the great depression.

As before people were improvising. For instance, as all the school districts would not be operating bus service for the coming school year, various townships were helping them set up new “walking distance schools“. Even several 19th century one-room school houses were being put back into service. For winter heating there was hope that if not much oil we would be getting coal deliveries from newly reopening mines in the PA Coal Region, some parts of which were reportedly booming. On the state level, Pennsylvania’s remaining steel industry was said to be planning on large-scale production of both commercial and home coal furnaces.

Our family project of late was trying to restore our old chimneys for coal use and trying to remember how to take care of our new chickens, but today was different; what we later referred to as Call-Up Day. It was the day many area former military personnel were recalled en masse to service, including our oldest son.

The county and city had decided to give the boys (and some girls) a send off such as they had done during the Korean War of 1950 recall.

Part of the county-wide bus system was still running during morning and evening rush hours, and we were able to ride (under packed conditions) to a location near the Lancaster Train Station, from where many of the troops would travel to Fort Dix, NJ to await deployment.

My elderly father insisted on going and wore his WWII white Navy cap along with a suit of multiple plaids, on which had pinned a row of his old metals. Fortunately at the ceremonies he was given a chair, as his legs were ready to give out. He soon got his second wind as he began talking with other old relics of wars long past along whom were his two lifelong best friends.

Another contingent of old vets from the Masonic homes in Elizabethtown had came down by train for the send off. To our amazement with them came our county’s last WW1 vet, who was well over 100 years old. My son even had a chance to shake hands with him.

The weather was agreeable for August and the speeches were few and short. As the long troop train pulled in the station the mayor (a Civil War buff who was getting to look quite like General Winfield Scott) fired off one of his antique black powder cannons while the high school band played patriotic songs. The train was already half filled with soldiers who had been picked up in Harrisburg.

We, along with thousands of others, said tearful goodbyes and the high school band changed pace and played the Belinda Carlyle song “Summer Rain”, and for those who knew the words - prophetic words - even more tears.

I can hear the whistle
Military train
I was dancing with my baby
in the summer rain
I can here him singing
Ooh "Love Is Strange"
Come dance with me baby
In the summer rain

I remember the rain pouring down
And we poured our hearts out
As the train pulled out
I can see my baby
Waving from the train
It was last time that I saw him
In the summer rain
 

Mike 9 or 10

Deceased
September 12 2005


For the first time Officer Johnson smiled as he pulled into the prison parking lot. God, he hated this place. The smell, the poor pay, and most of all the fascist bastards who ran the place.

He had worked here two years and even though he had gotten a couple small raises he still made Chump Change. It still pissed him off when he remembered the way they laughed his first day at the Training Academy when he asked why someone with a four year college degree had to start as a Officer. His Major had been Communication and with all his knowledge they should have at least let him start as a Sargent or some kind of Management position.

Well it didn't matter much now. When Bush and the Oil Companies had screwed up their war to steal Iraq's oil the Arabs had cut off the Oil and given the United States a lesson on the cost of Imperialism. One of the Muslim convicts had explained it all to him.

Last week when he found out he was getting Laid Off he had been pissed at first. But then he started thinking about it. Why should he bother going to work every day ? He could just sign up for unemployment and kick back and enjoy life.


When he got to the Preshift meeting the Shift Commander was talking to a couple of the other guys who were getting Laid Off. The captain was telling them how sorry he was to see them go and that if they ever needed a reference or letter of recommendation to just let him know. As Johnson walked up to them the Captain stopped talking. He then raised his voice so all the Officers could hear him and started giving the Preshift briefing.

We had a stabbing on the Yard this morning. No one saw who did the stabbing and the convict who got stabbed ain't talking. He said he must have walked into a door. The Yard Crew shook down the area and found the Shank. Looks like it came out of the school. It was made out of a piece of metal from the spine of a loose leaf notebook.

We had three fights during Morning Chow Lines. Word has it that it has something to do with who is going to control the weight pit. Keep your eyes open during afternoon yard and see if the regulars are lifting or if there are new people there.

Thats it except as you all know we are losing three Officers to Lay Off after today. You all know how short handed we already are. With them gone we are all going to have to watch each others back even more. We can Bitch and Moan all we want but the bottom line is with the Economy so screwed up the State is just flat assed broke. We have 1200 convicts here and we are just going to have to pull together and do the best job we can. I'll give you all the support I can but we all know its going to be tough. So hang in there.

Report to your normal assignment. Let's do it.

With that, the afternoon shift spread out the the various Officer assignments throughout the facility.

When Officer Johnson relieved the Morning Shift Officer on his assignment the Morning Cop said I heard you were getting Laid Off. You and I butted heads a couple times but I want you to know I wasn't trying to screw with you, I just wanted to try to make you understand how important it was to do the job right. Johnson looked at the Morning Cop and said nothing. After a few seconds the Morning Cop just left.

At 9:15 pm Johnson called his last Count into the Control Center. Now there really was nothing left to do except make rounds until relieved at 10 pm.

Screw it said Johnson to himself. The Convicts are all locked in their cells and I'll be dammed if I am going to walk that Rock my last 45 minutes.

Just for something to do Johnson called Miller one of the other Officers who was being Laid Off. Hey Miller, this is Johnson. How you doing ? Fine said Miller, I was just trying to write as much as I could in the Log Book so whoever had to run the floor after we get Laid Off would know what was happening.

Yeah, OK replied Johnson. What I called for was to ask you if we had to go to the Unemployment Office in person to sign up or if we could just call them ? How does that work ?

Miller laughed and asked what color is the sky in your world ? Haven't you been watching the news ? Why do you think we are getting laid off ? The State is broke. They are not letting anyone sign up for Unemployment until the have been laid off for six months.

Your Bullshitting me said Johnson.

No, I'm serious as a Heart Attack replied Miller.

Well thanks a lot Johnson snarled as he slammed down the phone.

Shit ! The dirty bastards take my job and now they screw me out of the unemployment I had coming thought Johnson. A wave of anger swept over him. All the resentment he had since the day he took this damn job came bubbling up.

How can I pay these pricks back he asked himself ? What would really teach them not to screw over people like me ?

In a flash the memory of the worst ass chewing he ever got flooded into his mind. Right after he had finished training he was assigned to run Two Gate. He had been told that he was never, under any circumstance to open two gate at the same time One Gate was open. The prison had been designed so that if the convects ever took over the Cell Blocks they would be contained by two massive Iron Gates. One and Two. As long as at least one of the gates was closed the Officers from other parts of the prison could Lock Down and draw weapons from the Arsenal and quell the disturbance. But if the Convicts ever made it past both gates they could surround the exterior of the Arsenal and hunt down the rest of the staff at their leisure.

Johnson walked into the mop room and found what he was looking for. The bag of rubber wedges the porter used to prop open the doors when he mopped. Slipping a few wedges into his pocket Johnson open the Lock Box that controlled the doors to the 100 cells on his floor. He first moved all 100 switches to " Gang Open " this would allow him to open all 100 cells by pushing one button. Leaving the Lock Box open Johnson then unlocked the gate at the head of the floor and taking one of the wedges from his pocket propped open the door to the corridor that led to Two gate.

Years of pent up resentment toward all the bastards who had kept him from all the things he deserved played in his mind as Johnson walked back to the Lock Box. Time for some payback he thought as he reached toward the button that would open the 100 cells. He hesitated just for a moment, what if they find out I unlocked the cons he wondered. But then he remembered that the first thing convicts always do was burn the place down and with that any evidence would be destroyed.

Johnson pushed the Open button and walked quickly down the corridor to Two Gate. As he had hoped since it was the end of the shift the Officer who ran the Gate was not paying much attention and was filling out his Log. Johnson was able to slip one of the wedges into the crack as Two Gate shut behind him. This is too easy he thought to himself. They never think to watch a Officer. When he got to One Gate the Officer running the gate looked up and saw what he thought was a closed Two Gate and swung One Gate open for Johnson, Just as Johnson stepped through the gate he stopped and asked the Officer if he had a extra pack of matches. Sure the Officer relied and turned to get some matches from the desk behind him. As soon as he turned Johnson slipped a wedge into the gate and closed it so it looked as if it was locked. When the Officer turned back and handed Johnson the Matches what sounded like yells from inside the prison could be heard. Johnson said I wonder what the hell that was and suggested the Gate Officer walk into the empty Visiting Room and look out the window to see if those Damn Cats were fighting again. Guess I better check In case the captain calls the Officer replied.

Johnson quickly walked the rest of the way out of the prison. As he opened his car door he could hear the first screams coming from the Protective Unit.

The Night Shift Cops were just starting to pull into the parking lot. Before too long most of them would be screaming too.

As Johnson drove through the small town the prison was in most of the children were already in bed. For many of them it would be their last night on earth. For many others it would be worse.
 

A.T.Hagan

Inactive
Sixty Days, Next Year - Florida

<b>September 12th, 2005 – Monday</b>

Everyone’s gone back to work who has jobs. Geoff hasn’t been laid off yet so we’re grateful for that. D.J. is talking maybe staying in a dorm on campus during the week because she’s starting to need to work ten and twelve hour days. I’m not thrilled with this, but if we have to we have to, at least until she is big with child, then she’s coming home every night like it or not. Henry says someone cut his fence in one of the pastures fronting the state highway. Thinks he’s missing two cows and maybe it was somebody from the Bush Camp down the highway that got them. “Bush Camp.” Now there’s a term that’s going around, even heard it on the radio. Have no idea where it came from. Is it referring to President Bush? Or because the hobo jungles are usually built out in the bush? Used to be called Hoovervilles or something like that way back during the Great Depression. Or maybe I should say the last Great Depression because it’s sure looking like we’ve got another one right now. Seems like I see at least one or two people walking up the state highway every day with some sort of bag looking for a better place.

Henry wants a night watch on the herds that can’t be brought in close so Billy and I are elected. Stay up all night riding horses and watching cows. Gonna start writing cowboy poetry pretty soon, I’m afraid. Maybe I should learn to play the guitar or harmonica or something. Garden’s looking great.

<b>September 13th, 2005 – Tuesday</b>

Hot again today, but not so bad as the week before. D.J. said Winn Dixe is looking pretty sparse so far as any sort of fresh foods are concerned, but we can still get staples. Prices going up every week but we’re buying what we can to spare the food storage. Radio said there was a fuss in Miami when Homeland Security took down an apartment complex full of illegals but didn’t hear anything else about it. Fracas in Southern California is still not cleared up, but apparently it’s been confined to a small area. Wonder if old Big Wave Dave is anywhere near there? Going to be a long day tomorrow. Spend all night watching the herd then all day tomorrow with the posse’.

<b>September 14th, 2005 – Wednesday</b>

Long day. That damn Billy is starting to get on my nerves. Never shuts up and knows everything, but I suppose all twenty year olds are the same. Sheriff sent the posse’ and a couple of deputies down to the Bush Camp south of O’Hannon’s place on the state highway after a rape was reported. The deputies took care of the investigation. We were there to show the colors or to provide color or something. First time I’ve been there. It’s on one of the Higgins parcels but the family isn’t doing anything about it. Since the elder Higgins died last year his son’s been pretty much letting things run down other than the barber shop. Used to talk about moving to Alaska when his dad died, but I don’t think he’s ever going to, he’s just going to rot. There’s an old hand pumped well in there which is what the camp formed around. Sulfur water, but it’s potable and safe even if it does stink. One big old fellow in there that seems to be something of the camp boss. At least everyone shuts up when he talks and he seems to be making them keep the place picked up. Wasn’t as trashy as I was expecting it to be. When we rode out we took a suspect with us. The camp boss – O’Keefe was his name, I think – turned him over. The guy was pretty beat up and he did readily confess he raped that girl. I figure O’Keefe probably did a little impromptu “interrogation” to soften him up and minimize the uproar for fear the sheriff would shut the camp down. A hell of a place to live, but it’s got to be better than what I hear the county has got going over to the fair grounds.

D.J. and Geoff brought home a big surprise – large windows the university is taking out of some of the buildings. They can’t afford to run the air conditioning so they’re trying to retrofit some of the older buildings to open the windows now that Fall is coming on so they can be used without a/c. All that money they spent to put new, modern windows into them old buildings so they’d be more efficient and now they’re taking them out again to put old-fashioned windows back in. Well, whatever, we’ve got the glass now. Got to be someway we can make a greenhouse with this stuff. She says there’s a couple more pickup loads of glass and the job super said she could have it all after she gifted him with a couple of loaves of DunHagan bread. I’d wondered where it went.

<b>September 15th, 2005 – Thursday</b>

I knew it couldn’t last. Billy’s dead, one of the rustlers is dead, and the posse’ is out looking for the other boy. Spent last night riding fences again. Got all the way down to the end of the southwest pasture and was about to turn towards the north again when someone shot Billy right out of his saddle. My horse reared and threw me off which may have saved my life because I think I heard a second shot as I was falling and it may have been meant for me. Hit the ground flat on my back and knocked the wind out of me. Couldn’t see shit in the dark, couldn’t get up for having the breath knocked out of me, couldn’t hear anything but the sound of the horses running off and the thundering of my heart. Drew my revolver and laid still. A flashlight came on and I shot at the light from where I lay. Six inch barrel or not, those full-house loads flash like a cannon going off. The light fell and I heard something hit the ground and the sound of feet running away. Fired a shot at the sound but I don’t think I hit anything.

Finally got my breath back enough that I could get up. The flashlight was still lit and shining more or less towards where Billy lay. He wasn’t even twitching so I figured he was dead. Off to my left I could heard a wheezing sound but I didn’t move towards it for a time because I couldn’t see anything and didn’t want to give myself away. Finally got a bit of night vision back and I could see the boy I’d shot. The flashlight was a couple of feet away. He died about the time I moved towards him. The bullet took him rising through the chest and punctured a lung before it exited out his back. Those 158 gr hollow points make a real mess. Spotted a pickup truck behind some bushes on the other side of the fence and checked it out but there was no one there. Later came to find out the dead boy had the keys in his pocket so the other boy had to run for it. The radio was on my horse which had run off so I decided to drive the boy’s truck around to O’Hannon’s house for help. Loaded Billy up, but left the boy.

With two deaths we had the sheriff and the posse’ out there pretty quick. Once we got lights on the area it was pretty clear what happened. There was a dead steer on the other side of a clump of palmettos where they’d been skinning it. The truck belonged to the dead boy who turned out to be the son of a man only a mile or so away. The other boy was a friend of his. Couldn’t find him right off. I’m sure he’s run. The dead boy’s father was drunk when we got there and started raving out of his mind when the sheriff told him what had happened. Seems his wife left him couple weeks ago and his son being killed may have pushed him over. Don’t know. Sheriff put him in the lock-up so he could sleep it off and maybe give us some information. He didn’t have any power so I don’t see how they could have kept any meat there for long. Maybe the boys were selling it somewhere. Truck had a full tank of gas so they were getting it from somewhere.

D.J’s hysterical and can’t be consoled. Wants me to quit today. Got Cathy hysterical with her. O’Hannon gave me a bottle of whisky and the day off. We’ll be burying Billy tomorrow at the Baptist church.

If them boys had sat still and quiet we’d have rode right on by them because neither Billy or I’d had the first idea they were there. Now there’s two dead and another maybe going to die.

All for a goddamned cow.
 

Dobbin

Faithful Steed
Gosh, ATH, I'm envious.

Yes, I can write about possible future happenings, even visualize what might occur and why, but I don't have any...

...HUMAN ELEMENT to my stories.

My narrative reads like a "laundry list" of humdrum facts as they might happen. Everything plausible and well thought out and as you might expect it to actually be. It is interchangeable as an entry of my day book/journal that I keep now about "life as it is."

Yours, on the other hand, captivates the human interest and while set in a possible to come future time, the future remains as only the "scene set on the stage." The real story occurs at "front stage" and is the human interaction.

I got it. Writer's Envy, I think they call it.

Well anyway, keep it up. We all hang on your every word!

Best,
Joe
 

Libertarian

Deceased
12 Nov 2005

The city announced a food truck and hand out in the Ingram Mall parking lot for today. I'm doing okay and don't want to leave the place unwatched but I've given two gallons of gasoline to one of the neighbors who will drive his truck over with a few others to see what they can get.

The hens are laying well. I've marked and left several eggs under one of the hens to see what happens. I'm glad I borrowed that rooster last week. For all his noise he may have started me out on having meat as well as eggs on a fairly regular basis.

13 Nov 2005

More bad news. Yesterday's food hand out turned into a riot. By the time the dust settled, 260 people lay wounded, 123 dead and three trucks were burning. Those guard troops don't mess around. The mayor has announced that the next food shipment will be handed out at the Alamo dome and only a few people will be admitted at a time. I think that they will have a bigger riot once the crowd gets tired of waiting. Fortunately my neighbors made it out before the bullets flew. They wound up with 25 pounds of rice and 10 of beans per family along with several boxes of canned goods and four salted hams. We will figure out an equitable distribution tonight.

Finished picking the last of the pears and grapes. I wish that I had some apple trees. Oh well, next year the loquats should begin bearing and if the winter is as mild as last year the papaya and bananas will bear well next year. I have the pots and fire and one of the neighbors has the jars and lids. We will can tomorrow morning. The chickens are in hog heaven with all the fruit scraps they're getting.
 

Todd

Inactive
September 16, 2005

Well, the last of the new city people moved out along with the dope growers. At last, no more cars going 30 miles an hour throwing up a rooster tail of dust on the county road.

All these people packed up when they ran out of propane for their appliances and gas for their cars and generators. Speaking of that, my neighbor and I welded up a couple of wood gas generators in my shop a few weeks ago. He's a better welder then I am but I can run my arc welder on the PV system so it was a mutal trade.

Besides one for our cars and trucks, I had him weld up a little one for my generator. I bought a couple of electric chain saws for Y2K and by hauling the generator around we can cut firewood. And then there are the two man saws if push comes to shove. All they need is a good sharpening.

September 17, 2005

We made our first trip to the coast (less then an hour away) to do rock fishing. We got quite a few. We'll can some and smoke the rest. It wasn't too bad stoping along the way to pick up wood to keep the wood gas generator going.

Also got a call from our city neighbors who have a cabin on a property next to ours. They plan on moving up from Half Moon Bay. They're good people and will be an asset. Their trouble is that they never listened to me about adding insulation to their cabin so they could heat it easier. Right now it looks like they, our tenants and our other neighbor will be relying upon our woods for firewood. I don't know how long that's going to last.

September 18, 2005

The alarm system we rigged up at the locked gate went off just after dark. We've been fortunate that so few people have tied to come up the road. I kept hoping it wouldn't be a fire-fight. Turned out to be a neighbor from up the road wondering about having us make a wood gas unit for him. Said he'd seen my neighbor's. Given the way things are, I don't know why in the hell he came after dark. Told him we would if he could find the materials.

All the people, well all eight of us, on our private road were up at our house this morning making apple juice. Tomorrow is tomato juice day and the grapes will be coming on soon for more juice. Since we have the only big garden, orchard and vineyard (all of three dozen vines) here, we recognize that sharing won't hack it next year.

We're going to convert on of the 4x4 trucks into a tractor and establish a community garden down by the pond. There's about 5 acres we can plant for vegetables and another 10 acres on my neighbor's property where we can plant tree and vine crops.

Life could be worse but all of this is getting old.

Todd
 

north runner

Membership Revoked
Goood Day todday

Got my last three neighbors, three on a match. What a bunch of clowns. After giving them my jerry can of gas for their gen I said sure I'd share. They went away happy as junebugs.

Almost as good as gettin the Doc and his wife. Those biotics they gave me sure must have had starch in them. I almost died. Got payback when I booby trapped their car. It was funny how the sheriff or FD didn't bother showing up. I was waiting :)

Things sure have improved over the old days. Back then I was always worried if I'd have someplace to live. Now I just watch the old people. They know their days are over. BaBa Boomers. Its fun to offer them money for their McMansions. A little game of fiat before I run them off hehehe. Always wise to burn a place like that after you've used it for the night btw. You don't want them back, the "we got rights" nimbys. What a group of morons. No one could own a damn thing under them...yeha did they get want they deserved when the oil cartel went belly up along with their brothas in crime the feds.

Well got to keep this short so just remember - there's more than one way to skin a live pig :lol:

The future is yours.

Enjoy!
 

GILTRIC

Membership Revoked
Heard the Bradley coming down the road and walked out to the mail box. Pete the postman wasn't in the Bradley today, some slick sleeve handed me my mail instead. One of the pieces of mail was an official looking brownish yellow envelope. Upon opening it I put 2 and 2 together and figured the guy who I saw checking out Toms property the other day had to be the tax assessor. Seems I owe 12 thousand dollars on a property I used to owe 3 grand a year on. Maybe I shouldnt have added the garden. Molon Labe you f*ckers. Blood from a rock and all that. I havent seen cash in 2 months.
 

Scrapman

Veteran Member
This is better then sittin around the radio waiting for the next installment of THE SHADOW or DICK TRACY ,
21st century equivalant
Thanx to all that contributated a tale ...I am on the edge of my seat ................
:eek: :bg:
 

Todd

Inactive
It's hard to belive it's almost the middle of October. The town has emptied out and the new $6M high school is closed - couldn't afford the juice to light and heat it much less the buses. The Chevron is closed so the closest gas is a 30 mile round trip. The town isn't really a town any more. It sounds strange but it's great since only the survivor-type people have stayed. Inerestingly, the ex-hippes represent the major group of people left. Maybe becuase they have been here longer then a lot of others. Maybe the just stay stoned. Who knows.

We're all doing great on our road. We spent a lot of time going through vegie lists so we had a balanced diet. It turned out we were seed and plant central. Well, we were ag-central really since no one else was as concerned as we were.

We all chipped in to buy our neighbor's cows - 10 of them. Now all we have to do is make a deal with Corky over the hill to run his bull with the herd. It should make the bull happy.

Our city neighbors with the cabin have been knocking themselves out on the new vegie area. Rather then converting a 4x4 as a tractor, we bought our neighbor's 50ish diesel Oliver crawler. We're running it on wood gas like everything else.

Well, time to go back to work. Yea, it's getting bette every day.

Todd
 

Libertarian

Deceased
20 Nov 2005
Earlier rumours of Mexican troops crossing into south Texas have been confirmed. The local military bases are gearing up for deployment. DPS has asked for volunteers to fill empty positions guarding food and fuel depots when the military goes south to secure the borders better.

22 Nov 2005
Brownsville, Laredo, El Paso and Eagle pass are allegedly in Mexican hands. Our troops are rolling south in a hurry this morning. Word from some folks who had been camping (living) in Big Bend Park is that it is now an occupied part of Mexico. Things are going to get even more interesting.

24 Nov 2005
We all got together today to celebrate Thanksgiving. We were thankful for our lives and continuing health. We were thankful that the military hadn't pulled more troops out of town. We need them now; fighting with the Mexican army is now less than 50 miles south of town. Everyone is carrying battle rifles and LBEs.

Our neighbors who are more ethnicly Mexican are worried about crazy redneck "patriots". They've started wearing American flag patches to hopefully let others know that they are Americans too. So far there's been no violence like when all the Arabs and Middle Easterners were burned out back in the summer.

I'm going to have another slice of pumpkin pie and go to bed early tonight. What a head ache! It is hard enough making it now without idiot bastards who want to make themselves feel good by shooting someone who is probably a better American than they'll ever be. Damn, but we live in interesting times!
 
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theoutlands

Official Resister
What are we predicating as being the situation for the next year? Assume things stagger along as they are? Maybe China caps its industrial growth to focus on expanding their agriculture? I've got some stuff going, but it requires figuring out how to hold the status quo.
 

Deena in GA

Administrator
_______________
Just want to thank Flavius Aetius for starting this thread with an excellent story (and much to think about) and everyone who has contributed to it!
 

night driver

ESFP adrift in INTJ sea
August 15

RELIC still has a job at the hospital, though it has changed again. NOW she is working in surgery and the ED. Came home tonight and said that she had gotten a new ration card so we'll have gas for a while.

I have been looking at the "tank farm" and trying to decide how to handle it. think we'll be getting all of the gas her ration card will allow, and mixing it with the 45 or so gallons in the 2 drums. We'll run the Crown Vic until I can find a decent trade for it...but I am DAMN glad that I found those two Bladze scooters last month. Folks were throwing them out. "Welll now that we won't have any gas we don't need THESE toys..." yupper mr Yuppie just toss em out on the tree lawn and I'll takew care of them.

It wasn't hard to rig the trailers up to them, and mount the gas cans and coolers and packs on them for bug-out should we decide to exit. they will be SUPERB stage 2 units.

We're keeping in touch with a couple folks who have offered us places to BO to should it become necessary.



Aug 16 10 AM

This is the last morning she drives in to work alone. We are going to have to repair the Passenger side window on the Crown Vic because she had to shoot the sunofabitch who climbed in at the stop light. Gotta see about some CorBon or a more frangible 9mm round for her P89. damn round went through the perp's neck and the window, and the car next to her. Nobody in the car hurt but it just coincidently toasted another carjacker trying for THAT car....Cops gave her an on-scene commendation for 2 with one blow and she went on to work.


Evening:

the raised beds we put in last fall have settled nicely, and are producing REALLY well. I have spent the last 5 or 6 days (with her home or not) cannning and drying vegetables.

I have carrots, peas, early beans, VERY early tomatoes (hey I learned last year, started em WAY early (feb) and grew em on the porch (damn cats) until I could get em out into the beds. I've got 3 more varieties that are a bit later that will can VERY nicely.

the Potato Tire Experiment seems to be going well as does the upside down tomato experiment. the Castor beans (for lube oil and biodeisel) are coming along nicely. I'm not kidding myself that I'll get a usable quantity out of them, but I SHOULD get a few quarts of lube oil anyway.....

The Sunflowers are going well too, and I have shot the raccoon so I should HAVE sunflowers this year.

Time to crash. I've stopped shaking and she has convinced me that logistics just won't LET me take her to work and come home and go get her......she'll just have to go more obviously armed. I think I'll cut down the 870 tomorrow.


August 17 Evening:


Handed her the shortened 870 and got kissed like I haven't been kissed in YEARS by her. There ensued an interuption in the normal evening routine and dinner was delayed somewhat....when yer stewing Mystery Meat, another hour or so isn't a problem.....


August 18 Noon

She called just now and said that things were getting "Fluid" at work. and I just got a PM from one of the places I was going to BO to which said effectively, "Please don't come here. we're fighting SOME KIND of bug in the county and don't know what it is. Unless, of course, you can plan on self quarantining in which case we'd welcome you still."

the OTHER BO Place hasn't answered PM's in several months. Dunno if he's still even THERE. we have a couple secondaries, and I'm prolly gonna have to get in touch with them pretty soon.

When this hoopla started in June, I was pretty sure that we'd be able to handle it here in the 'burbs but things are getting mighty hinky right about now. There are 12 burned out houses in the 3 blocks I consider "my" street. Story is different on each one but it actually boils down to either they didn't have what someone wanted and were burned out because of that, or THEY demanded something from some one ELSE and got burned out. NOT to mentioon the 16 or 20 empty houses in back of us in the 'hood.

I am overjoyed we have had water right through so far because we had to wet down our own roof a few times in the last 3 weeks. Well tomorrow I'm taking a little trip out to a placve in Geauga County where they used to sell trailers to see if I can't get one for us.....to pack and have ready to pull out in. Even if it is just a solid utility trailer or a flat bed I get to build on.



Aug 29

GEE. I can't IMMAGINE why I haven't updated this Weblog since a week ago Thursday. I'm doing it from the dining table in "Real Vans Wear Black". We're sitting in a closed hotel parking lot in Norwalk Ohio, except the power is stil on in the place and their WiFi node is still up. My trailer is hitched to the back of this van, and RELIC is behind that in her truck with the utility trailer. The 4 ex-SF guys are behind THAT with their pickup camper and trailer. We lost the SOF Wannabe's somewhere around Sandusky in the ambush. It's been one hell of a week and a half.

Where do I start?

OK. RELIC called directly when she got to work and told me not to leave as she was coming home. Job ended, and she had both the regular paycheck and the check for the 1 week. She pulled out of the hospital and was half way home when the explosion took out half of the hospital.
We made the executive decision to go ahead with the plan to go to the RV shop to see what could be had, as there were rumors to the effect taht if the stuff wasn't gone by friday night they were going to be burned. When we got there w found those rumors to be true. they were literally handing the keys to people who asked for them. And there was NOT a crowd there....

"real Vans Wear Black" USED to be a dual use camper (front half crew back half shop) for a race team. Deisel. We scarfed it up in a heart beat. Along with a deisel pickup, and 2 trailers, one for living in (used airstream) and a utility trailer. the truck has a VERY small camper in the bed, a pop up. SO we pulled BABS, our van, into the utility trailer (did I mention it was a LARGE one??) and got everything home and jockeyed them all into the back yard and driveway.

On getting home we started to load the utility trailer (minus BABS) with the contents of the basement, all of our storage preps and such. Some went into the util trailer, some into the camping trailer. By dark we had loaded al of the PREPS (per se) into one of the trailers or camper, and I had figured out what to do with the tank farm.

We crashed dead out at about 9 o'clock, and were rudely awakened by banging on our door at about 3 in the morning (which turned out to be gunshots, not knocking). We smelled smoke ands saw the light of flames outside and RAN down stairs. It wasn't our house but it WAS the houses on either side of us. We did what we could, to protect ourselves, and watched as the houses were destroyed. We watched our siding melt off the wall towards the brick house next to us, but it never caught fire.

the word was that the two families in the brick house had turned down some one or other days before for something and so they came back, nailed the doors shut and torched the place. Nobody got out. they also torched the house ont he other side because that family was out and about when they did the brick. we were awakend by the gunshots.

By 5:30 that morning we had packed ALL of the rest of our belongings that mattered, and the cats and exited. I destroyed the castor beans but left the rest standing for whatever gleaners might have wanted.

Blog, it's late, and I am going to crash. I'll pick up the REST of the non-stop week for Hell when I get up.
 

Freeholdfarm

Inactive
My story has to start a couple of months before the big blow-up in Saudi Arabia.

We moved to this one acre only about a year and a half ago, and a neighbor told us that the two lots across the road (about an acre and a half total) would be offered really cheap in the next tax sale. The reason was that they don't perk, being low and very clayey. I thought at the time that if possible I'd get them for pasture, as I had plans for a small goat dairy. Well, nobody bought them last year, so in the tax sale this May I was finally able to get them, and first thing I did was fence them and put up a small shed. By this time gas prices had been elevated for over a year, and the situation in the Middle East was looking worse every day. I decided that there was enough grass on Grandma's one acre for the goats, even with the small market garden I'd put in, and got a mustang from BLM. Grandma thought I was a little bit nuts, but it was on my own land, so she didn't say much. I did some scrounging with neighbors and friends and came up with harness, and materials for a light buggy. I've had mustangs before, and it didn't take long to have the little bay mare gentled and begin training her. In the meantime, the Farmer's Market in town, twelve miles away, opened up and I started taking a few things in to sell each Saturday morning. Grandma and Half-Pint would go with me. Grandma helped sell stuff (she's still pretty sharp, in spite of her 92 years). Half-Pint chattered and generally got in the way, but we love her anyway. We sold eggs and honey, vegetables and flowers, and goat milk soap. I expected to have some surplus bunnies soon, too.

Well, that is about when things began to get very interesting overseas and at home. We stocked up on everything we could afford to (kind of hard when your income is mostly Social Security), especially Grandma's medications, chicken feed, and hay for the goats, rabbits, and horse, and got several cans of gas. I told Grandma we would have to save the gas for emergencies, and start using the horse and buggy for normal errands and such. Thankfully we were producing most of our own food already, though it will be a couple more years before the fruit trees we planted will produce anything. My main concern was winter. I suspected that electricity would get very expensive and could be unreliable as time goes on, and wanted to get a wood stove installed. Grandma agreed -- she's an old farm girl, and raised her own children during the Depression. The wood stove was easily found, as a lot of people have old pre-regulation stoves rusting in outbuildings. But we didn't have any wood on either of our tiny places, nor did any of our close neighbors. My next concern was to make sure that we had a reliable water supply. The well is over a hundred and fifty feet deep, a little too deep for a hand pump. The river is only about a quarter of a mile away, so we could haul water and purify it in a pinch, but I'd rather not do that if possible. During the winter we could probably collect quite a bit of water from the roof of the house and garage, but summers here are really dry. We decide to use some of our meager savings and build a house over the well (the well house, with the pressure tank in it, is up by the house). On the roof we put a solar array, and install a solar-powered pump. The building houses batteries, and stores extra feed for the animals. We could have just put the solar array on mounts on the ground, but were afraid it would make them too easy to steal. At it is, they are inside a fence, protected by a large watchdog, so hopefully they won't disappear. Our savings were now gone, but the basic necessities were provided for and we have no debt. I've bartered with one of the neighbors; they get goat milk and eggs and we'll get half of one of their steers when they butcher this fall. Another neighbor is helping me in the garden in exchange for goat milk for her grand-daughter. Wish I knew how my little grand-daughters were doing. They are clear on the other side of the country, and I haven't heard from their parents in several months. Haven't heard from my middle daughter, either. Worried about what is going on in New England, but haven't heard anything on the news -- what little we get.


My mother and step-father live seventeen miles from the nearest town, about fifty miles from us, and he drives a 10-cylinder pu (to pull a large trailer), so they are really hurting. But they do have enough trees to keep them in firewood for a while -- if they get a wood stove. He's allergic to wood smoke, so I don't know what they will do. We talk to them on the phone regularly, but I've been wondering how much longer that will last.

My sister and BIL in Wyoming are doing OK. They sold their house last year and moved into their tiny RV with their two little girls in order to get out of debt. He doesn't know how much longer he'll be working -- he's been working in a Lowe's distribution warehouse since losing his job as an aircraft mechanic -- but they are safely parked behind their church, and are gardening with the Pastor and his family. They have some poultry, and just got some meat rabbits. Last time I talked to them they were trying to find a milk goat, but they are worth their weight in gold now, with the price of milk so high, when you can find any at all. I suggested they try to find a pregnant donkey as they can be milked, too. The parsonage grounds have housed equines before.

I guess I should be thankful that my father died last winter so isn't having to cope with what my brothers and their families are going through. They live in a small village in Alaska, and neither family was prepped at all. One SIL usually does have a small garden, and my brothers and nephews hunt, but they are scrambling to get firewood in and worried sick about having enough food and lamp oil to get through the long, dark winter. I'm going to try to send them some seeds for next years gardens, but unfortunately can't send live animals to them. They have lived there for a long time and have lots of friends and contacts, and people are helping one another out as best they can, but it's a rough situation. My SIL with lupus is running out of her medications, too, so her health is a major concern.

As summer neared its end we solved the firewood problem. The Forest Service is allowing cutting in the parts of the National Forest that are only about eight miles from here. I have joined forces with several neighbors -- my horse teamed with another (lots of usually useless horses in this neck of the woods -- worth their weight in copper now!) pulls a wagon load of wood home while other neighbors cut and split in the forest. It's only pine, but it will hopefully provide enough heat to get us through. Hopefully we'll have a mild winter. If it gets too cold, we'll probably have to close off Grandma's bedroom and sitting room, as they are the farthest from the stove. She would have to sleep in the living room, on the hide-a-bed. Power is getting erratic, though, and I'm wishing we had more kerosene for the lamps. It has been a couple of months since we have used the van. The little horse takes me to town every Saturday morning for the Farmer's Market. I think that may soon be our only income, because news we are hearing from the rest of the country isn't good, and government money, i.e. Social Security, will probably stop coming soon. Grandma is worried about losing her Medicaid and her medications, but is trying to put a good face on it. She's had a longer and healthier life than most already. I'm thankful she's been with us as long as she has, because she has a lot of knowledge of how to survive on very little, and in primitive conditions. She's also a better shot than I am! We don't have much ammo. stored up, though, and it doesn't look like we are going to be able to replace any we use, so are hoarding it for serious need. So far we haven't had any serious incidents here, though we've heard of some. There has been some trouble in town as food supplies got short. One thing some lucky folks in town have, though, that I wish we had, and that is geothermal heat!

We had a major surprise today. My middle daughter arrived with her fiance and her older sister's three small daughters. They have had a really rough trip. If they hadn't been able to team up with some other travelers, and if people on the way across the country hadn't been excessively kind to them, they would never have made it, and it still makes me shudder to think they even tried. But they were told to evacuate, as they were too close to Boston after some incident there. They aren't sure what happened, just were told to get out. They decided to check on my oldest daughter's family on their way out and found evidence of a battle, so talked to one of their neighbors. The house was only a mile from the Interstate, and prowler's tried to get in one night. SIL protected his family at the cost of his own live, and my oldest daughter went down with him. By then the neighbors were alerted and came in time to run the remaining intruders off. Their sacrifice saved the lives of their little girls, though, and middle daughter found them at another neighbor's house and brought them. I don't think they realized when they started out in August what an odyssey they were in for. They are thin, dirty, ragged, and spook at everything. But they are alive, and we will make room for them. I was in tears half the night, laying in bed with the three-year-old cuddled in my arms. The two older girls are in the top bunk in Half-Pint's room -- she protested, but they were so tired they quickly fell asleep and she calmed down. You just can't reason with someone with autism.

Kind of wish I hadn't spent so much time last year on TB2K -- I've been seeing a very bright star in the night recently, and now it's starting to even be visible during the daytime. If I hadn't spent so much time on that forum, maybe I wouldn't be worrying about something from outer space crashing into the earth! But I'm trusting God. Speaking of that, we found a couple of neighbors who are Christians, and have been meeting at each other's houses on Sunday mornings. The men take turns bringing a Bible study. This has really been a blessing as it is so far to go to town for church. We had been using a little gas each week for that until it pretty much became unavailable. We are going to start having our own Farmer's Market next summer, we've decided. It's too far for people to be going clear to town to buy and sell. Through the friend of a friend network I managed to get enough grain and some sugar beets to feed the stock through the winter. We are really fortunate to live in a farm area.

Middle daughter is a teacher, and we are starting a little "one-room" school. It will meet in an empty house around the corner. The elementary school is closed and can't be opened without electricity or heat, and the children in the area are too scattered to bring them all to one central place, anyway, so there are several of these little "one-room" schools starting up. Daughter's fiance is going to help her out, and with other adults will take turns standing guard on the school when it's in session. It is really important to keep the children safe.


Yikes, I guess I've gotten long-winded! And am stopping rather abruptly, as it's getting late and Half-Pint needs her supper. It is so easy to mix truth (or hopes and dreams) with fiction -- no idea how the next few years will really come out. Hopefully I'll have more than just another year to prep!

Kathleen
 

Infoscout

The Dude Abides
I will try to add more when I can!

I hope this keeps the story going!
September 6th, 2005

I wanted to start writing this diary, for two reasons. One, I just got the coolest fountain pen I have ever written with. It is a Pilot Vanishing Point, which works like a regular ball point pen. With broad point nib, it just writes fabulously.
The other reason is the events that have been happening in the past few weeks. I wanted a journal, a record, so I could look back and see how things unfolded. It all started with the finding of seven dirty bombs in California, New York City, and Washington DC. Then all hell broke loose in Saudi Arabia. Two of their highest yielding oil fields have been hit with dirty bombs. The next day, Venezuela was racked with a revolution. Oil has quit flowing from them until things get under control. The US, whose military is already stretched too thin, does not have the necessary might to get control in Venezuela. Needless to say, Gas prices are rising.
I have almost maxed out the credit card, buying supplies for the family. It has been hard, shuffling funds, around trying to make sure all the bills get paid, as well as storing as much food and water as we can. My job is in retail, and it will only be a matter of time before my company begins to close stores. My wife is a teacher, so hopefully at least she will stay employed for sometime.
I have been prepping for years, but had stopped after Y2K did not materialize. When 911 happened, I began again, but my wife and I also had a child. I became a stay at home dad, which further cut into our funds. But to be honest, I would rather be poor and spend the time with my son than be solvent and driving to daycare. He is truly a light in anyone’s life he touches.
There is talk on FOX news that there will be rationing soon. President Kerry’s first response to the violence overseas has been to use an executive order to suspend all firearms and ammunition sales. Seems the Democratic party thinks guns are to blame for the worlds troubles. What could they have planned in the next few months that they would stop Americans from purchasing firearms? I am not happy about this, I already have a decent collection of firearms, and ample ammo, but keeping others in my community from legally arming themselves seems a little drastic, but then we are dealing with Democrats. Jeez!
Gas has gone up to almost five dollars a gallon. We just purchased a Honda CRV, which gets good mileage, so it looks like that will be the main family car now. I have extra five gallon gas containers, which I purchased from Brigade Quartermaster, so I will fill them up and put a little STABILL in them to keep them for awhile. I have to look at my condo in a new light now, how to stock it, how to prep it for winter, how to cook in it, how to secure it. I have to expect the power to go sometime in the future if we have a gas shortage.
My father just called, he is at my Grandfather’s old house, which my parent’s have rebuilt in order to rent it out. It has a well and two fireplaces. My grandfather died ten years ago, and it has been empty ever since. My parent’s have been renovating it in order to rent it. It has two fireplaces, and a well. we talked at length about the well, and how to use solar panels and car batteries for power incase of the city have a blackout. He said he was on it, I hope so.
My neighbors are great. There are four joining condos, and I couldn’t have asked for better neighbors. The men share an interest in firearms, and just last year we all had FALS built. I had acquired a Century Fal in a trade, and decided I wanted another one. I found some Imbel kits from Sportsman’s Guide, and told my neighbors about it. At the time (Sept 2004) the Assault Weapons Ban had just expired, so you could have a true military grade rifle, with the appropriate amount of American made parts. So the three of us had Imbels, and we joined a local range to shoot at. John, who is from West Virginia is a crazy hunter and fisherman. He does most of his hunting where he is from, but he keeps his FAL, his Winchester 94 in 44 magnum, his Ruger Redhawk 44 mag with him here. Darryl, my other neighbor, is from the eastern part of the state, grew up in a tobacco farm. He only has the FAL, and a Glock 17. I have my Glock 17, Glock 26, a Taurus 22lr, Rem 870, Rem 870 express (bird barrel, and slug barrel), and my two Fals. Ammo supplies are as good as can be for what can be stored in a condo’s storage room. Most of my collection was purchased before the birth of my son. Except for the building of my FAL, which I spread out over a few months, I have not purchased a new firearm in a long time. The only purpose they serve is the defense and survival of my family.
As someone who reads all the message boards, I am worried. I believe this is it. This may be the slow precipitous fall into chaos.

October 10th, 2005

My company, due to the economy going South, has decided to close some of its stores. I only worked part-time, so its no super big deal. Our store will be open another few weeks as merchandise sells down. Fat chance of that!
The Mid-East is heating up. The Saudi Army is the only thing holding that country together, with UN troops heading toward their oil fields. Parts of that country are in chaos, with foreign nationals being kidnapped almost daily. Israel, in a bold but dangerous move, with the help of the US, has bombed three Iranian nuclear reactors. Iran is vowing revenge, and there have been a string of suicide bombings in Israel since. A car bomb exploded in Jordan, killing four of the top military commanders of that country’s military. King Abdulla is trying to keep calm, but who knows how long that will last. China and Taiwan are arguing over fishing rights, and a Chinese fighter jet flew too close to a Taiwanese naval vessel. There were no shots fired yet.
Gas is now seven dollars a gallon and climbing. Rationing of gas will begin November 1st. Everyone has to submit to state authority estimated mileage lists for each car that you own. Also, you are asked to estimate how many miles you drive for groceries, or food. everyone is talking about padding the info, but according to the DOT, mileage will now be checked as part of your yearly inspection.
My neighbors and I have quit going to the range. We want to conserve ammo, since it cannot be purchased anymore. We have also been reading the guidelines for the homeowners association. What is our bright idea? We want to turn the backyard common area into a small garden. We could grow a few things, and hopefully offset the cost of goods in the grocery store. Everything not grown in North Carolina where I reside has gone up in price, and any plastic or petroleum based product has skyrocketed in price as well. If the sky is the limit, the sky must be pretty high up there.
We are actually seeing empty shelves in some parts of the grocery store. Trucks are late getting to their stops, thanks to gas shortages all across the country. Although the news does not report it, rumors of hijackings are abundant. TV news, on that note, has become stale, with repeated information on how to save mileage, how to carpool, where the new bus stops are, and so forth. It is almost as if they aren’t being allowed to say something.
My father talked to his cousin the other day. His cousin’s son is in Iraq. They are not allowed to use cell phones, or any other phone to call home anymore. Email must be cleared through high command twenty four hours before it is sent. She hasn’t heard from her son in over a month.
I am running out of ink, so I think I will turn in. Should be an interesting day tomorrow.
 

tsherry

Membership Revoked
It has been so long since it started, I wanted to make sure that our children remembered our words and thoughts of how it was Before.

In the eleven years since the Fall, we have lost many friends and much of what were counted as gains over the past eight decades. While life is difficult by standards of the days Before, it is a routine that we must live with, for as certain as the Creator, no one will take care of things for us any more. The Nanny Government is no more, we depend now on our States for what little governance we require. After the Revolution, there were no more needs for a Federal Government beyond what was required for the mutual defense of our borders and to regulate international trade. Since that time, I know of very few who would claim allegiance to the old government, although there were many who were employed by It. I assume that the Federal Government still exists, although it has been five years since I’ve seen a Federal.

I was born in 1960, forty-five years and some days before the Fall began. I was a consulting landscape architect, a somewhat un-necessary career these days, in which I live as a subsistence farmer and gardener, and like most others, someone who is capable of many things that I never thought I would be, in the Before years.

The ‘End’ happened quickly at first, and then bottomed slowly like silt settling in a bucket of spring creek water. The first oil crisis, thirty odd years before the End, was manufactured, as was the second, just a few years later. The third, was of supply, not of control. When the last tankers left the Kingdom of Allah (then called ‘Saudi Arabia’, and several other countries, prior to Israel’s destroying them), I was living as a normal American, with a shiny new SUV (‘Sport Utility Vehicle’) that ran on gasoline imported from half-way round our planet, and status was measured in the excessive consumption of the precious liquid, rather than the conservation of it. My Ford (named after the manufacturer, for those that do not know or cannot remember) had a ‘fuel economy’ of 13 miles of distance traveled per gallon of fuel. These days, 13 miles is about what people travel by horseback, as did they in the second century past. It would travel up to nearly a hundred miles PER HOUR, and I could travel several hundred miles per day, on business, and then travel back home. Now, a trip like that is measured of months, not hours.

I was working a ‘normal’ forty to fifty hour week with my partners and two staff as things came unraveled, then were re-woven. First, the prices of fuel increased, then those of ‘commodities’, like store bought food (for the reader, many foods were available in massive quantities, at low cost, from all over the world. Some, such as ‘bananas’, and ‘kiwi’ were imported from distant countries via ship, then moved by truck and train, and sold for nearly nothing, in todays’ Silver or Gold). Finally, one partner, who lived some distance away from the City, decided to work at home, due to fuel costs. One employee, who lived even farther away, and drove her automobile (to the reader, a ‘car’ is not a ‘truck’, or SUV, and often cars made better distance on the same amount of fuel), could no longer afford to work here, or could no longer get fuel. After the electrical power (which used to be provided full-time from those holes in the walls) was rationed, and then restricted only to Hospitals and Dying Centers, we never heard from her again.

After only a few days, our business activity ceased. Our ‘design contracts’ all were cancelled within days of the devaluation of the old US Dollar. (people paid us to think up attractive ways to arrange their trees, shrubs and hide their ‘parking lots’ -where cars were parked by the hundreds--design places to play soccer, baseball, and other exercise venues where people ‘played’ to stay physically fit. No, food garden production was never considered. Yes, I know, it was most foolish.). Within only a few days more, we were forced to close our doors. I managed to take most of the expensive computer equipment with me before the building was sacked, but lost all of the paper client files in the ensuing fire. I still remember seeing the old Flour Mill burn, I could see it for miles. Three days it burned, I heard later. Of course, the computer equipment was useless, without business activity and electrical power.

With the US Dollars taken from our company, my partners and I parted ways reluctantly. My most distant partner I have not seen in those eleven years, but did hear he and his family were alive after the first year. My other partner and his family left the City for a retreat with other family members in Idaho, and I hope to this day he and his wife and daughter survive. I heard years later, that both my employees and their families had been killed in the riots. We were only saved by luck, ammunition and ruthlessness. There are days that I’m not proud of, but my immediate family is alive and well, my distant family members I pray are alive. I will never know for sure. No word of them from Minneapolis, Salt Lake, or even nearby Seattle. There are still yet nights when I awake in a sweat as I remember the screams and echos of automatic-weapons fire.

My ‘preps’ as we used to call them on a ‘newsgroup’ on the ‘internet’ (I still remember, ‘Cory Hamasaki’s Weather Reports’. I wondered for years if he made it out before the Cobalt Bomb went off?) were ‘good’ before the Fall. I had stocks of wheat, rice, corn, oats, canned goods (store bought, from many distant places), dried milk, and hundreds of other things I thought useful at the time. Electric generator. Fuel. Clothing, many many other things. These helped us live through the first Years of the Fall. During which, we learned.

My cars were many. I had no less than 10! We used to ‘restore’ them, make them as ‘new’ and drive them just for fun (to the reader, this is not meant to be humorous, but is in fact, true). I spent tens of thousands of US Dollars on my ‘hobby’, all which in the end, turned out to be a waste of resources. For this, I to this day, apologize. I also owned at that time the Ford Tractor, which we used until just a few years ago, converted to run on other fuels. It still is here in part of the old shed, behind the bunkhouse.

We all just assumed that things would go on, progress, expand, and improve. We never knew at the time that we were at the peak of the Oil Age.

I will write more of those early days, and how we’ve come to where we are. At fifty six, I hear all too often of the shortness of my days, and am considered a very old man. When I tell them I’ve known people who have lived well into their 90’s, the young ones laugh loudly. I’m not insulted by this, as they spend much time with me, as though I am a distraction, a shiny rock, from some ancient time.

If we had only known.
 

Libertarian

Deceased
30 Nov 2004

We have had one hell of a week. We reenacted the Alamo, only this time Santa Ana had his butt kicked way south of the Rio Grande. There is talk of annexing Mexico about 50 miles south to Texas. I hope it doesn't happen. We don't need the extra mouthes to feed. All was not fun and games. Over 35,000 Mexicans died in the last 6 days. over half were Army, many were banditos and Aztlanos and a bunch were just poor folks in the wrong place, speaking the wrong language. We lost over 14,000 of our own in the fight to take back the south of Texas.

Vincente Fox is screaming racism and revenge. I doubt that there are enough federal troops left alive to cash the check his mouth is writing. Especially not now that all of us are armed with captured FALs, heavy equipment and other good stuff. President Kerry has ordered all captured weapons to be turned over to the federal military. Gov. Perry told him to blow it out his butt. He then told all the troops still here that they were now Texas troops. I can see this getting real fun in a hurry. Nearly all of the troops have already exchanged the Stars and Stripes for the Lone Star. Both Dallas and parts of Houston are thumbing their noses at Perry. That will last as long as the food shipments do.

4 Dec 2005
The West Texas oil fields are back online! several thousand new Texas Militia troops and 20,000 militia irregulars are on full time guard duty on the pipelines and refineries. We've already killed several hundred saboteurs. Most were Mexican but some were Arabs and a few Chinese.

We have a regular supply of fuel to all government vehicles and most buses. The fire departments are back in business as are the ambulances. If the electrical supply stays up the hospitals will be back in business full swing. I wonder where they will get their medicines and surical supplies?

6 Dec 2005
I am glad that it is wintertime and there is little to do with the crops. I got my little garden turned over and added a bunch of goat poop. It will be ready for an nice early planting. I will start seedlings in old yougurt cups in early January so they will be ready for a late February planting.

The newest batch of goat cheese loks like it will be a good one. And all of the loquats and pears that we didn't eat or can went into wine making. I will bottle it all over xmas. (being a packrat is a good thing. I just happened to have 20 cases of emtpy Grolsch bottles and five of wine bottles stacked up behind the shed.

My girlfriend has gotten together with several of the neighbors to start up a quilting bee. We are gathering up rags and old fabric from everywhere. "Busy hands; happy hearts" as Grandma used to say. I have conerted two of my mother's old industrial Singers from electricity or treadle power. Finding those flywheels helped a lot. The girls are going the build up some impressive leg muscles learning to work them.

The people of Dallas and Houston have just announced that they are fully behide Perry and Texas. They are also looking for new mayors and city councilmen. Food and fuel supplies have resumed to both cities.

7 Dec 2005
How appropriate. Today Japan and South Korea attacked North Korea. The whole region got tired of Kim's lunacy and China gave the nod that they wouldn't interfere so long as Japan did not occupy the peninsula. I am so glad I got my old Shortwave receiver working on the solar panels and batteries I got from the old school crossing signs. (don't tell anyone I said that.) It seems that the Chinese had deactivated most of PRNK's nukes before the attack so only a few small ones were used. Piongyang was obliterated in a retaliatory attack. I do not envy the job ahead feeding all of those soon to be freed North Koreans. It will be far worse than the German reunification.

10 Dec 2005
Got a new bitch dog to breed for pups. My trusty backyard trooper is beside himself with joy at having a friend and mate. The guy across the street ahs been supplying me with rabbit and chicken scraps for the one dog. He has agreed to increase the supply if I give him at least three from the first litter. I hope that I haven't messed up my future source of dog food.

12 Dec 2005
President Kerry has ordered Texas to give our new oil fuels to the federal government. Gov. Perry told him that he could buy it at market price. Kerry said that it was US property as he had nationaized all fuels. Gov Perry in rare form told Kerry to go f*** himself. He did this on the radio and a nation news feed satellite uplink. Kerry was not amused. VP Clinton has told the Congress that she thinks it is an act of war and wants them to declare it so the feds can treat texas as an enemy combatant. the Congress rubberstamped the request. All of the Senators and Representativesones who had stood against the President (her in reality) had mysteriously died or resigned since the troubles began. The whole capitol is filled with her syncophants. Fortunately she wasn't as clever with the Pentagon and they are draggin their feet at mobilizing and doing everything short of actual mutiny.

Arkansas, Oklahoma, Mississippi, Louisianna, Alabama, Georgia, both Carolinas, Florida. Arizona and Nevada have all sided with Texas. Colorado and New Mexico are on her side. Utah and most of the NW except for Western Washington are talking about joining up or forming their own bloc. Kentucky, Tennessee, Indiana and West Virginia are also talking about their own bloc. (I think that they may wind up joining the Southern Confederation - if it gets to that -rather than going it alone.)

Hillary was furious that Arkansas betrayed her. Their gov told her to go f*** herself. She had to be sedated. the radio reporter said that she was actually frothing at the mouth and screaming obscenities at everyone around. I am going to have to get the old direct TV dish turned back on if I can talk Bob the TV shop owner into sharing his bootleg hack. The box and my little TV don't draw much power and to see the news again would be great. I'll just have to watch while the sun is up to minimize the drain on my batteries.

15-20 Dec 2005
A time of mixed emotions. The US or A is no more. Hillary took over after Kerry resigned citing stress. She ordered the military to attack the states who had defied her. Her Secret Service detail shot her dead. The three big blocs of states are forming their own confederations. California decided to become its own nation. We now have the Pacific Northwest Alliance, the Southern Confederation (Virginia joined at the last minute) and the Greater Northeast Democratic Republic. The new capitals are Austin, Seattle (the liberals left for Sunny Califonia) and NYC.

The PNW and SC are almost one nation still, with open borders and free trade. The GNDR is pretty much on its own. Alaska and most of Western Canada are talking about seceding either forming their own bloc and going it alone or joing the PNW in the former US.

Colorado and New Mexico are flopping around looking for someone to cling to. They don't have the industrial base or agriculture to be much more than an Albanian style nation. The military they once counted on has either moved to surrounding states on gone into lock-down and airlifts men and supplies in and out from friendlier areas. I think that Richadson is about to cave and join the Confederation.

25 Dec 2005
Merry Christmas! We're still alive and healthier than ever. Things are still pretty desperate and didn't magically get better after the splitting and reforming of the states. We just no longer have an intrusive federal government sucking the life out of everything that remained after the fall. That in itself is a blessing and a magnificent xmas gift to us all. I will open some of the wine early and we will toast those brave SS agents who gave their lives making our new nations possible.

My girlfriend and I are having xmas supper with several of the neighbors in the empty house next door. We have made it into our official meeting place and set it up for group suppers as well as meetings. I guess the old folks who used to live here had a big family at one time. The diningroom table seats 16 with all of the leaves installed. I wonder how they fared in the relocation camp the went off to? We never heard from them again.
 
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Deena in GA

Administrator
_______________
Sept. 30, 2005

What a summer! Wish I could have written down earlier what's been going on, but we've been working so hard in the garden and canning that there's been no time. And, of course, we ended up having the hottest summer in the past 50 years which made everyone miserable (not to mention short-tempered) since the electricity is so sporadic and expensive there was no air conditioning and very little use of fans. We had to adopt the custom of resting in the heat of the day and doing our outside work in the morning and evening. Even then, it's been so miserably hot that we didn't feel like moving, but also too hot to rest comfortably.

We've had to fight the wildlife, especially the deer and squirrels, for our garden produce. They've loved the apple and pear trees too, unfortunately. We've been taking turns patrolling at night to run the animals away and to protect our firewood too. Hubby has always kept several years worth of wood stored around the yard and it is worth it's weight in gold now that people are thinking about winter coming on. I sure am glad we have that wood heater. I can cook on it too, thank goodness! Our propane is just about gone even though I've used it almost entirely for canning. Sure am glad we had enough to finish putting everything up. Of course, who knows what we'll do next year.

Interestingly, we had studied pioneer life in our homeschooling shortly before the fall began. It gave us some good information to fall back on. J, who is 13 now, remembered some of the traps we had looked at and then built a few to catch some of the squirrels and rabbits. As hard as life is now, it still isn't as hard as what the early pioneers went through. I remind myself of that time after time.

I sure am glad we always have kept a stock of food as that is what is getting us through this. We still have enough wheat, dried potatoes and oats to last for several years, although other stuff is getting slim. What we managed to get out of the garden will get us through the next year. We are thankful to the Lord for supplying that!

One good thing that's happened is that hubby has lost a good bit of weight between working so hard around our little homestead and not being able to pig out at all-you-can-eat buffets. This has normalized his blood pressure so that he doesn't need his meds for that anymore. That is a real blessing as there's no way we can afford meds now anyway. Hubby's job has cut back to just two days a week. Between the shortage of gas and the ever higher cost of it, they can't produce and ship anywhere near as much as they used to.

Gotta go and get busy now. Will add more later.
 
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A.T.Hagan

Inactive
Sixty Days, Next Year - Florida

Everyone be sure to pay close attention to your dates so we don't inadverdently trip each other up. Actions in someone else's piece may affect actions in your own.

==============================================

<b>September 16th, 2005 – Friday</b>

The lull is over. We buried Billy yesterday. It was a quiet affair, but a lot of people showed up for it. Still haven’t found the other boy yet and I suspect we may never find him. His dad says the boy took his truck and lit out. I suspect his old man gave it to him, but I suppose if it were my son I’d at least want to give him a chance. So much dying going on now it’s hard to care any more.

While we were burying Billy the Feds rolled into Gainesville with four chartered Greyhound busses. They’d been in contact with the Gainesville PD and the Sheriff who both had been around in the pre-dawn hours picking up people on the list the Feds had supplied. One of the ramifications of the Washington attack. Congress put a resolution through canceling all visas from a long-list of nations and the President put it into action. Took them this long to get it together enough to start picking folks up. Surprised me that they managed to keep it as quiet as they did but with the State of Emergency and all I guess it wasn’t all that difficult. A couple of visiting faculty members, one tenured professor, and a bunch of foreign students were picked up and taken south. Don’t know where to, the busses got on I-75 southbound and that’s all we know. The Sheriff says he doesn’t know where they’re going either. I don’t think anyone much cares now, we’re too preoccupied with our own problems. A handful of students tried to start a riot in protest, but enrollment this year at the university has plummeted and even among the students only the most radical hotheads could get themselves worked up. UPD and GPD rolled them right up and stuck them in the county jug. Maybe they’ll get some sense knocked into them – in one end or the other. America is not welcoming foreign guests at this time.

<b>September 17th, 2005 – Saturday.</b>

O’Hannon has hired on more hands. I’m now something of a straw boss. Not because I know what I’m doing, but because O’Hannon trusts me, I think. Wages are next to nothing but he’s feeding them and there isn’t any lack of men looking for a job what with the unemployment trying to go belly up and no work to be found. Spent today knocking together shacks for the new hires. They’d embarrass a share-cropper but they’ll keep the rain off their heads and maybe keep a little heat in come the winter. Local saw mill cut the lumber and O’Hannon salvaged some old barns in the area that were falling down for the tin. Garden doing great. We’re working out a deal with Bruce to use his horse and wagon to maybe take produce to the local market. He’s got more horses than he’s going to be able to keep through the winter if he doesn’t get some help making hay. Going to be a tricky business and I don’t know if we can pull it off, but we need him and he needs us. Hell, everyone on the whole road is pulling together.

<b>September 18th, 2005 – Sunday.</b>

Took in the service at the little Baptist church where we buried Billy. Preacher says it’s the biggest attendance he’s ever had. Met some neighbors we’ve never talked with before and a couple I’ve never even seen before. This is good, we all need to know who each other is.

Fuel situation seems to be settling down – if you have a ration priority. If you don’t there simply isn’t any fuel. There is the black market, of course, but it’s obscene what you have to pay. That’s for paper, I hear. If you’re paying in metal or something else of value it’s somewhat different, but still pretty bad. Authorities found out Geoff and Vicky are living with us so they combined his and D.J.’s ration. Oh well, at least we’ve still got one. Even with a ration there’s only a drop left over from what they have to have to get to work, but with careful management we’ll have enough to get someone to the hospital quickly instead of having to take them in Bruce’s wagon.

Riots in L.A. as the government moved in and started picking up illegals for transport south. Picked up some folks who were legal from what I hear, but I don’t think a lot of folks care too much just now. Congress passed the Expanded Patriot Act. Watched the show on O’Hannon’s TV as we were having coffee. Impassioned speeches by senior Republican and Democratic senators from their beds were they were undergoing chelation therapy for radiation poisoning as to why it had to be done. Passed the Senate 92 to nothing. The House hardly even stopped to count the vote before they passed it and the President signed it as fast as they could get it to his desk. It was almost surreal. This time last year I’d have been yelling my head off, but just now I hardly care. The doings of Washington D.C. are becoming as distant to me as news stories from Beijing.

<b>September19th, 2005 – Monday.</b>

Bruce brought home an old horse drawn sicklebar mower. I recognized it as a lawn ornament from that big two story slate blue house on the edge of Archer. Major parts seem to still be serviceable, but needs some minor parts, a lot of cleaning, and the harness leathers and wood. Says he traded an old Model 10 Smith for it which is a big price these days, but relative to what it brought was little enough I suppose. Wants to know if I can put my shop back together and forge the needed parts. Probably I could, but it would be a huge time investment just now. I suggested we load the whole contraption in his wagon and we’ll go see if Richard can fabricate them. He makes some of the prettiest Damascus steel I’ve ever seen, but in these days I think even a master bladesmith would be willing to do a little honest blacksmith work. Going to have to talk it over in family council about what we can offer in trade.

<b>September 20th, 2005 - Tuesday </b>

One of the Jersey Giant hens is setting a clutch. I filled her out to an even dozen eggs. She’s set before but didn’t stay with it so we’re watching her in case she abandons them. Somehow or other we’ll incubate them if she doesn’t. Traded a bottle of whisky today for a drum full of whole corn. We each walked away thinking we got the better of the other. I’m sure there’ll be plenty of moonshine in the coming months, but good ten year old bourbon is only going to be the more valuable.

Hellfire and damnation breaking loose in the Middle East. Saudi has fallen. A coup in one of the Gulf states, but the radio fuzzed and I didn’t quite catch which one. One of the talk radio callers said he heard on the short wave that some apocalyptic Islamic movement is trying to consolidate the entire Gulf area into one Islamic Republic. Didn’t think apocalypsism ran in Islamic circles but after it’s been filtered through the short wave media and talk radio who knows what they really are if there’s anything to it at all. With the failure of the oil shipments our interest in the Middle East is waning. Major fracas on the Mexican border as a the spirit of Pancho Villa rises. I think we’re going to end up going into Mexico in some way or other. I wonder if the Mexicans appreciate that we may have designs on their oil fields?

<b>September 21st, 2005 – Wednesday</b>

Laid up today. Sprung two ribs this morning when the horse threw me. We were penning cattle when my horse suddenly started bucking and tossed me off. Just missed being stepped on by that big, short legged brindle Brahma bull. Sam was fast on his horse and got in between me and the bull for which I am glad because he’s usually got an attitude. He sires good calves though so O’Hannon keeps him. Sam says he caught something out of the corner of his eye just before my horse threw me and thinks maybe one of the hands did something to cause it. We were all in tight getting ‘em into the chute so it could have been one of several, if it really happened. They’re all new men not from around here except for me and Sam so now I’m wondering if maybe we might have a problem. Vicky took a coon today, but we buried that one. He came right out in the daylight and was trying to get into the henyard. Strange behavior for a coon and I didn’t like the look of his eyes when she showed him to me. Wasn’t drooling or anything, but it wasn’t worth taking a chance so we just buried him under one of the pecan trees.

<b>September 22nd, 2005 – Thursday</b>

Stiff as a damn board this morning. O’Hannon ran me off and said not to come back until I could get on a horse without needing help. Had kind of a strange air about him today, but he’s an old cracker and ain’t gonna let on about anything until he has to. Cathy rubbed my back for me considerable after I got back. Being only six she has to put her whole body into it, but I do believe it helped a lot. Spent much of the day shelling pecans from last year’s crop we brought down from the farm. Finished that up, couldn’t concentrate on reading, tired of talk radio, so I tried the computer. Somewhat to my surprise Atlantic.Net was up so I logged on to TB2K. Haven’t much been able to go online these last several months so maybe I’m just out of touch, but something’s not right there. I wonder when the last time anyone on the board has actually physically seen Dennis? Middle Eastern situation continues to devolve. President announced today we were pulling out of Iraq. Says we need the troops to defend the homeland. Defend it from what? Vicky cooked a fabulous meal tonight.

<b>September 23rd, 2005 – Friday</b>

Went over to Richard’s today with Bruce carrying the sickle mower. Traded him three bottles of whisky and a hundred rounds of buckshot to get him to refurbish the mower and fabricate any needed parts. Made it clear with Bruce that this was going to make me full partners in that thing with him and he agreed. Bruce actually used on the things we he was a boy so he was able to sketch out what was missing, what needed to be repaired, and how it was all supposed to work. Richard’s not looking so hot and the way Sarah’s lips thinned when I gave him the bottles makes me wonder if that’s the reason. He’s always done good work in the past so drinking or not I hope he can still perform.

Stopped in town on way back and did some trading. Got another drum of feed corn for another bottle of whisky. That’s half my supply gone, but if we can get enough feed grain to get through the winter and get that sickle mower running it’ll have been worth it. Beginning to wonder where he’s getting the grain from, but it’s clean, dry, and not moldy so I’m not going to wonder too much.

D.J. says university is shutting down half the buildings on campus. Students have dwindled down to less than half last year’s enrollment so they don’t need all the classroom space. The ag schools, engineering colleges, and medical schools are still full. Pieter, the Albanian programmer she’s always struggling with has disappeared. She doesn’t think INS got him, but after they came through he’s been anxious and she thinks maybe he’s hiding or something. They’re getting all new hardware to bring the data systems more fully up to speed which is to me an indication of the rising importance the Governor is placing on it. She’s got two new student workers too. University is doing a lot more work study as the money fades. She says they’re practically running a truck farm out there now with lots and lots of hands-on experience being gained. Said she tried to volunteer to help until the Dean saw her pulling weeds and chased her back to her desk.

<b>September 24th, 2005 – Saturday</b>

Back to work today. Sam seemed especially happy to see me back as did O’Hannon. Something’s going on with him, but I can’t figure what. Asked if I knew anyone who wanted a job that I thought was worth a damn because he’s tired of no-account help. Told him then that I didn’t know anyone else who could physically do this sort of work that needed a job only to come home and find a cousin of mine with his wife from the other side of Orlando. They’re both unemployed and couldn’t make out where they were at so stopped by our place on the way north. Made the hair on the back of my neck stand up for some reason. He’s a musician by training and profession, but he’s twelve years younger than me and able bodied enough so I asked him if he wanted a job working on a ranch. He said yes without even blinking. We jawboned it over and ultimately decided we’d clear out a part of the shop for them to stay in. He wanted to find a place in town or something and I wanted him here. I think O’Hannon is beginning to get under my skin.

Garden doing well. Power’s been flaky all day today, but it’s always come back on. Geoff brought home a big mess of fish. Traded it off a fellow from Cedar Key. He and D.J. were on their way home from work and passed him working on his truck on the side of the road. They gave him a lift into town and he gave them a bucket of fish. Had an impromptu fish fry and invited a few neighbors. Marsha said she hasn’t seen Cicely Jean in several days and she doesn’t answer her phone. Wants me to go over there and see if anything’s wrong. Of course, that damn pit bull of hers is in the yard so that might be a trick. He’s a good watchdog. Won’t leave the yard even if the gate’s open, but he damn sure won’t let anyone in either.

<b>September 25th, 2005 – Sunday</b>

Major blow-out in D.C. Rioting when the food distribution trucks didn’t show when they were expected and the power went down again. Had to bring federal troops in to quell the rioting which led to a lot of casualties. No sure number coming out. Fella on talk radio claims to be a Ham and says someone is jamming the contacts he’s been trying to reach in the Virginia side of the D.C. area. President came out and suspended sale of civilian ammunition and firearms, but that was as much for show as anything. I haven’t seen a box of ammunition for sale in the stores in two months or more. The black market, of course, marches on apace.

There’s a Cat 2 hurricane crossing Cuba tonight heading generally north. NOAA says she’ll strengthen when she hits the open Gulf. Maybe she’ll hit the Mexican border and rain on all the hotheads there before that fracas breaks out into open war. I’m getting to be pretty sure one of the hands is a plant for someone or other. Haven’t figured out what he’s about yet. Sam thinks he’s up to something too.
 

fi103r

Veteran Member
another memo from TX, Glitter gulch that is

Yup, TX has rivers some actually have old locks and dams,
canal boats are vastly more efficent than trucks and trains, they just take time and lots of water...

Aug 4,

Missy,

Pardon the delay on reply to your July missive, Glad to hear that Gengis and the Horde haven't disappeared into the thicket yet.

We finished the last 25km from Liscomb lock to east fork and there is unbeliveeelable passenger traffic at $5(ag) per head. I expected lots of folks heading out but what fool heads to glitter gulch in july?

hmmm it must beat Bagdad on the Bayou, to me it's a tossup.

not much fuel but the barges work fine with horses, yup, they drag them along quite fine. I've been snailing a workboat most of the time, usually towing the barges accross the various lakes, the heaviest traffic is moving to and from the burgs?,

The cargo is mixed as you could expect, but we have food in the supply chain, just don't yak to the fools at fema they keep trying to mislay everything we deliver along the way. We finally just drop ship to existing cust of the fd service groups that way folks get their grub at their usual shopping points.

Ja there were pirates, operative term *were*

Right now, I don't care who they were or what their thoughts were I'm just glad they won't be back, not that bunch.

Jungle Jim was tasked to get the locks back in order and we paid $1 silver per day skilled labor charges for the concrete folks, and $1 week for the ditch diggers/we supplied 1 meal and clean water daily/.

no one gets rich at that but it kept the idle hands busy and to an extent fed.

Do not even get me started on the highways.

Jungle cat built the first set of doors out of tip-up forms and shipped the forms along as we went (dat was pug ugly 40' tip-up frames on a 24' barge, bvrrrr) we dropped jigs for wooden doors as a precaution.

Jungle Jim had hidden little forts top and bottom and had some 1.65 rifles sited in all of them. Jungle cat had to staff 20 odd of these things and was sore past words til some old Sarge showed up with some career artillerist(?). they worked gratis for room and board. I won't bore you with the details but some fool figures to grab a barge full of vittles and make a business for themselves.

We lost Ceasar and Vinnie, their barge was jacked and the fools that took it ran right to the loading dock to 'filler up' well 6 on the barge 8 more trying to do a flank on the lock house.

care to guess the effective range of 40mm?

Ceasar's will is attached, give my condoleces to Ms Valencia. Vinnie was single as far as I know, please inquire for me so I can forward his share.

further news:

I drove the fartmobile to the dives, both are still standing and we can re-occupy the crowsnest by Nov1. Dive between the ditches has water but we have to boil it, Crowsnest has clean/processed gravity fed real good water guess which one I paid off 8-) $10 au and a consideration (free ticket to lakefort East for Spring and consignment of some stuff you will drool over)

Layton has part of the consignment. Yes he saw what happened to Vinnie, he heard the shots and fired on the boarders but when Vinnie was hit he dove in to grab him, by the time he got Vinne ashore the barge was gone. Those little radios you made last month saved a bunch of lives, try to get that through to Layton as he was was not listening to us up here.

later,

your half mad/drowned river rat

oh, logistics

need 1k+ of .30 carbine cost no object,

.32 if you find more

there is a variable market for any 7.62

so

10k x51
10k 51r
5k x39
2k x54r

I may have some sheet brass lined up no promises yet though...it is priced like platinum by the clueless in jewlery supply like anyone is buying jewlery now?

keep shipping .38 as long as the things hold tolerance
(we got a lift here Masters had a nasty string of squibs *do not get sloppy* our customers will supply negitive feedback, his customers took umbrage,and a few pounds off his hide)

those elefant gun cartridges are pattern pieces: a jerk up here will pay $1 per 10 rounds see if there is any interest in production run.

have Tanner make some more of those plated bibs they are quite popular up here.
 

Dennis Olson

Chief Curmudgeon
_______________
If we're running multiple characters in multiple places, duplicate dates would be okay. But not in the same location, or for the same set of characters. (I'll be contributing again too; I've just been too darn busy. Now, back to the story...)
 

A.T.Hagan

Inactive
That's fine. Some of us are throwing national scope stuff in though which has to be taken into account. Had to change my direction slightly to account for what's coming in the future in Libertarian's piece. Don't want any continuity errors.

.....Alan.
 
Just wanted to try my hand at this, if ya'll like let me know and I'll continue.

Prologue;


Events of the past year have been so fast and furious, that, I think I had better record them just so that in the future, I can look back upon this journal to prove…if only to myself…..that they actually happened. That the former world of plentiful food and cheap consumer goods, easy money, cheep beer, electricity at the flip of a switch, fast cars and full gas tanks, DID exist. It is so hard to believe it now.

Truly, the last 12 months already seem like more of a nightmare….or an episode of the Twilight Zone, than real life.

Last June was when the shortage of gas and crude oil began to have a daily impact on most American. As gas pump prices inexorably climbed from $1.69 to $2.09 and then gradually but steadily through $3.00 a gallon. The summer driving and vacation season fizzled into staying put to save money. That coupled with major heat waves and record breaking droughts, nearly, nation wide…the population was in a very ugly mood by late summer.

Riots were breaking out around the country at the drop of a hat. Police brutality was becoming so common place that it rarely reached the evening news casts anymore. Consumer prices were climbing almost daily and everybody struggled constantly just keep their heads above water. The war in Iraq muddling along for its second year, and casualties gradually approached 1000 service men….and then inched up to 1500….and kept rising from there.

The economy, which had shown some promise in the spring and very early summer….at least according to the governments blatantly propagandized statistics, had faltered in mid-June, as gas prices began to effect every aspect of life. Families were forced to cut entertainment expenses, eating out, and long vacations. Businesses began to lay off employees to save money for sky rocketing energy costs. The trucking industry virtually shutdown over night as the cost of buying fuel exceeded the amount they could get for hauling freight. The cost of shipping a UPS overnight letter reached $40….before UPS and Fed EX , lobbied congress for a airline style bailout , and got it. Tourism from coast to coast got hammered. Restaurants and bars closed their doors in mass. Move theaters closed as air-conditioning costs exceeded the amount they could make off of the rare few that could afford to go out to the movies. Agriculture, from coast to coast was impacted by the drought conditions and very hot temperatures, harvests were dismal and eventually resulted in much higher food prices and shortages of many items

The Dow and the Nasdac slowly drifted down to 5000 and 1000 respectively and unemployment slowly drifted up to stand just short of 9% (officially) just before the presidential election. Needless to say, Kerry/Clinton were elected in the most one-sided political race in history…they received 90% of the vote. Not because they had a desirable platform, or even a meaningful campaign, but just because they weren't G.W. Bush.

After the election, things rapidly went from bad, to much, much, worse. Homelessness became an extreme problem as families that had been struggling for months to keep their homes were forced out in foreclosure proceedings. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac went tits-up under the weight of so many loan defaults and the Federal Government took them both over completely. Many banks struggled with bad loans through the fall, only to close the doors in the early winter.

In an effort to help all the homeless people, many large cities had built large encampments with surplus military tents and any other shelters they could throw up. The Red Cross was active in many of these "Bushcamps" as if the were responding to natural disasters. But, G.W. Bush, now a lame duck and nearly out of office, seized the opportunity to declare martial law and federalize the camps under FEMA jurisdiction. In time they became less homeless camps and more and more they came to resemble detention camps and out-right prisons. The people that wished to remain in them had to sign a contract to remain, and that contract essentially stripped them of their civil rights. They became the property of the Federal Government.

After the Kerry/Clinton inauguration, changes came so fast that it was nigh impossible to keep up with it all. Because Bush declared martial law, the checks and balances provided by the congress and courts were virtually ignored. Kerry/Clinton basically wrote and enacted the law as they saw fit. In the first 100 days in office they:

*Impose a price freeze on every food item in the country-with rationing of some things.
*Nationalized Petroleum stocks, Natural and LP Gas supplies, coal, and electrical generation. And set up rationing of it ALL.
*Unilaterally withdrew from the reconstruction of Iraq. Removed all US forces from Korea and Germany…..for use enforcing martial law in the US.
*Outlawed the sale of all ammunition.
*Expanded Americorps into a nation-wide full employment agency…with direct control over the homeless in the Bushcamps. Eliminated unemployment insurance.
*Mobilized and federalized EVERY state or National Guard unit for local enforcement of martial law.
*Federalized ALL healthcare providers, hospitals and pharmacies.


Life in the US slowly came to be that of a police state.

You could only buy a certain amount of groceries at a time. If you can get past all the checkpoints between you and the grocery store without being refused a pass. And if you were fortunate enough to find a gas station that had gas. And if you hadn't exceeded your gas ration for the month…etc.

Even with all the new restrictions, Americans adapted and continued to persue their lives much as before. People still got up and went to work and watched TV at night and went to school and grumbled about the government, and all the other things that people do. Except for the populations in the Bushcamps, life went on as it had for generations.

I guess if I had to point to any one thing that could be singled out as the "Beginning of the End", it would have to be the "Great Blizzard of '05". In early February, the Jet Stream dipped way south over the center of the continent, and began pumping huge amounts of moisture and cold air from California to the Carolinas. Reinforced with moist air from the Gulf of Mexico, it dumped record-breaking amounts of snow from central Aladamntaxabama to Maine. Transportation ground to a total stop, record cold temperatures sapped gas supplies nation wide, electrical distribution ceased to exist, the nation was blacked out from the Mississippi river to the Atlantic ocean.

The loss of life was gut wrenching. The Bushcamps, temporary mild weather shelters, were decimated. Old folks in the NE froze in their homes as gas pressure fell from over demand, many whole families died in their homes because of failed electric furnaces or lack of natural gas for their furnaces. Hundreds perished in house fires as they struggled to heat their loved ones with open fire sources that they lost control of. Many that had endured the initial storms and temperatures succumbed in the follow 2 weeks from hunger. Even after the roads were cleared it took weeks to replenish store shelves that were laid bare by shortages even before the storm.

Even now 5 full months after the storm, electricity has not been restored to many parts of the country, not that it matters, with the new draconian electricity rationing. But, by far the worst blow to the country came just after the storm. On April first, Hugo Chavez, President of Venezuela shut down ALL gas and petroleum shipments to the US. Over night we lost 25% of our fuel imports at the whim of a communist dictator. Well, at least we still have imports from Saudi Arabia, maybe they will increase production and help us rebuild our supplies before next winter.

Life has now changed dramatically for all Americans. We face a nearly constant shortage of most food items, and paper is in short supply because all the loggers shut down in the face of rising fuel prices. Fuel of any type is difficult to find and outrageously priced if you can find it. And as bad as it is now, I fear it can only get worse. Many American farmers only planted for their families' consumption this spring. With fuel so hard to find, and so expensive to buy, many could not afford to plow and plant their acreage's. Much of the vast Great Plains and Corn Belt remain fallow this year.

My wife and I have faired better than most for the last year. We have 20 heavily forested acres on the Upper Cumberland Plateau in Tennessee. When we moved here the nearest power line was 2 miles and $10,000 away, so I have become very proficient in producing our own electricity. We had a dam built the second year we were here and it has enough flow through the spillway that someday I can generate most of my power from it. We have the pond stocked with Bass and Catfish, a 4 year old orchard that is just getting real well established, and turkeys and chickens. Wild game abounds.

My work in structural engineering gradually faded away as the economy crumbled, but my wife is considered "essential personnel" at the regional hospital and therefore, she not only gets a steady salary, she gets an extra 5 gallons a week on her gas ration card. If we can hang on for 4 more years the property will be paid-off and she can retire, and stay home and play with me all the time. IF.



June 14, 2005

Well, I had a fairly productive day today. I spent the morning digging into the back hillside for the new root cellar. Sure seems like a lot of dirt to move for such a little cellar, or maybe I'm just not as young as I think I am. I sure do miss being able to rent a mini-excavator, I could've finished the cellar in a morning, instead of the week it's taken so far. With luck I should be able to finish digging it tomorrow.

I had a surprise visitor today. The dogs woke me from my mid-day siesta barking their fool heads off at something. I figured for sure it was some coon or squirrel, but I grabbed the old scattergun and wandered down the road by the pond. Just as I got to the pond the geese started going wild, so I knew something was coming, I settled in next to an old firewood pile and watched up the road. A moment later I heard a voice cussing and fussing at the dogs, and then here comes someone scrambling over and through all the trees I have dropped to block the road.

I looked him over and realized it was Harold Cooper, the local moonshiner from way back during the 40s' and 50's. I stood up and called off the dogs, while still holding the shotgun ready, Harold and I had gone a few rounds, even back when things were normal. I didn't know what the old coot was going to try now. He was still ornery and dangerous, even if he was 80 some odd.

Harold called out as he was walking up "You can put the damn gun down, I've come to make you a business proposition".

"Business proposition? ", I said.

"Yep, I want to buy your spring water" he said.

Well, in this day and age, anyone that wants to BUY anything gets my attention, so I lowered the shotgun and sat down on the firewood pile in the shade. "And why would you want to pay good money for that ",I asked.

Harold rolled a block of firewood over to a shady spot set it up on end and sat down on it. "Let's just say that I am getting back into the moon shine business" he said. "Every since Kerry froze prices and Federal benefits, I can't make ends meet".

I laughed and said, "I can understand that feeling, but why moon shine? Aren't you getting a little too old to hide a still out in the woods and fight snakes and the Feds and never do wells over shine?"

Harold gazed out at the spring fed pond and pondered it for a moment and then spoke, "The Feds quit watching me 20 years ago when I quit making shine". "As far as the snakes and the never do wells, I planning on making it a family operation, I don't think anything will come up that Kenny can't handle".

I imagined Harold's grandson Kenny in a fight and had to shake my head in agreement with him. Kenny was one big scrappy boy, I would definitely want him on my side in a fist fight.

"Well, why do you need my spring water for this business?", I asked.

"I made 'shine for 25 years" Harold said, "people would travel hundreds of miles just to buy my 'shine, I was famous". He paused and then said, "My secret ingredient was your spring water, there is something in it no other spring has. I know, I've tried them all."

All of a sudden I realized why Harold had seemed so resentful when I had purchased this property, I had bought his secret ingredient right out from under him! I chuckled a little, and then said "You said you wanted to buy it, does that mean money?".

He laughed shaking his head no, "Nobody has money anymore, I was hoping we could trade."

"Hmmm, What do you have in mind?" I asked.

"2 gallons of shine for 100 gallons of water", he offered.

"Nope, don't want 'shine." I said. Suddenly it dawned on me that Harold had to have corn to make 'shine.

"50 pounds of corn for 100 gallons of water". I countered.

Long story short, I agreed to pump 100 gallons of water out past the tree fall in the road and into his truck, in exchange for 25 pounds of corn and 1 gallon of 'shine, which he would sell or trade for me.

As I watched him pick his way through the huge pile of brush and tree trunks on the way out the driveway, I had to struggle not to smile. I now had a steady supply of chicken feed and not a moment too soon. I had opened my last 50 pound bag this morning.

I spent the rest of the day weeding the raised beds and collecting vegetables from the garden.

I can't wait for tomorrow, Judes' three-day shift at the hospital end at 3:30. I get her all to myself for 4 days.

After I put the chickens and turkeys to bed, I went in the house and turned on the TV to get my daily dose of propaganda (news). The lead story was that the House of Faud had fled Saudi Arabia, the country was in chaos, and oil imports to the US (25% of our total supply) were in danger of stopping.

The news reader then went on to describe how Kerry/Clinton were planning on reducing the "Essential personnel" ration to off-set to loss of imports. Damn, just damn, I said as I shut the tube back off.

What a way to ruin a perfectly good day.
 

fi103r

Veteran Member
glitter gulch gossip

glitter gluch gossip: 10/8

Missy,

rec'd your epistle from Chantal, and a raft of mail from Tyler as well.

Yes, we are STILL sailing and dragging barges, I'm off to glitter gulch to find out *exactly* why. The offical line is 'supply problems'

I'll give em supply problems, it is hard to access air with a 9.5 fist down yer throat, details as they emerge...

But I spent last week a the crowsnest and got a call, yes land line is officaly running as of 9/9 or so at Crowsnest. Dive between the ditches was hardwired as of Aug 30 but Lance didn't bother to test it till the Constable drug in.

It appears that we had a minor discussion about the Wild Horse desert again, with roughly similar results,to the last time, annexation thoughts are drifting about but hopefully saner thoughts emerge.
The Constable is a Major *again* he is ticked that he missed the discussion in Mexico but more ticked that I outrank him (commision came in 'commodore' (one star admiral? It's the rank of convoy cmdr? huh? I just reports them I don't write them)

While the good folks between the Nueces and the Rio Bravo were discussing title traces the Constable was dealing with Raoul's Aramada,
I only had one bottle of old crow so all I got was there is no longer an aramada at the gates of Mustang Island or Boca Chica, it appears that Raoul tried to re-enforce the invasion bzzzt. There are a few Cubans renaming Mustang Island starvation point though.

Sorry this is late but I spent most of Sept in the Indian Nations, (I'm still not a diplomat) the upshot is we should expect the roads to be clear by Nov. I passed this on the Constable as well, he *should* stop by enroute to the bay,

There are two new units running around in Blue,

3rd Seminole Scouts lance with 3 eagle feathers on gold field,

4th Seminole Scouts lance with 4 eagle feathers on Blue field

I did not inquire to methods and tactics but I'm eating fried shrimp that got driven in fresh from Mobile, AL by truck, their yea we can do it ad.

relay the badge info asap as we do not need any blue on blue here.

Our latest commission has been a series of 48' and 72' barges to supply lignite to a plant down south, our prototype Larkspur, got swiped by the mudpuppies for a C3I raft, command here is a pair of 7" howitzers, don't ask you don't want to know where they came from, I suggested a pair of 3" guns on pivots, nooo, use these, THEY WILL SINK THIS BOAT! naaa they will do just fine.

I mounted the fool things and ran.

there's the bell, have to ship out.

Later

rat
 

A.T.Hagan

Inactive
<b>September 26th, 2005 – Monday</b>

For the rest of my life if ever I hear someone say “it can’t get worse than this” I do believe I will have to shoot him.

Major blow out today at the fair grounds at the homeless camp there. Local Guard troops were too shorthanded to get it under control without killing a lot of folks so they requested back-up which came in the form of an infantry unit transiting the area on their way back from South Florida. It’s not clear as to who gave the orders or why or the details of how the deal went down, but much killing ensued. The local Guard commander tried to intervene and was killed – by which side is one of those things that is not clear. By the end of the day several Blackhawks and some Apaches came down from somewhere to the north and a number of uniformed officers were seen to dismount and go into the area command tent. An hour later three more men than had dismounted got into the choppers and flew off and the federal troops pulled out while the on-site troops were in parade formation and Guard troops from over to Duval county came in. No one will speak for the record and rumors are running wild. Called a friend at Shands who called me back a little later from a telephone away from campus who reported they had fifty five people with gunshot injuries in the Shands ER alone, no idea how many in the other area hospitals, and no bodies in the morgue. Thinks they must have been taken somewhere else. Everyone is scared half to death because it sounds to me like it came down to open mutiny between our local Guard troops and the Federal troops.

D.J. is furious because I insisted she stay home tomorrow and I advised Geoff to do the same. I don’t know what the hell is going on in Gainesville, but it may just bust loose any day now. Maybe it’s just nerves from listening to that damned talk radio all day. Must have been a dozen callers cut off in mid-sentence trying to talk about what had been seen at the fair-grounds. All the local radio stations are like that and the local TV stations are saying even less. Atlantic.net is down again and D.J. can’t get on through her university account either. Got word an hour ago for the posse’ to be ready to ride on short notice and to pack for overnight.

There was a special service at the church tonight and the place was packed.

<b>September 27th, 2005 – Tuesday</b>

Both Geoff and D.J. called in today – said the truck was broke down. No one seemed surprised. Posse’ called out last night to go down to the bushcamp south of O’Hannon’s place. A girl showed up at O’Hannon’s late last night and said there had been a murder. Henry phoned it in so off we went. Something definitely wrong there. O’Keefe is gone and may be one of the victims. Camp is half-deserted. Didn’t find a body, any evidence of a crime, nor anyone who was willing to tell us if there had been one. I think the girl was telling the truth though because something’s definitely not right. The sheriff is going to lean on Randy Higgins to get permission to clean the place out. He was willing to turn a blind eye to the place with O’Keefe there keeping it quiet, but now it seems like the place is a threat.

I’m pretty sure that Ed Tucker, one of the new hands, is some how involved with what ever is happening at the camp. He works well enough and is better at working cows than I am but he’s up to something. O’Hannon, Sam, and I are all convinced of that. Another couple of days and maybe O’Hannon will just run him off.

Situation in Gainesville seems maybe to be cooling. No fighting today. Federal troops gone. Local Guard troops sent down to Orlando. Duval boys running fair ground camp. Ophelia in open Gulf and strengthening. Moving generally north by northwest, but NOAA says oncoming front may push her East. Tomorrow may get busy.

<b>September 28th, 2005 – Wednesday.</b>

Ophelia projected to hit somewhere in Big Bend area late tomorrow night or in the morning day after tomorrow. She’s at 128 mph right now and may go into Cat Four sometime tomorrow.

D.J. and Geoff in to work today. Pretty quiet in town. She says most people seem to be holding their breath. O’Hannon wants to move cattle out of the pastures the other side of c.r. 337 in case storm hits close. Says the big storm that landed back in 1950 flooded that whole area pretty bad and his granddaddy lost a lot of cattle. No fuel to truck them up so we’re going to have an old-fashioned cattle drive. Well, at least we won’t be blocking traffic – there’s no traffic to block.

The Ugli Hen hatched out ten this morning. The Jersey Giant hen still setting. The DunHagan flock is getting bigger. Need to see about trading for more corn. We’ll expand our plantings to meet our needs, but it’ll be next Summer at the earliest before we’ll be able to harvest it. Geoff, Josh and I spent fair part of the day we weren’t at work securing the place against the storm. Not sure about the hen house. We’re going to have to stake it down somehow. The girls saw to the water and food situations.

<b>September 29th, 2005 – Thursday.</b>

Ophelia definitely heading this way. Latest projection puts her on shore just north of Cedar Key with a fairly wide circular error probability because she’s wandering somewhat. Windspeed at 133 mph. State sent in Guard troops to evacuate the Key for the folks with no fuel to get out on their own which is most of them. Mandatory evac order for everyone from mouth of Crystal River up to somewhere in Taylor county. Spent all day into the early evening getting the cattle into the pastures on 121 where it’s higher ground.

Word is coming out of the fairground massacre and it’s not good. Big blowout in Atlanta. State legislature beginning to sound off about heavy handed Federal behavior. President’s supposed to address the nation tonight, but we may miss it with the storm. Governor sent a delegation to meet in New Orleans which ended up moving suddenly further north when it looked like the storm might head that way. Most of the southern state governors sent representatives. This is beginning to sound like 1861. D.J. is afraid for her family in New England and I’m worried about Jody and the kids in the D.C. area. Some sort of fracas going down in New Hampshire, but we haven’t been able to get word as to what other than it involved the Free Staters.

<b>September 30th, 2005 – Friday</b>

She here’s. Wind’s howling. Think something hit the workshop. Dear God it’s…
 
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