Showing posts with label doomsday. Show all posts
Showing posts with label doomsday. Show all posts

Monday, July 16, 2012

[Moon-dæg] When the Guard is Down

{A figure, a silhouette, a being - but with what intent and purpose? Image from the Minecraft modding site mcmodding.com.}



Context
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Closing

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Context

This piece of flash fiction (or scene from a longer work) came from a writing exercise, that, as far as I remember, just involved a phrase. The idea of the exercise is to take a phrase and then to write a piece that starts with that phrase.

So, once the phrase "She could hear them living all through the house" came up, I just took it and ran.

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She could hear them living all through the house. She felt herself sink deeper into the bed, all of the muscles in her arms and legs loosening for the first time in weeks. Mathias' plan had worked. And he was right about them not wanting to get into this room.

A quick glance to the window still showed a pillar of smoke rising from somewhere below the lintel. And the sky remained filled with the kinds of clouds that brought drabness but no rain.

Yet she knew that they were all living beyond the door and down on the first floor. The still silence confirmed it. Silence enough to hear someone's walk. It's brisk, she mused. A word she hadn't been able to use to describe anything's walk for far too long.

She relished the sound of shoes squeaking on the floor. A stop! Low voices. Low voices that only survived as undulations of sound full of pitch and intonation - but measured and easy - after they crossing through walls and even floors.

But then, a scratching. A scritching against wood that forced Emma back into the fore of her mind. She closed her eyes and tried to melt into the mattress. The memory faded, but the sound did not. She put her feet on the floor, faced the closet and walked over to it.

Her hand reached for a knob of the folding door. Her hand's steadiness caused her no surprise - she knew the door led only to a closet. And nothing terrible had ever come from a closet. They had never seemed to get into them.

The scritching subsided and air rushing through the corner of a canine mouth could be heard.

How on earth did he wind up in there?

She turned the door knob. The hinge creaked and the colour of clothes formerly worn only by shadows rushed to get through the crack of light.

A low growl followed.

Her arm continued to push the door outwards. But before the panel door snapped into place a weight latched onto her neck and she fell backwards.

"No..." she managed, as low as the voices that had now resumed below and around her. But teeth and flesh would not part. "No...bad. Bad...Dog-uugh!"

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On Wednesday, come looking for an editorial on some of the newest news, and on tomorrow and Thursday be sure to watch for annotated links #8 and #9. Plus, don't miss part three of Nicolas Cage month on Friday, featuring his 2011 thriller Trespass.

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Wednesday, March 14, 2012

[Wōdnes-dæg] Preppers: Not Starchy and Dull Ties, but Freeze Dried Food and Bartering

Introduction
Going too Far
Some Possible Disasters
Conclusion
References

This entry's topic is a bit of a cheat, since it didn't come from a newspaper or a Google Alert. I'm letting it slide in since I did get it through email, it was unexpected, quite surprising, and it offers a whole group to learn about.

{Preppers. Even National Geographic is curious, enough to make a show about them. Picture from Doomsday Preppers' Overview page}


Introduction

Preppers, people who are preparing for what they believe is an imminent disaster or cataclysm,1 might seem a little crazy to some. People a little too close to the paranoid thinking espoused by people like Glen Beck. But before jumping to any conclusions, let's see the extent of Preppers' preparations.

Based on the content of Prepper.org, it seems like they do it all.2 But, the three mainstays, understandably, look like becoming self-reliant for food, bartering, and self-defense.

The first two are understandable.

Bartering doesn't necessarily need to undercut money or the economy, it could be used to buttress it in some ways.

And learning how to grow your own food, make your own flour,3 and so on and so on are all really important things. Doing things in the old ways helps to perpetuate those ways. In a way, people who know how to mill their own flour are living pieces of history while the rest of us still buy it from store shelves. Stockpiling food can be problematic, however.

Nonetheless, if you're expecting civilization to collapse, it makes sense that you'd want to make sure you can defend yourself, but this sort of preparation is where the movement starts to sound less quaint and becomes vaguely threatening.

Going too Far

Yes, if society as we know it collapses, that means that the law might lose its power to maintain order. And a return to what some call "natural law" would not be pretty. But to take preparations to the extreme of stocking up on guns and ammo is simply going too far.

Getting firearms or archery training in preparation strains the boundary, but still seems somewhat sensible. If it makes a person feel safe, that's great, but it suggests too firm a belief in the imminent collapse of society.

Some Possible Disasters

Now, there is a lot going on across the world to suggest something might be coming down the tubes shortly.

The problem of having a money based more on an idea or series of concepts than any tangible thing (like gold); a new disease breaking out of laboratories and causing a pandemic; an earthquake that will finally cut large pieces of California and British Columbia away from the North American continent; a zombie apocalypse.

Okay, the last one's made up, but all of these scenarios seem to lean so heavily on things out of people's control or their own self interest that zombies may as well be included in a list of possibilities.

A small group of people may have a lot of sway over the global economy but what do they have to gain if that economy crumbles? Without that sort of system in place all of their value becomes meaningless. If you were in such a powerful position wouldn't you do everything possible to serve your best interest as well as, at least nominally, the best interest of everyone else?

The same goes for the fear over scientists potentially publishing their findings about making avian flu transmittable between mammals.3 Human hubris doesn't put people beyond trying to spread it in the mistaken belief that they have an antidote and will be safe. All the same, if pandemic strikes and the world's population is decimated where does that leave the survivors re: its resources? A power vacuum might exist, but society would also be entirely re-ordered.

Conclusion

Times are tough, economies are eccentric, and people might be getting more paranoid as a result. But it's important to remember that as much as there's a lot going on in the world, ours is also a world in which its easier than ever to see/read/listen to what's going on.

Our high level of connectivity means we get more news, the fact that a lot of it is negative definitely isn't going to help us feel better about the future. But it's more a matter of volume than of content. Bad things happened all over the world before we could read about them with just a click or a flick.

Nonetheless, Preppers should be commended for their dedication to their beliefs. And, ultimately, for those of us who are perhaps more optimistic, for their preparing themselves as potential teachers as well. And if there is no major disaster, then at the least there will be a whole subculture that keeps extreme DIY attitudes alive while the rest of us rely more and more on each other.

References

1. Forsyth, Jim. "Subculture of Americans prepares for civilization's collapse." Reuters 21 Jan 2012.

2. The Prepper Networks. Prepper.org. 2009-2010.

3. Branswell, Helen. "Future work on lab-made bird flu viruses should be done in most secure labs." Winnipeg Free Press 6 March 2012.