But that is why I have my concerns about their list.
I honestly believe that for most people, a mediocre kit, which I think after reexamining the Sydney list is, are in some ways worse off becuase they think they are properly equipped. That is an overnight bag with a bottle of water, thats all it is- it isn't going to amount to much other than to guide you to a shelter/evacuation point, but it isn't going to reduce the strain on logistics or give you self sufficiency for any period of time if all the log plans go to poo.
At the very least, I would want to see them list 3-4 liters of water, rather than "a bottle of water", per person. "A bottle"- 20oz? 500ml? A liter? A gallon? How big? "A bottle" is a nice little wiggly bit that says a lot of nothing while sounding good.
It's like the difference between a toy hard hat and a real one- if I'm on top of a three story building tossing rocks over the edge, which one do you want people to have? People who don't know any better will think the toy one will work and try to cross the dangerous area and get knocked on the head. Someone without a hard hat of any kind will look at 1" dia granite hail and decide to wait for my day to get better or find a way around me.
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-IronRaven
When a man dare not speak without malice for fear of giving insult, that is when truth starts to die. Truth is the truest freedom.