I've posted before that the irony of longterm survival sites is their short online survival.
Today the idea of longterm survival seems to encompass the two weeks between paychecks, and I am being half-serious here. Most people can't see beyond the next paycheck. I try, but it is very difficult to do so.
I would be interested in the philosophy and concepts embodied by such a forum, but would not be able to put any into practice. I live in a townhouse development in a heavily developed and rapidly expanding suburb of Philadelphia. It's hard enough to carry a PSK or any belt gear around here without raising eyebrows.
As for really discussing longterm survival, I saw a British movie once called "Threads," about the aftermath of a limited nuclear exchange. It was extremely realistic and totally depressing. During the course of the movie, mankind degenerated into the kind of primitive heathens we read about now in history books and laugh at, marveling at how far we've come.
Wouldn't take much -- a simple EMP, really -- to knock us right back down, flat on our butts in the muck. No electricity, no modern civilization. Nuclear Winter. Middle Ages Part II. Agriculture fails. Starvation sets in. There is no happy ending to this movie. All the main characters die or are killed off. There is birth, but trust me, it is not at all happy.
Anyone else see "Threads?" How realistic do you think it is?
-- Craig