Complete Disaster Non-Preparedness: DC Grocery
Stores Out of Food, Gas Unavailable, Grid-Down as Summer Heat Rages
by
Mac
Slavo
SHTF
Plan
Recently
by Mac Slavo: Policing
for Profit: 'I Absolutely Would Not Believe That This Could Happen
in America'
We've seen
it time and again over the last decade. An emergency strikes and
panic grips the city or region for days or weeks on end.
We saw a complete
breakdown of emergency response and law & order during Hurricane
Katrina. The 2011 Snowpocalypse
on the east coast led to runs on grocery stores and empty shelves
within a matter of hours. Widespread blackouts during Hurricane
Ike left large sections of the Houston power grid down for up to
four weeks. In all these cases gas was almost impossible to find,
what was in your pantry was what you had until food distribution
resumed, local water was not safe for consumption, and government
response was limited to reinstating essential services first and
foremost.
The bottom
line, as Jesselyn Radack of the Government
Accountability Project notes, is that after billions have been
spent by Department of Homeland Security, FEMA and local law enforcement,
we are no more prepared today than we were the day before September
11, 2011.
After a short
but unusually severe thunderstorm that roared through the D.C.
area on Friday night, the entire Washington Metropolitan Area
was thrown into chaos.
Three days
later, countless traffic lights are still out, hundreds
of thousands of residents are without power, including
myself, grocery stores and gas station are closed for lack of
power, and the federal government is encouraging employees to
telework.
[SHTFplan
Editor's note: Brilliant recommendation from the best and brightest
to "telework" when the grid is down. ]
...
Is
this the work of a terrible terrorist attack? No, it is the complete
disaster non-preparedness a decade after 9/11. Despite the fact
that billions if not trillions have been spent since 9/11 on counter-terrorism
and so-called "homeland security" measures, one of the major terrorist
targets, the nation's
capital, cannot cope with a severe thunderstorm.
...
I received
a message from PEPCO that most D.C.-area residents may not have
power until next Friday at 11:00 pm – a full week after the storm
hit. With temperatures this week set for the mid to upper-90s,
that is a long time for residents to be with air conditioning,
or fans, or refrigerators.
Two years
ago, the Washington Post's comprehensive examination of
the billions of taxpayer dollars spent on "homeland security,"
"Top Secret America" reflected that the D.C. metropolitan area
was burgeoning with infrastructure, though apparently none of
it focused on keeping the D.C.-area up and running after a severe
thunderstorm.
...
I am not
the only D.C. taxpayer wondering, where are billions in
"critical infrastructure" protection and "homeland security?"
They are not going toward obvious solutions like putting power
lines underground.
The D.C.
area's responsiveness to unexpected events has not improved, but
taxpayers' pockets have been drained to create an entire secret
city of "national security" in northern Virginia. Making sure
citizens have food and power in an emergency should be a top priority,
not a distant second to security theater like taking our shoes
off before getting on an airplane.

(Pictured:
Run on grocery stores; Snowpocalypse 2010)
Once again
we are provided with ample evidence that not only is the government
ill-prepared to handle a large scale city-wide emergency, but the
residents of this nation are completely oblivious to the fact that
if the shit hits the fan, no one will be there to provide assistance.
When Houston
was hit almost head on by Hurricane Ike in 2008 the residents of
the entire metropolitan area were shocked. Never mind the mass chaos
as millions tried to flee the region, with drives to neighboring
cities taking upwards of ten times longer than they normally would.
Power for 90% of the city went out, and for some areas, including
where we lived, power was not restored for almost a month. Suffice
it to say our community was anxiety ridden, frustrated and tempers
were flaring. When gas became wholly unavailable and the generators
stopped running and we were overtaken with near 100 degree heat
during the day, the situation for many became untenable.
FEMA's own
web site
calls on Americans to have a two week supply of emergency items,
yet most citizens have only a three day supply of reserve food
available – whatever's in the kitchen when disaster strikes is what
they've got until things get back to normal.
Even after
these recommendations from the very people who are tasked with responding
to emergency and disaster situations, not a single resident in our
community that we were aware of had emergency supplies on hand when
Ike hit – even though many had gone through countless hurricanes
before and knew what to expect.
After Katrina,
Ike, the various earthquakes, wildfires, snow storms, "Derechos,"
power outages, and tens of billions in taxpayer funds supposedly
appropriated into infrastructure, security and emergency response,
it's simply incredible that we are so unprepared as a society.
Imagine, for
a moment, what happens in a scenario that affects not a single city,
but an entire multi-state region, or, perhaps the entire nation.
And imagine that the event(s) is so widespread that government is
totally overwhelmed – food transportation stops, refineries can't
get gas to local areas, water and power utility workers stay home
to care for their families, law enforcement is faced with widespread
looting, the internet becomes inaccessible as do all avenues of
communication due to blackouts, and grocery store shelves remain
out of stock for weeks or months.
Such a scenario
may be unlikely, but certainly possible – and the resulting effects
on the population and our way of life would be nothing short of
complete and utter pandemonium, especially for those
who have failed to prepare.
Reprinted
from SHTF Plan.
July
4, 2012
Mac
Slavo [send him mail] is a
small business owner and independent investor.
Copyright
© 2012 Mac Slavo
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