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‘Preppers’ Quietly Stock Up for the ‘Perfect Storm’


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2021 Aug 7, 2:48am   3,351 views  71 comments

by Patrick   ➕follow (55)   💰tip   ignore  

https://www.theepochtimes.com/mkt_morningbrief/preppers-quietly-stock-up-for-the-perfect-storm_3935935.html?utm_source=patrick.net&utm_medium=patrick.net&utm_campaign=patrick.net

A crippling ice storm that left Travis Maddox and thousands of other Missouri residents without power in 2007 had an “almost apocalyptic feel to it.”

“No one could move. It just shut the whole region down for two weeks. I wasn’t as prepared as I thought,” said Maddox, a burly man of 43, sporting a long black beard, T-shirt, cargo pants, and baseball cap, while tending his garden.

Those two weeks made Maddox realize that being prepared—“prepping,” as it’s called today—was the key to a life of self-reliance and personal freedom.

As an Eagle Scout, he never forgot the Boy Scout motto: Be prepared.

“To me, the ultimate level of prepping is being self-sufficient. You’re still being modern, but you’re in control,” Maddox told The Epoch Times on Aug. 5.

In 2009, Maddox launched his YouTube channel, “The Prepared Homestead,” which now has over 32,000 subscribers.

People, he said, are waking up to the worsening reality of supply chain disruptions and food shortages, and rapid political and social changes that all point toward “a perfect storm” just ahead.

The COVID-19 lockdowns and empty store shelves only served to heighten popular sentiment that the “old normal” is gone, he said.

“When the pandemic struck, we started seeing all this panic buying,” Maddox said. “What’s really increased is the number of people that contact me. These are really personal emails. They’re not crazy extremists. These are single moms, elderly people, disabled people, regular working people. They’re realizing that things are changing. They can just feel things are changing rapidly,” he said.

“The riots [of 2020] were bad. The election was bad. Now what’s happening is the whole world is starting to change.”

Talk of a global political and economic “Great Reset” and vaccine passports have done little to diminish anxiety among the unvaccinated that society is about to turn its back on them. And so they and others prepare—with food, water, alternative power sources, survival gear, and plans to leave the city if possible for the relative safety of rural areas.

Along with “The Prepared Homestead,” a host of other YouTube channels cater to seasoned and beginning preppers, including “Magic Prepper” in North Dakota, “Angry Prepper” in New York City, “Alaska Prepper,” “Ice Age Farmer,” and many others.

Maddox said “The Prepared Homestead” began as a way to share basic gardening tips that grew in scope as political and economic circumstances changed.

Now he produces at least six videos per week, touching upon such controversial topics as forced vaccination, firearms confiscation, and “cultural secession”—living apart from the government and its “woke” culture—while using careful language to avoid the YouTube censors.

“A huge portion of our country is saying you’ve gone too far,” Maddox said. “We’re seeing not just a rapid change in politics and policies and the economy, we’re seeing a rapid change in the heart and soul of America.”

While many individual preppers and prepper organizations try to remain anonymous, the number of people preparing appears to be growing. In the last year alone, roughly 45 percent of Americans, or about 116 million people, said they spent money preparing for hard times or spent money stockpiling survival goods, according to Finder.com.

Maddox, however, said there’s a big difference between prepping and “hoarding.”

“Prepping is something most people did all the time” in bygone years. “Our grandparents were preppers. I suspect if things continue to worsen, preppers will be made to be the bad guys,” he said.

In the months following the pandemic lockdowns, online stores that serve a growing number of preppers have experienced record-breaking sales and interest in their products.

Keith Bansemer, president of My Patriot Supply in Salt Lake City, said his business has grown exponentially amid widespread fears of a return to COVID-19 lockdowns, empty store shelves, and forced vaccinations that will limit personal freedoms.

“For those that choose not to be vaccinated, the fear is that it’s going to restrict their access to certain things,” Bansemer told The Epoch Times.

In a word—food.

“Since mid-July, we have seen a [six-fold] increase in orders and are shipping several thousand orders daily from our centers in Utah, Missouri, and Ohio,” Bansemer said. “Americans are quietly preparing.”

Bansemer said My Patriot Supply has provided over 1 million families in the U.S. with emergency foods, water filtration, and other survival products since the start of the pandemic in March 2020.

“We own and operate three large warehouses covering over 500,000 square feet. We spent the last year adding 10 times the additional capacity to our operations to best serve our customers during times of crisis and emergencies during spikes in orders like we are seeing now,” Bansemer said.

“An increasing number of those new to preparing have placed orders recently. They are primarily purchasing our large food kits that average over 2,000 calories per day and last up to 25 years in storage. The most popular item right now is our 3-Month Emergency Food Kit.”

In the end, he said, being prepared isn’t about politics—it’s that “people just need to eat.”

A prepper collects eggs from his chickens which he raises at his home in Sebastopol, Calif., on March 30, 2017. (Monica Davey/AFP via Getty Images)
At South Carolina-based Practical Preppers, a supplier of emergency preparing supplies, President Scott Hunt said COVID is “definitely a driver of increased demand.”

“The social and political divisions are also making people nervous,” he told The Epoch Times.

The Texas ice storm and the Colonial pipeline ransom earlier this year “really caused people everywhere to pursue independence,” he said.

“Electrical independence is very high on everyone’s list. I predict demand will outstrip supply this month or the next. Shipping difficulties play a very large role in this. Port congestion and trucking shortages are contributing to this perfect storm,” Hunt said.

As a seasoned prepper, Maddox said homesteading is the next level preparing for hard times. He lives with his wife and daughter in a family-built house tucked away in the pristine Ozarks with the goal of living off the grid.

The family raises goats, chickens, sheep, turkeys, and grows a variety of fruits and vegetables including squash, corn, and asparagus in a large garden.

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33   richwicks   2022 Apr 10, 9:44am  

Patrick says
The family raises goats, chickens, sheep, turkeys, and grows a variety of fruits and vegetables including squash, corn, and asparagus in a large garden.


How comfortable would you be with killing them for meat?

You never killed your chickens did you?

It's interesting to see how soft I am. I'm in a point in society where I don't have to kill to live.
34   GNL   2022 Apr 10, 9:50am  

Hircus says
DhammaStep says
I had a profound heartbreak last year when I spent my savings on a risk to "prep" out in some isolated land and do farming. Unfortunately, I learned the hard way not to depend on your SO's perceptions of their family members sometimes. They can be very biased and completely miss major personality flaws.

Alas, if the doom strikes, you better believe I'll be facing it in free for all urban metropolis! Woohoo. (Any advice?)


So you moved, and it didn't work out, so you're back in the city now?

I too want to build or buy a self-sufficient farm, and I want one now, but I don't really want to move out and live rural, yet. One idea I have is I wonder if I could set things up so someone else lives there for now, taking care of things, maybe even paying a small rent (or maybe not), with the agreement that I may show up one day to also live there. I would want multiple dwelling...

Sounds like a pretty tight plan.
35   GNL   2022 Apr 10, 10:18am  

richwicks says
I'm in a point in society where I don't have to kill to live.

That's not unlike 99% of society.
36   AmericanKulak   2022 Apr 10, 11:22am  

HeadSet says
I remember when I was a kid on a school field trip to Mount Vernon, they showed how George Washington had a deep dirt basement fridge. George had ice from the pond put in the dugout during the winter, and the ice stayed frozen all summer. Same trick was done at Thomas Jefferson's house in Monticello.


There's also some recipe for an ammonia based fridge.
37   AmericanKulak   2022 Apr 10, 11:23am  

ad says

Good point, as it won't work if the maximum relative humidity is above 40%. The problem in the desert region is that you will need to ration water and may have not enough to run the swamp cooler or evaporative cooler.


Exactly. Every region has unique issues, but water is the key, One thing great (and bad) about Florida is the high water table. Springs abound, and of course it rains reliably most of the time (not always as Central Florida burns up once or twice a decade due to lack of rain for a few weeks). But, it means cold cellars are generally way too difficult to engineer, at least for a layman, in most places.
38   AmericanKulak   2022 Apr 30, 6:49pm  

Wow, what a cool and competent Austrian Chick. I'd survive with her.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ici2ZTHXLhM&source=patrick.net
39   HeadSet   2022 Apr 30, 7:40pm  

AmericanKulak says

Wow, what a cool and competent Austrian Chick. I'd survive with her.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ici2ZTHXLhM&source=patrick.net

Yes! A woman that when out of the kitchen, can build her own!
40   komputodo   2022 Apr 30, 8:08pm  

richwicks says
It's interesting to see how soft I am. I'm in a point in society where I don't have to kill to live.

You are in a point in society where you can afford to pay someone to kill for you...And also to cut up, clean, and package the meat so it doesn't look like it came from an animal. You could even convince yourself that since you didn't actually kill the animal and that it was already dead, you might as well buy the meat and eat it.
41   komputodo   2022 Apr 30, 8:21pm  

AmericanKulak says
There's also some recipe for an ammonia based fridge.

like the one in the movie "MOSQUITO COAST"?
42   just_passing_through   2022 May 1, 10:29am  

Hircus says
Sugar is real cheap in 50lb bags, and lasts a very long time in storage. I never considered storing sugar to be used for making alky, but that's a good idea. Corn is also cheap and stores very well too, and sugar + corn is the bread and butter for making good ol southern corn liquor moonshine. Although, keeping some active yeast might not be so easy, then again you could probably just grow your own if really needed.

The stored corn and sugar can be used for many other things, too.


You don't necessarily need to store a lot of corn either. Get non-sweet hard corn for planting and a mill. A much more efficient grain than wheat etc.,
44   stereotomy   2022 Jul 3, 1:01pm  

AmericanKulak says

Wow, what a cool and competent Austrian Chick. I'd survive with her.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ici2ZTHXLhM&source=patrick.net

Yes, OK face, but with thighs than can strangle a man. How much did she learn from her grandmother (during the Third Reich)?

I've fucked a german girl way back in the day. The things they say as sweet nothings during a fuck session are pretty hilarious.
45   Patrick   2022 Jul 3, 3:27pm  

My first girlfriend was German. Turned out she wasn't just my girlfriend though.
46   Hircus   2022 Jul 3, 4:40pm  

just_passing_through says

Get non-sweet hard corn for planting and a mill.



Why this type of corn?
47   just_passing_through   2022 Jul 9, 1:13pm  

Hircus says

Why this type of corn?


That's the type used to make corn flower.
48   HeadSet   2022 Jul 9, 2:50pm  

stereotomy says


I've fucked a german girl way back in the day. The things they say as sweet nothings during a fuck session are pretty hilarious.

Hopefully not:
"Dein Fick gut für Mann mit kleinem Penis"
49   HeadSet   2022 Jul 9, 2:51pm  

Patrick says

My first girlfriend was German. Turned out she wasn't just my girlfriend though.

Lotzen Porken
50   stereotomy   2022 Jul 9, 3:33pm  

HeadSet says


stereotomy says


I've fucked a german girl way back in the day. The things they say as sweet nothings during a fuck session are pretty hilarious.

Hopefully not:
"Dein Fick gut für Mann mit kleinem Penis"



Quite the contrary - she was worried since she couldn't get off on German guys that she might be a lesbian. Despite my Irish-sized p3nor I got her off and reaffirmed her heterosexuality. I laugh when I think about this (because I had the attitude but not the physique of a Chad), but (and given these were at best 6's) that she was the second woman who I alpha-widowed. And then, thus ended the brief 2-year run of my poon-slaying career.

EDIT: given my German is rusty after a few decades, yeah, I suppose you're right. Maria Muldaur sang it best, "It ain't the meat, it's the motion . . ."
53   stereotomy   2024 Jan 24, 6:35pm  

Gun Club membership - check.
1000 rounds of ammo - check
Reloading supplies for another 5000 rounds - check
Reloading press - check

No hunting license, but then again, I'm preparing for Elmers up to no good.
54   Eric Holder   2024 Jan 25, 1:27pm  

Patrick says

“For those that choose not to be vaccinated, the fear is that it’s going to restrict their access to certain things,” Bansemer told The Epoch Times.

In a word—food.


Didn't happen.
55   AmericanKulak   2024 Jan 25, 2:29pm  

In Europe, esp. Austria, they restricted non-vaxed from restaurants and supermarkets.

https://www.reuters.com/business/healthcare-pharmaceuticals/austria-orders-non-vaccinated-people-into-covid-19-lockdown-2021-11-14/

However, 35% of Austrians avoided the Vax.
56   NuttBoxer   2024 Jan 25, 6:37pm  

If you got fired and couldn't afford to eat? If lockdowns prevented you from going grocery shopping? If you weren't allowed in a restaurant because you didn't have a vax passport, or refused to wear a mask?
57   Eric Holder   2024 Jan 25, 8:01pm  

NuttBoxer says


If you got fired and couldn't afford to eat?


It is impossible to start in the US even if you have 0 income from work. Period. And it was even more impossible to starve during coof even if one had 0 money: schools were giving out boxes of free food, food banks were placing boxes of food into trunks of cars pulling up, no questions asked. Fresh stuff too, not some old cans.

NuttBoxer says


If lockdowns prevented you from going grocery shopping?


Where did that happen? Chyna? Even there they were given government cheese delivered to the entryways of their appt blocks.

NuttBoxer says


If you weren't allowed in a restaurant because you didn't have a vax passport, or refused to wear a mask?


If all restaurants woulds suddenly drop from the face of the Earth I most definitely would not starve. And people who thought they couldn't live w/o them learned that they very much can. But even this is red herring because every restaurant staying in business was preparing food for pickup and delivery.
58   NuttBoxer   2024 Jan 26, 9:10am  

You never said starve, your quote was about restricted access to food, which obviously did happen.
59   RWSGFY   2024 Mar 28, 8:12am  

NuttBoxer says


You never said starve, your quote was about restricted access to food, which obviously did happen.


No, it did not. Even if somebody for some reason could not wear a mask to the supermarket, you could pick your food at a supermarket parking lot or had it delivered. These dedicated pick-up parking spaces are still visible all over California - the arguably most evil state of them all. And, as already mentioned, FREE fresh food was given out at schools and food banks where, again, you didn't have to exit your car, let alone wear a mask. It was touted as a scheme to help small farms, btw.

If I were to restrict access to food I would definitely not pay small farmers from the government coffers and distribute food to the population for free, no question asked. Sounds counter-productive to the goal at hand.
60   WookieMan   2024 Mar 28, 8:24am  

RWSGFY says

No, it did not. Even if somebody for some reason could not wear a mask to the supermarket, you could pick your food at a supermarket parking lot or had it delivered. These dedicated pick-up parking spaces are still visible all over California - the arguably most evil state of them all. And, as already mentioned, FREE fresh food was given out at schools and food banks where, again, you didn't have to exit your car, let alone wear a mask.

Grocery ordering here in IL is a thing, which I actually think is good for the consumer. Order online, park the car and they bring it to you. And you don't spend a fuck ton of money on stupid shit that you walk by in the grocery store. One positive of covid. Unless you're super anal about your produce.

My kids could get free lunches during the worst of it, never did it though. Not a prepper, but we usually get a cow and pig every year. So plenty of meat. Food restrictions are only as small as your brain is. At no point during Covid was I ever worried about food. I don't know a single person that was. And if they mention it I'd help out. At some point someone that cannot get food in modern times is kind of a dip shit. Definitely shouldn't have kids because they'll be idiots or homeless.
61   NuttBoxer   2024 Mar 28, 11:54am  

Did people have to wait in line to enter the stores? Did they refuse to allow purchases if you didn't mask up? Did they restrict the hours you could go shopping? You know the answers already, so why keep lying?

I bought food from a CSA during that time, government didn't buy shit from them. My neighbor routinely went to food banks, that shit was always mass-produced, none of it local.

Your attempt to justify such rampant fascism by the state is turning you into quite the commie-apologist...
62   Patrick   2024 Mar 28, 9:00pm  

Oh they abso-fucking-lutely refused to sell you food around here if you didn't have the useless and humiliating mask on.
63   WookieMan   2024 Mar 29, 4:15am  

NuttBoxer says

Did people have to wait in line to enter the stores? Did they refuse to allow purchases if you didn't mask up? Did they restrict the hours you could go shopping? You know the answers already, so why keep lying?

Nope. Not where I live in IL. I saw mask wearers publicly mocked. Not a joke. You coastal(ish) people live in a different world. No lines. They put the social distancing stickers on the ground and no one respected it or cared. No mask needed. Only wore a mask at airport security basically. Even on the plane I'd have a bottle of water handy and just say I was drinking. Only had one flight attendant get bitchy with me.

None of Covid was law. There are still sheep doing it after my recent travels. 3 trips in for the first quarter. About 10% mask wearers is my guess. I just laugh at this point. You immediately lose any respect from me if you're wearing a mask.
64   AmericanKulak   2024 Apr 21, 11:43pm  

I've been trying to find this out for a while, a guide on roughly how much to plant per person for a year.

I'm sure it needs to be adjusted to climate, personal prefs, specific subtypes... but hope it's useful.



BTW, Potatoes are full of Vitamin C, and fiber. "Wonder why" mainline media pushes rice over potatoes so much.
65   AmericanKulak   2024 Apr 21, 11:47pm  

I haven't seen anybody wear a mask in well over a year.

About early 2023, you could once in a blue moon see an AWFL or AAFES with one. More rarely a very aged person (85+) who probably doesn't use the internet at all and is 100% dependent on CNN or NBC.

This Snowbird season NO I saw no one in a mask, no matter how elderly or woke.

*African American Federally Employed Sister
66   HeadSet   2024 Apr 22, 5:54am  

AmericanKulak says

I haven't seen anybody wear a mask in well over a year.

I am still seeing people with masks around here, but I assume it is for pollen.
67   WookieMan   2024 Apr 22, 7:24am  

HeadSet says

AmericanKulak says


I haven't seen anybody wear a mask in well over a year.

I am still seeing people with masks around here, but I assume it is for pollen.

I actually never thought of that. It would actually work for pollen I'd think. I can see the pine pollen on our cars in the driveway this time of year. My BIL/SIL living in Germany are storing their dark blue Jeep here. It's basically yellow at this point. Actually wondering if people discovered this during the early days of covid and now they just wear masks certain times of the year, not for Covid?

I'm near(ish) to Chicago, so I still see masks as I'm near a major state highway. Back of napkin math though I'd say 2-3 per 100. Further east I go, the more I see it still. Pretty rare in my town though and not higher than 10% even at airports.
68   GNL   2024 Apr 22, 7:28am  

Patrick says

Oh they abso-fucking-lutely refused to sell you food around here if you didn't have the useless and humiliating mask on.

I used self checkout. I was told several times to leave the store but I ignored them. It takes too long for the cops to get there.
69   stereotomy   2024 Apr 22, 7:59am  

If you have reliable refrigeration/freezing (minifridge running off battery charged by solar), then grass-fed beef is the motherfucking shit. It is a complete food - all a body needs. Load up on 200 lbs of grass-fed ground beef from a local farmer (properly vetted, of course) and grill to your hearts content.
70   HeadSet   2024 Apr 22, 11:48am  

stereotomy says

It is a complete food - all a body needs. Load up on 200 lbs of grass-fed ground beef from a local farmer (properly vetted, of course) and grill to your hearts content.

That sounds like fun even if the beef had no nutritional value.
71   HeadSet   2024 Apr 22, 11:55am  

WookieMan says

I actually never thought of that. It would actually work for pollen I'd think. I can see the pine pollen on our cars

They do work for pollen, you can see the green/yellow staining on the mask. The wife and daughters have severe allergies and the masks have a noticeable effect. Pollen does not bother me at all. Have you checked the pollen filter on your car?

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