The End Is Near

The End Is Near
2nd Amendment



A well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the People to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.



Friday, September 18, 2009

Preppers get ready for the worst.......


Preppers get ready for the worst…………
Movement to stockpile for emergency at all-time high



I found this Info at WND
Posted: August 31, 2009
9:48 pm Eastern
© 2009 WorldNetDaily

These people are ready for anything, including "the end of the world as we know it."
Participation in National Preparedness Month is at an all-time high according to the authors of "How To Overcome The Most Frightening Issues You Will Face This Century"
Thomas Horn owns a publishing house, is married to a horse trainer and has four grandchildren and one on the way. He lives on a farm in rural Missouri.
Horn, a semi-retired minister considers himself a reasonable man with a well-balanced outlook on the future.
But since Sept. 11, 2001, Horn has been stockpiling emergency supplies and encouraging others to do the same.
"Following 9/11 and Hurricane Katrina it was abundantly clear that it is dangerous and even naive to expect government agencies to swoop in to save everybody in the event of a major emergency," Horn explained. "Now we are hearing from federal authorities that it is only a matter of time – when, not if – a catastrophic event could make 9/11 pale by comparison. Experts have placed even-odds on a terrorist attack using a weapon of mass destruction (WMD) inside the United States within the next five years."
Horn, a veteran minister of 30 years and co-host of Raiders Live! News Talk Radio is part of a growing trend in which regular people – doctors, mechanics, laborers, receptionists and others – are preparing to survive should a natural or man-made disaster strike.
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Theirs is not an extremist community holed up in underground shelters teaching bizarre or cultic ideas.
These "preppers" (as they are called) are regular folks that saw what happened on 9/11, experienced their 401(k)s falling apart as the economy soured, witnessed the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina and decided to take the future into their own hands.
"These are average people holding down regular jobs who understand the world is not the idealistic place they might have once thought," Horn said. "The proliferation of weapons technology in the hands of terrorists and recent unusual weather patterns have made them aware how things can suddenly go wrong. They are preparing to survive whatever may come."
Avoiding the run on supplies
Joe, 31, manages an emergency preparedness store and recalls what happened in 2001, when the nation was gripped with panic and survival merchandise suppliers were inundated and ran out of stock in one day.
"It was a nightmare getting services and products," Joe said. "The number-one supplier of emergency food was receiving 10,000 orders per day and within one week was back-ordered for over six months. At the radiological laboratory where we get Potassium Iodide Tablets (Potassium Iodide shields the thyroid from radiation damage in the case of nuclear exposure), the U.S. military flew in and purchased every tablet KI4U had in stock – millions of pills – leaving the public without a supplier for some time."
Joe explains how the lessons of 9-11 led the private investors he works for to form the wholesale emergency supplies outlet survivormall.com in order to amass in a single-source platform what the public needs to stock up on before another crises occurs.
Business has been booming for such companies lately, with long-term storage food producers and survival gear manufacturers shipping product as fast as they can make them, testament to the result of a growing body of people agreeing on the need to prepare before something happens and stores sell out again.
"Our business has doubled each year for the last three years," Joe acknowledges. "Especially our Mountain House freeze-dried foods. Next to that, commercial gas masks and hand-crank devices like NOAA radios have been flying off the shelves."
,Making plans to survive
Allie Anderson is one of 20 authors who recently contributed to the new survival book "How To Overcome The Most Frightening Issues You Will Face This Century" (Defender Publishing Group, 2009). She explains how the "prepper" movement and economic downturn led her and her husband to pack up, leave the West Coast and purchase land in the Midwest where a stream provides a natural water supply, which they can use for drinking and bathing in a crises, and to grow food for themselves and their children.
During a recent power outage that lasted three days, the Andersons practiced their off-grid plan, drawing water from the spring and boiling it over an open fire (which they were able to do as a result of having a one-year supply of firewood for just such an emergency). They carried containers of water into the house to use for baths and laundry, and ate vegetables and wild herbs they harvested from their gardens. Their son, 13, and their daughter, 8, worked right alongside them.
"We have about a one-year supply of necessities and can barter with neighbors for other items such as milk, eggs and meat if we need to," Anderson said. "We also have a large pantry with bulk flour and dry meals, at least a one-year supply at a time. I hope we never have to use them as a result of an emergency, but we are ready to do that if the day ever comes. We never want to be put in the position of having to beg for food or basics."
Church leaders advocate preparedness
Being prepared to survive under a variety of scenarios including a layoff, severe weather, global pandemic or terrorist attack is just common sense say church leaders.
David Wilkerson, a well-known pastor and author of "The Cross and the Switchblade," recently predicted, "An earth-shattering calamity is about to happen," and urged his followers to get an emergency supply of food.
Some preppers foresee a time they call TEOTWAWKI, an acronym that means "the end of the world as we know it."
"It is wise council when preachers like David Wilkerson advocate disaster readiness to their flock," said Thomas Horn. "The Book of James measures faith by personal action, and Hebrews 11:7 describes true faith this way: 'By faith Noah, being warned of God of things not seen as yet, moved with fear and prepared an ark to the saving of his house.'
"God told Noah that He would destroy the earth by a flood. He gave Noah instructions on how to be prepared so that he and his family could survive. Noah didn't know when the flood would come, only that it was prophesied, and he prepared for it. When the flood arrived, he was ready. His faith in and obedience to God's word, his survival instincts, and ultimately his preparedness actions saved his family and preserved the human race."
Horn believes the parallel between Noah and today is worth noting. "As it was in the days of Noah," he cites Luke 17:26-27 concerning the last days. "Noah's actions should define the modern believer's responsibility, including the need for spiritual and physical preparedness."

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