I think I see what is coming for us all.
What appears to be coming right now (and I share this to create possibly a different or better outcome) is that billions of people (at this point) appear to be going to die here on earth during the next 10 to 20 years from various variants of Covid-19 or it's successors.
And I'm worried that the ONLY ones who might survive this will be the ones who get vaccinations.
AT this point it really doesn't matter whether someone did this all on purpose or whether it was an accident or whether this is just a part of the 6th Great Extinction. Either way, the human race appears to be heading towards near extinction in the next 10 to 80 years from all this.
What is happening makes sense to me in that it's likely very few humans survive ice ages too (but there are always the eskimo types that live in the far north of Alaska, Canada and Siberia still. But, it takes a specific skill set and hereditary traits to manage all this too. Not everyone is suited for such a life.
So, what I'm saying here is that the future looks bleak for many groups of people here on earth regarding both Covid and Climate Changes.
So, what can people do to survive all this?
The first thing might be to get vaccinated with a Pfizer or Moderna Vaccine.
Then the next thing might be to prepare for literally any climate change possible. Or you can psychologically prepare to survive whatever comes.
How would one go about this?
My idea that I tried in the 1970s was to move to the country where there usually is a better chance of survival of bad things than in a big city. I tried living in Mt. Shasta from 1976 to 1977, then from 1979 to 1985. And then from 1990 to 1992. The problem with living in the country is mostly making a living to support your family there. Not everyone is good at that. So, people often drive big trucks or play music or things like this to make a living when they live that remotely. So, their work is less tied to where they live.
People might say to me: "Well. I have every convenience living in a big city and I have a good job etc.
However, that might be true now but what happens when the shit really hits the fan in big cities?
Big cities will be the first places you don't want to be when it gets really bad.
However, going too remote can be as bad as living in a big city.
Because what I have noticed is that the craziest people I have ever met are in the inner cities and also the ones who live remotely too. Both the inner city people and the most remote people can be insane for different or the exact same reasons.
So, the choices of how to survive "Whatever comes" likely has to be different for different people.
In the end it's all a gamble on figuring out how you can survive whatever comes.
By God's Grace
However, living remote in Mt. Shasta gave me enough hope in my life to continue to be alive now at age 73. I think the most helpful thing for me was building a house with my Dad before he died from 1980 to 1985 when he passed away. This likely gave me more hope in my life than anything else and this hope lives on even today wherever I am on earth.
The other thing that gave me hope is home schooling my older children for 5 years on Oak Meadow School independent study. This was really wonderful too.
By God's Grace
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