I am writing this essay with a bit of trepidation. I do not want
to make you think I am an expert on anything, but I do think a lot and have
spent
a lot
of time studying the economy. Mr. Rawles can verify that my education and
training are as follows — I am in the medical profession and also
an attorney. I am also in the Air National Guard, after spending many years
in the Army Reserve. I was deployed in 2003-04, primarily to Kuwait, but
also made trips
to Iraq, Qatar, and Djibouti. I also spent most of 1997 in Bosnia.
My concern is that most of the friends and relatives that I have, think preparing
for hard times is like taking a weekend camping trip. I am working diligently
to get peoples’ attention, as this is so far from what I see coming.
Due to my work as an attorney, I have spent considerable time helping clients
invest money in non-traditional arenas. Because of this, I have been exposed
to two or three people who have studied this extensively. One of them calls
the coming trouble “The Big Rollover.”
Ray’s essay a few days ago was very good — the decision-making
process is important and most of us never stop to consider it at all. The same
is true about the Big Rollover - how many of us stop to really think about
what is coming? Oh, I know, you read "Patriots", but in the back of your mind
you think that that could not really happen. I am
here to tell you that you might be right, but you might also be way off! Well,
maybe not, but what will you do if the bank you go to locks up your account?
I have clients that are dealing with this right now! Have any ideas what you
can do when the grocery store is out of food? What about fresh bread and milk?
How often do you go to Wally World? They use the Just In Time (JIT) delivery
system, too, and will have empty shelves just as quickly as local stores.
What will you do when you are notified that your pension fund is bankrupt,
gone forever? It happened to thousands of people in my area due to the Enron
scandal a few years ago. How long will social insecurity last? Your guess is
probably better than mine.
I am just like all the rest of you — I hope and pray that this does not
come as quickly or as severely as some people are saying. But, what can you
do? I will give you some ideas, take them or leave them:
1. Become fanatical about saving money and stocking up on anything that will
store for a long time. Get it organized, and labeled, and learn to manage it
well.
2. Be quiet about this and find a way to do this without calling attention
to yourself.
3. Think about the failure of the power grid and what you will do if you are
out of electricity for a long time — maybe months or years. Gensets,
fuel, wind generators, solar collectors are all great, but think about what
you will do to keep your windows blacked out if you are the only one with electricity.
Talk about a lure for looters. Watch out!
4. Learn to speed read - I have way too much to read, but try to spend one
to two hours everyday reading and learning all I can.
5. Make sure you have some extra beds - even if you have to put them in the
garage or barn. We already have an adult child and her husband living with
us due to a bad landlord, and it does change the dynamics of your household.
6. Learn to garden — find someone who has some dirt and learn to grow
vegetables and fruit (BTW, my dearly beloved tomatoes are fruit). Go to www.seedsavers.org
and www.gardeningrevolution.com — both good sites and there are other
sites out there, too. Eat what you grow and learn how to store it - can, freeze,
dry, vacuum pack it or whatever else you can figure out how to do. Also, learn
to save seeds. This may actually save your life during the coming trouble.
7. Become an active member of a relatively small local church. If you do not
understand this, you are in serious trouble.
8. If you cannot control your addiction to television, throw it out or give
it away. I am not kidding.
9. Learn to fix everything you can. If you do not have a knack for fixing things,
get to work and learn all you can. This is not an option. When doing this, stock
up on parts and supplies for everything you own or want to own.
10. Buy things that will last a long time. I am driving a 20-year old Mercedes
Benz now that is in great shape. How many other cars last this long? I can keep
it for at least ten more years, but may buy a newer one to last for the next
15 to 20 years of bad times.
11. Make things last longer. I just received back my first knife that a man in
Omaha froze to near absolute zero. A friend has been using a disposable razor
to shave her legs for a year now with the same treatment. Others surely know
about this type of process, but it seems to be truly amazing. And, I am quite
a fan of German engineering.
12. Everything I own has synthetic or semi-synthetic oil in it, and has for the
past 20 years. I am also putting Cermax® in everything
that burns oil products - it somehow embeds a two micron layer of ceramic into
the metal. And, Cermax® is
cheap - I think the price is $29.95 or soon will be $39.95 for each treatment
of two ounces. Go to www.cermatechnology.com and look around -- you may have
to register (free, no obligation) and if you do, my ID is 10075, which they ask
for to create an account. I love Amsoil® products,
but they are very expensive. I am growing very fond of Schaeffer® oil products
- www.schaefferoil.com
is their site.
13. Decide what to do about medical issues and medications. Learn to live without
doctors and drugs. I know this will irritate some people on this site, but these
people are the ones who have issues. The medical care system is just about ready
to implode, in my opinion, so avoid it as much as you can and when you cannot,
develop relationships to help you. Think outside the box - I am very biased,
but I have found that some of the best medical thinkers are veterinarians, dentists,
and nurses.
14. In spite of my passionate dislike for television, we are stocking up on clothes,
books (www.half.com), movies, toys for our grandchildren, board games, outdoor
games, and more.
15. Learn not to be too imperialistic. I am the head of my household, but I am
not a dictator. I am a fairly high ranking officer in the guard, and have to
be careful when I come home from duty times, not to bark too many orders! But,
in the changing dynamics of our economy and our families, someone has to be in
charge in every situation and to be a good leader, you also need to know how
to take orders yourself, at times.
16. Be careful about what you eat. The big food companies do not actually put
the true ingredients on many labels and we now consume so much processed food
it is frightening. Try to not go to the store more than once a week, then once
a month. What will you do if this is the actual scenario that
comes in a couple of years? How long will you survive if you cannot get to the
store? I have heard
it said that you can live three minutes without air, three days without water
and three weeks without food.
17. One of the large, untapped markets in America, in my opinion, is growing
and selling organic fruits and vegetables. Go to the above link, www.gardeningrevolution.com
and see how you can spend a few hundred dollars and get one, two, or three of
Len Pense’s raised beds operational (cost $417.00 each plus the cement
blocks, plus shipping or transportation) and grow lots of crops you can sell.
Then, in the coming years it costs about $50.00 per raised bed per year to maintain
them. Also, I am working on a patent for a plant breeder, who has a couple of
special tomatoes that sell in his area (Washington state) for $3.95 to as high
as $6.95 a pound. In my area, if I can get $2.00 to $3.00 a pound, I would do
well. You may not become a trillionaire, but you can make some decent money and
won’t starve in the process. Mr. Pense does not use any soil, so his crops
are 100% organic and free of weeds and bacteria (e.g. E. Coli H0157). I can put
you in touch with the tomato breeder and you can grow these plants directly from
the seeds. I am a privacy freak, but you can email gotrocks@safe-mail.net and
I will contact you.
18. Another great way to make some money is by growing dirt-raised chickens.
See this site - www.acresusa.com/events/events.htm - the information about Polyface
Farm Intensive Farming methods are very intriguing. I receive $90.00 per acre
per year from the chemical farmer who farms the dirt here in the midwest. If
I can turn one acre into $1,500 per year of profit, even with a bit of work,
that is very tempting. The big key looks to me like it is marketing the product,
but this may not be as hard as one thinks initially.
In the summer of 1929, in northwest Kansas, where I was born, my maternal grandfather
(who passed away three months before I was born) bought a farm on a handshake.
A few weeks later he told my grandmother, whom I knew well and did not pass away
until I was 30 years old, that he thought he should go pay for this farm. He
made a trip to a bank in a nearby Nebraska town, just a few miles north of their
farm. He got the money out of this bank, which nearly depleted his account, and
paid
for the farm and recorded the deed in the courthouse. A few weeks later, along
came October 29, 1929, and you know what happened.
Well, my grandmother told me several times how much they benefited because during
the Great Depression they had this farm bought and paid for, but the bank where
the money was eventually closed, and their account would have been totally lost.
This farm is still owned by one of my cousins, and every time I drive by it I
think about this lesson.
I think you should have some cold, hard greenbacks stored up, just for emergencies.
And, have some gold and silver, because we may need them for barter before you
know it. Pay off your debts as fast as you can. And, if you cannot, rotate your
debts to protect yourself as much as possible.
One advisor says “you cannot be too wealthy going into the Big Rollover, ” and
he is probably right. I am not sure where it is safe to store money now - I think
JWR is probably right, it is better to buy stuff, than have money in a bank.
But, now this takes some big changes in our thinking. My clients, for the most
part, have a comfort level with money and this comfort level is almost always
related to their bank account balance.
A good web site to go belongs to Harry
Dent, who has written
several good books about the coming trouble and he is using demographics to map
out what he sees coming. He says that the downturn will start in 2009 or 2010.
At Dent's site
there is a 15 page report dated October 31, 2006, that
is pretty good reading.
Acres USA is a very good magazine for organic farming
and gardening.
An adviser whom I trust a lot, says that late 2008 to early 2009, will
start the trouble. He describes 16 major forces converging in this time frame
that
all affect our economy. He says, correctly, that it is not possible
to accurately predict the timing nor the severity, that you need to be prepared
as much as
you can.
I have six rules for clients who invest money and these are not optional:
1. Diversify
2. Diversify
3. Diversify
4. Make Your Money Work For You
5. Spend Less Than You Earn & Earn More Than You Spend
6. The Most Important Things In Life Cannot Be Bought Nor Sold With Money
So, in conclusion, wake up and smell the coffee - trouble is brewing, and I do
not have all the answers, but I do know that we need to be prepared for years
of living without many or even most of the conveniences we have all become accustomed
to having without even thinking about how it happens!
My list of ideas is not complete nor exhaustive. Actually, I am of the opinion
that preparation is a work in progress and for many it is a complete lifestyle
change.
I am an optimist - my parents were both born during the Great Depression and
their families survived, but since then, in America, we have become fat, lazy
and stupid. We will survive this one, too!
Keep thinking!
