As mass shootings become more and more prevalent, the gun debate becomes more and more heated. While liberals insist on intensifying gun control laws, those that stand firmly by their second amendment rights think a gun grab would only make things more unsafe.
In the midst of all these debates are those who continue to stockpile guns. Many of these people don’t just stock pile guns, but food and everyday household items as well in preparation of an impending catastrophe. These people, tokenly known as doomsday preppers, have been in the public eye for the past ten years and even garnering a television show that focused on their preparations.

Yet the successful television show does not fully encompass the doomsday prepper culture. While some preppers think a devastating natural disaster is in the very near future, others believe that war or the all the powerful forces of the government with perpetuate them into a survival state. All of racial tensions sensationally reported in the media also adds to the notion that Marshall law can be put into effect in the near future, a notion that seems more and more probable to the average person in light of current events.
Yet not all preppers are preoccupied with impending doom. Some want the freedom of living completely off the grid and off the land like our ancestors have done for thousands of years.

Others think that being able to survive with the bare essentials in the event that power and modern technology goes down is completely necessary. Although the phenomenon of doomsday preppers has captivated the nation as an unreasonable spectacle, is it not unreasonable that many in the US would not be able to survive if the grid goes down? That the so called “modernized”
Đăng nhận xét