What will happen when food disruptions occur, the currency collapses or social chaos breaks out in U.S. cities? This video answers that question by revealing how everyday people can transform into crazed animals who trample other human beings in order to get what they want. A shocking video that reveals a part of human nature that society tries to keep caged.
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Whose side is this fellow on, exactly?
Fear your neighbors? When he says, "Be prepared" what, oh deary me, can he possibly be suggesting?
Here's a thought; animalistic behavior, as he puts it, which stems from a short circuited frontal lobe and leads to crazed rushes and panicked mob frenzies, may certainly erupt in a short term reality, but mobs burn out fast. The long haul, the weeks and months after the point of collapse, are what I'm more interested in studying. And we have several excellent examples.
Did we see legions of marauding zombie people hacking each other to bits after Katrina?
No. We saw people pulling together to help each other out. We DID, however, see armed goons from Blackwater and the national guard acting like psychopaths.
A personal anecdote. . .
The last power outage I experienced hit my whole community and left the town dark for a couple of days. People, smart people I'd not thought would worry about such things, nervously compared notes on self defense, as though faceless gangs of hooligans would be appearing any moment. I confess, I found myself worrying about this as well before I snapped out of it.
What *really* happened was that people pulled together and new support systems rapidly formed. Remember; society is a result of humans, not the other way around. If you knock down society, then we have the built-in desire, like hunger, to form a new one. We seek to make friends, to offer value to a group. We know the value in caring for others. We know compassion.
Certainly, we have been drugged and programmed and we have lost focus, but in a collapse, TVs and cell phones will stop working, and people will actually have their minds clear at least a little bit.
Being worried and being aware of the worst isn't wrong. But I suspect the kind of fear being touted in this video is more programming designed to make us stop trusting ourselves and each other, and to allow our rights to be trampled; to allow us to look the other way when the police and military contractors start beating up regular folks on the street.