Different kind of disasters require different responses. A viral plague
requires a different response than say tornadoes or hurricanes.

How does one prep for a virus that has gone global. The only solution I see
is to relocate to an area with a low population density, or better no
people. The lower the population density, the quicker the virus will burn
out. If the virus hits a city or even a town, the casualties will be very
high until the population density has been reduced. We are seeing happen
now in Liberia and Sierra Leon. Guinea was smarter and took action quickly
to prevent the virus from moving to cities. The death toll was very high in
the villages near Sierra Leon but now the virus has almost exhausted itself
as it can not find hosts.

Olushola

On Wed, Oct 15, 2014 at 12:50 PM, Ron <ron....@gmail.com> wrote:

>  They all have their place and time. Cash on hand for the immediate
> crisis. Prepper items of course.
> When the crash comes gold & SILVER would probably be better to hold than
> say the stock market?
> If you have a spare half hour this is the real deal.
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3vwxGxmDOZk&feature=youtu.be
>
> Ron
>
> On 10/15/2014 8:03 AM, phoenix23002 tds.net wrote:
>
> Just my opinion but I would think things like cigarettes, sugar, toilet
> paper, coffee, clean water, matches and antibiotics would be
> worth their weight in gold/silver.  Lola H.
>  On Wed, Oct 15, 2014 at 6:37 AM, Ode Coyote <odecoy...@silverpuppy.com>
> wrote:
>
>> ..Until people reaslize the system is permanently busted and the cash
>> worth no more than wall paper.
>> Then FOOD and fuel will be king.
>> Only when the absolute necessities are in surplus and trade/commerce
>> resumes, will gold and silver have value beyond the intrinsic based on
>> actual every day usefulness as a substance vs a symbol...and silver is much
>> more useful than gold.
>>
>> Ode
>>
>> On 10/14/2014 7:16 PM, Ron wrote:
>>
>> Yes. I think that having cash on hand is protection against a banking
>> lock down.
>> Any kind of financial crisis could close the banks and ATM's and /or
>> simply limit the amount of cash one can withdraw. With cash on hand you can
>> buy groceries and gasoline and other vital necessities.
>>
>> Ron
>>
>> On 10/14/2014 3:45 PM, Olushola Camara wrote:
>>
>>  Yes, if the catastrophe is nation wide or global. There are always
>> regional catastrophes like Katrina or mid-west tornadoes, but the economy
>> keeps on churning elsewhere.
>>
>>  Olushola
>>
>> On Tue, Oct 14, 2014 at 5:01 PM, ASL raVen <aslra...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> I thought cash would be useless in a time of severe strife and silver
>>> would be more valuable to trade?
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>  RaVen
>>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
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