Growing Unease On Main Street
There’s no doubt that the Internet is a fantastic research tool. But what I really appreciate about the World Wide Web is that it allows me access to the local “color” throughout this vast country of ours. For example, this afternoon I was reading an article that appeared in the Kennebec Journal earlier this month. Why would I, a Chicago resident, be interested in a publication that comes out of Augusta, Maine? Because the situation described by Liz Soares is one that others on Main Street, whether it be in Maine, Missouri, or Montana, will likely encounter with more frequency as time marches on. Soares wrote on July 2:
When the conversation at the ladies’ luncheon suddenly swung from cats and grandchildren to the ammo shortage, I finally verified I was not imagining things.
We’re living in strange times. Perilous times. Definitely uncertain times.
The Internet is full of kooks and near-kooks preparing for “the end of the world as we know it,” or TEOTWAWKI. Some have a precise date set for the apocalypse. Hmm. I think I’m going to keep on working on keeping my soul clean and taking my chances on that one.
Others predict the economic collapse of the United States. This is TEOTWAWKI in a more figurative sense. It is a vision of hungry residents of exurban McMansions walking 15 miles to town (because gas is no more) to pick from what’s left on the shelves of Hannaford or Shaw’s, but probably not both because there won’t be enough processed food to support multiple grocery chains.
We’ll all be sporting those bumper stickers that proclaim “My Other Supermarket is My Garden” on our bicycles.
Perhaps we’ll also be toting Lady Smith revolvers in the wicker baskets attached to the handlebars.
Taking on a more somber tone, Soares continued:
Now, I do take the ammo shortage talk with a grain of salt, as I do all discussion of TEOTWAWKI. Given the freak-out scenes at Christmas when stores don’t stock enough Wiis, we are not a people known for having any sort of acquistion patience. An “ammo shortage” might mean the Wichita Wal-Mart was down to five boxes of .22s on May 6, for all I know.
But I sit up straighter when chatter on the Internet reaches critical mass and especially when it overflows into the sacred milieu of the ladies’ luncheon. At this point, unarmed as I am, I don’t really care about ammo shortages per se. I’m concerned that others do — and enough to talk about it.
I’ve had the distinct feeling lately that we are poised precariously between two realities.
Our lives go on much as they have before. Our cars still run, our washing machines chug away, our children still manage to find summer jobs at McDonald’s. Every so often the federal financial gurus tell us things are getting better. The Dow goes up for a day before it goes down again. Our jobs are safe. For now.
But then we hear the state government of California is writing IOUs. Tent cities are springing up in Florida. Major auto companies, once a mainstay of our economy, would go under if not for government help.
We seem to accept it all without a blink of an eye. So far we have left revolution to the Iranians. But we are talking about TEOTWAWKI among ourselves. Ordinarily peace-loving citizens are arming themselves. The murmur is growing louder.
I am listening.
Source:
“Pay attention when chitchat turns to ammo shortages”
Liz Soares
Kennebec Journal, July 2, 2009




July 15th, 2009 at 8:49 am
I know what u r saying..here jobs are disappearing by the day..local crime has risen alot ..I have purchased weapons and ammo myself and currently and for the forseeable future will continue to maintain 1 to 2 months food ahead..as Obama himself said things r going to get worse before better..and if the govt admits that..I figure things r going to get really bad..as usually the govt trys to underplay bad stuff coming down the pike..thing is to prepare for the worst and hope it dont last too long I guess.
July 15th, 2009 at 11:20 am
Thanks for the comment azurevirus.
“thing is to prepare for the worst and hope it dont last too long I guess.”
You got it…