Connect with us

Published

on

When preparing before SHTF, make sure you also have plans on what to do if you get stuck elsewhere after an electromagnetic pulse (EMP) attack. This ensures that you have survival gear and that you can safely get home even if things go south. (h/t to TheSurvivalMom.com) What is an EMP?

An electromagnetic pulse is a burst of electromagnetic radiation from large explosions, especially nuclear explosions or from a magnetic field fluctuation.

EMPs can produce damaging current and voltage surges within electrical systems, which can put your appliances and gadgets at risk.

In Ted Koppel’s book “Lights Out,”the author warned that the nation’s leaders have done “virtually nothing” to protect the power grid from “any type of attack, nor are there effective plans in place to help the millions of citizens who will be completely unprepared.”

When researching his book, Koppelinterviewed people in the know, such as Janet Napolitano, Leon Panetta and Admiral William Gortney, who spoke during a Pentagon news briefing in 2015 about power grid vulnerability. Tips for creating your plan to get home after an EMP

When finalizing your EMP emergency preparedness plan, you should figure out how you’re going to get home after an EMP attack before you travel. Planning ahead gives you the time to assess your particular circumstances.

Before SHTF, prepare get-home bags and leave one at your office and keep another one in your car so you can access your gear if something happens while you are on the road. (Related: How to prepare for an EMP strike.)

Here are six variables to consider when drafting your plan:

Transportation

Do you plan to walk all the way home if SHTF? If this is your first option for transportation, you need to make sure you are in shape.

You need to be healthy enough to walk several miles while carrying your get-home bag. Exercise regularly and get quality walking shoes or boots and pack several pairs of socks.

Keep some Shoe-Goo in your emergency kit for quick repairs and for a quick waterproofing job.Prepare a basic first aid kit and include moleskin to protect against hot spots and painful blisters on your feet.

Weather and terrain

The weather and the terrain mightchange as you travel.

Can you stay dry if it rains? Do you have enough water in your bag to stay hydrated on a hot day?

You should also look for alternate routes that might be easier to travel or would allow you to avoid populated areas if people rush to escape the chaos of an EMP attack.

Water

Where you are stranded and the terrain between you and your home will determine if you can access clean water for your various needs.

If you’re not sure you can find water, stay where you are. A one-gallon container of water weighs eight pounds, but you can keep your bag light by getting a water straw.

You should also have something that allows youto filter larger quantities and carry some water with you until you find a new water source.

Food

Here are some food items and snacks to pack in your get-home bag: Cheeses (Choose cheeses with a stable shelf life.) Chicken, salmon and tuna packets Crackers Dried fruits Dried meats Energy bars or breakfast bars Nut butter Nuts Seeds Tortillas Trail mix

However, if you’re on the road for several days, your food will eventually run out.

Before SHTF, make sure you know other ways to find food safely. You can learn how toset traps and hunt and fish using alternative methods.

Another option is to learn how to forage and identify edible and medicinal wild plants.

Other essential prepping skills that will help with finding and cooking food include knowing how to start a fire and how to purify water. Pack something you can use as a cooking pot and a tiny, lightweight camp stove, if possible.

Shelter

If you think you will be traveling for several days or more, learn how to set up a sturdy shelter. You can also bring asmall, lightweight tent in your emergency kit so you can sleep comfortably outdoors.

Security

Lastly, you should be able to defend yourself. You can either learn a martial art or learn how to use a self-defense weapon like a gun or pepper spray.

When SHTF, you might be surrounded by people more desperate than you so you need to be able to fight back if escaping isn’t an option. 5 Ways to increase your chances of survival in a post-EMP world

You don’t have a lot of options if you arestranded far from home after an EMP attack, but it doesn’t mean your situation is entirely hopeless.

Before an EMP event, you should have several options in case the worst happens and you are dozens or hundreds of miles from home.

Head home with your survival gear or whatever you can find

Survival novels often feature determined men who make their way home to their families while traveling hundreds of miles. This option is possible if you are in good physical shape, have no health issues and are lucky.

If you’re lucky, the terrain between you and your family might have several clean bodies of water.

Stay put andkeep your head down

If you have the necessary survival skills and knowledge, set up a wilderness camp and use your skills to live off the land.

How long you survive will depend on how skilled and creative you are.

Stay put and try to join another household or group

If you have many prepping and survival skills like gardening, food preservation or medical training, you can try to join a survival group.

As the infrastructure begins to be rebuilt, you can go back on the road and begin heading home.

Do a bit of both

If possible, keep traveling and try to seek shelter with several families orcommunities. Some people might be willing to accept another survivor if you have useful skills or if they need additional help with physical labor.

Stay put and start a new life

This option may seem pessimistic, but depending on your circumstances, you may have no other choice but to stay where you are and start a new life.

Before SHTF, make plans and prepare your get-home bag with the necessary survival gear. Learn more about your surroundings and look for safer alternate routes to travel, be alert and avoid danger and always have a backup plan in case things don’t go as planned.

With a detailed plan and the right supplies, you can get home safely if you are stranded elsewhere after an EMP attack.

Watch the video below for tips on how to prepare and maintain your get-home bag.

This video is from theSurvival 101 channel on Brighteon.com. More related stories:

Personal safety and survival: 15 Things to do after an EMP attack.

SHTF tips: How to survive an EMP attack that brings down the power grid.

12 Tips to survive an EMP attack.

Sources include:

TheSurvivalMom.com 1

TheSurvivalMom.com 2

OceasOutdoors.com

Brighteon.com
Submit a correction >>

Continue Reading

Entertainment

Trump has ‘obligation’ to sue ‘very dishonest’ BBC

Published

on

By

Trump threatens to sue BBC for bn over speech edit

Donald Trump has said he has an “obligation” to sue the BBC over an edit of a speech he gave before the US Capitol riot in 2021.

The president doubled down on his legal threat to the corporation in a Fox News interview on Tuesday night, as the corporation remains in crisis after the resignation of two of its top figures – including director-general Tim Davie.

“They defrauded the public, and they’ve admitted it,” Mr Trump said.

“And this is within one of our great allies, you know?”

It came after concerns emerged about a Panorama documentary from last year which showed Mr Trump appearing to tell supporters he was going to walk to the Capitol with them to “fight like hell”. There was in fact around an hour in between the two parts of the speech that were spliced together.

He told Fox News the Panorama edit had made a “beautiful” and “very calming speech” sound “radical”, which was “incredible” and “very dishonest”.

Mr Trump had faced charges of trying to overturn the 2020 election in light of the violence that befell the Capitol in January 2021, but those efforts were dropped when he beat Kamala Harris in 2024.

Trump’s three demands

Mr Trump is threatening to sue the BBC for $1bn unless it issues a “full and fair retraction” of the documentary, apologises immediately, and “appropriately” compensates him. It’s been given a deadline of 10pm UK time on Friday.

Read Trump’s legal letter in full

The BBC has come under increasingly heavy fire from its critics in the UK over the Panorama programme. The Conservatives have demanded it apologise to Mr Trump and the public, while Reform has reportedly pulled out of a documentary the corporation was planning about the party.

Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy defended the BBC in the Commons on Tuesday, denying accusations it’s institutionally biased and calling on MPs to “value it, uphold it, and fiercely defend it”.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Nandy’s BBC warning to MPs

She said she has been in “regular contact” with BBC chair Samir Shah, ensuring that where standards were not met, “firm, swift and transparent action follows”.

Ms Nandy said a review of the BBC’s Royal Charter will begin “imminently” and a public consultation will be launched, with more details in the “coming weeks”.

‘We made a mistake – but need to fight,’ says outgoing BBC boss

Her Commons statement came after outgoing director-general Mr Davie said the corporation “made some mistakes that have cost us”, but added he was “proud” and that the organisation needed to “fight” for its journalism.

Mr Davie told staff on a call: “I think we did make a mistake, and there was an editorial breach, and I think some responsibility had to be taken.”

Mr Davie, who has worked for the BBC for 20 years and been in charge for the past five, is not stepping down immediately but hopes a successor will be put in place “over the coming months”.

There are several potential candidates who could replace him. The job effectively serves as both the corporation’s chief executive and its editor-in-chief across television, radio and online.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Inside the BBC staff call

Leak reveals staff anger at Tory-linked board member

In a Q&A with Mr Davie after the all-staff call, staff were frustrated by having their questions vetted, Sky News arts and entertainment correspondent Katie Spencer reported.

Some questions were about the controversial appointment of Sir Robbie Gibb, the former Tory director of communications for prime minister Theresa May, to the BBC board. But when these questions were getting through the vetting process, staff tried to ask questions in the reply boxes, which were public.

Read more:
The man behind the leaked BBC memo
Who is Sir Robbie Gibb and why are there calls to get him off BBC board?

Robbie Gibb, Theresa May's then director of communications, leaves No 10 in 2019. Pic: James Veysey/Shutterstock

File type: JPG
Image:
Robbie Gibb, Theresa May’s then director of communications, leaves No 10 in 2019. Pic: James Veysey/Shutterstock

File type: JPG

The anonymous comments included questions like “How can we claim to be unbiased if Gibb is on the board?” and “Why is Robbie Gibb still on the board?”.

“I find Robbie Gibb’s continued presence at the BBC to be incredibly demoralising. It feels as if he is fighting against and undermining the work we’re trying to do,” another comment read.

The leaders of the Lib Dems and SNP have both called for Sir Robbie’s removal.

But Ms Nandy told the Commons the government is “unable” to remove Sir Robbie, as “the charter sets a strict legal threshold that must be met before dismissal of a board member”.

Continue Reading

Politics

Nationally chartered bank SoFi rolls out crypto trading for US customers

Published

on

By

Nationally chartered bank SoFi rolls out crypto trading for US customers

US bank SoFi Technologies has launched crypto trading services to its customers, as clearer rules have allowed the crypto market to court greater interest from traditional finance.

SoFi said on Tuesday that its crypto service will aim to offer dozens of cryptocurrencies, including Bitcoin (BTC) and Ether (ETH), and started in a phased rollout on Monday, with more customers able to gain access in the coming weeks. 

SoFi CEO Anthony Noto told CNBC’s Squawk Box on Tuesday that his bank is the first and only nationally chartered bank to launch crypto trading to consumers and was spurred to do so after the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) eased its stance on how banks can engage with crypto in March.

“One of the holes we’ve had for the last two years was in cryptocurrency, the ability to buy, sell, and hold crypto. We were not allowed to do that as a bank. It was not permissible,” he said. 

Source: Anthony Noto

SoFi withdrew from the crypto industry in 2023 as a condition of obtaining a bank charter in a stricter regulatory environment. The bank returned to crypto in June, when it rolled out international payment options, allowing conversions from fiat to crypto and transmission via the blockchain. 

Blockchain and crypto a “super cycle technology”

SoFi also plans to introduce SoFi USD, a stablecoin backed dollar-for-dollar by reserves, and integrate crypto into its lending and infrastructure services for borrowing and faster payments.