The
threat posed by an electromagnetic pulse (EMP) was once considered by the
mainstream as simply the stuff of science fiction or lone nut jobs living
in rooms lined with tin foil. But people are now coming to understand that
an EMP — whether from natural causes or a weapon — poses a real threat to
America's electronics and could send the country into a new Dark Age.
Even the
corporate media is on board, as the mainstream mouthpiece USA
Today imagined in a recent article "What a US electric
grid attack looks like." Hint: It would "come from a hostile
power using a nuclear weapon targeting the special vulnerability that comes
with electricity and computerization. The hostile power would not target
cities, as in the past, but instead would detonate a nuclear bomb high in
the atmosphere, creating an electromagnetic pulse (EMP)."
The Hill writes: "US would be wise to
prepare for EMP attacks on its cities." Even the Huffington Post wrote
about "Understanding North Korea's EMP Threat."
The possibility of and EMP has even knocked congress out of its
self-absorbed stupor. The House has decided to reactivate a disbanded
committee that was originally created to devise counter measures against a
possible electromagnetic pulse (EMP) attack by North Korea.
An EMP
could come from the sun as well. Solar flares, or coronal mass ejections,
can disrupt radio waves, GPS coordinates and overload electrical systems. A
large burst of energy could flow into high voltage power grids and
permanently damage transformers. These huge flares have caused blackouts in
the past.
This
just happened in September when two massive solar flares lit up the surface
of the sun. Even though their energy was not directed at the Earth,
according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Space
Weather Prediction Center the flares resulted in radio blackouts.
High-frequency radio experienced a "wide area of blackouts, loss of
contact for up to an hour over [the] sunlit side of Earth," and low
frequency communication, used in navigation, was degraded for an hour.
In 1989,
a relatively low level storm from the sun knocked out power for 6 million
people in eastern Canada and the U.S. for 12 hours. Imagine what a nuke detonated
in the upper atmosphere could do.
There
are reports that Iran and North Korea — which are being goaded into war
footing by neocon warmongers, despite their posing no threat to the U.S.
mainland so far — have nonetheless been working on an EMP weapon that could
be launched from a ship or barge off the American coast.
An EMP
would shut down the nation's power grid, silence communications and render
everything containing electronics — from hand-held games to cell phones to
airliners — inoperable. Water would cease to flow as pumping stations shut
down. Grocery store shelves would be bare within hours. The banking system
would crash. Those in poor health depending upon machines to stay alive
would be dead in minutes.
Within
days the weak and infirm would be dead from dehydration. As the crisis
grew, riots would ensue and people would turn on one another. As an example
for how bad it could get, remember the islands in the Atlantic ocean that
were in the paths of hurricanes Harvey and Irma this past summer.
Some of
those islands have no people living on them anymore, and the ones that do —
even the U.S. protectorate of Puerto Rico, are suffering terribly.
According
to The Heritage Foundation, the U.S. must take steps to:
- Prevent the threat. Regardless of the mitigation
and response measures, a massive EMP impact could have a devastating
impact on the United States. Washington must pursue an aggressive
protect-and-defend strategy, including comprehensive missile defense;
modernizing the U.S. nuclear deterrent; and adopting proactive
nonproliferation and counter-proliferation measures, both unilaterally
and in partnership with allies.
- Provide resilience. Measures must be adopted to
ensure the resilience of the U.S.-Canadian electrical grid and
telecommunications systems, including developing limited redundancy
and identifying means for the timely replacement of essential damaged
parts or their rapid substitution.
- Plan for the unthinkable. The U.S.
must have robust pre-disaster planning — with practical exercises that
include top officials who rehearse a wide variety of contingency
scenarios — that integrates federal, state, local, private-sector,
nongovernmental organizations, and international support.
- Protect the capacity to communicate. The U.S.
must have the means to establish assured emergency broadcast as well
as interactive communications both within the U.S. and across the
globe. An EMP strike can easily obliterate America's electrical,
telecommunications, transportation, financial, food, and water infrastructures,
rendering the United States helpless to coordinate actions and deliver
services essential for daily life.
In the
words of former Arizona Senator Jon Kyl, EMP "is one of only a few
ways that the United States could be defeated by its enemies."
Of all
the things that government is considering, this is one concern that must be
front and center. And expecting that Congress will screw it up — as they do
most everything else — it's something that everyone must prepare for
themselves.
How to
prepare? Consider what life will be like when your electronic conveniences
— and necessities — are no longer available. Then store food, water,
medicines, sundry items, guns and ammunition — and gold and silver for the
barter economy that will develop.
These
are things that we warn about that many of our readers do not take
seriously. But the time to prepare is now. One small example is that I have
repeatedly advised to store food. It is not only basic to life, survival,
and barter, but in time it will be classed as hoarding and will be a
criminal act if caught.
I will share with you the following list of items that I have in my food
storage: Salt, water in gallon jugs, Clorox and Lugols iodine for
disinfecting and purifying water (six drops per gallon of water), brown and
white sugar, dry beans and pastas of all kinds, chili, mayonnaise, coffee,
sardines, tea, olive oil, rice, baked beans and pork and beans, cereal,
canned soups, kraut, salmon, canned white tuna in water, food bars, a few
frozen dinners, olives, pickles and treats (chose those you like), minimum
amount of cake mix, flour, cornmeal, seasonings for cooking, dried and
canned milk, all paper products, cleaning products, basic patent medicines
such as cough medicine, cough drops, Tylenol, eye drops.
One of the best foods to store is vacuum sealed dry foods of all kinds.
These will last for years and years.
If you can't imagine being hungry in the midst of chaos then you will
probably ignore this suggestion and others I make regarding true health and
wealth, but you won't forget them. And they will haunt you if you fail to
take action.
But if you envision our possible futures, you will
survive and prosper in the years ahead. Remember, my advice is to
always prepare sooner rather than later. I will keep talking to you about
the need for all types of preparedness in future Alerts.
But in case you missed it, follow this link for a complete
survival guide.
Yours for the truth,
Bob Livingston
Editor, The Bob Livingston Letter™
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