Protect your access to resources

Globally, an increasing number of People are experiencing challenges to access resources. Resources such as water, food, energy, goods and services. We are talking about basic daily resources that you need to live.

It’s an issue and it is important that we, People, collectively identify and put in place solutions. If we wait for the very People who put us in trouble to come to save us, it is likely that we will end up being enslaved. Below, we will explain to you how you end up being enslaved.

Normal times

In normal times, most of the People can access resources on a daily basis, be it food, water, energy, goods and services. A part of the People on Earth struggles to do this but most don’t. It’s important to state clearly what is expected on a daily basis for most of us.

We normally can access resources such as water, food, energy, goods and services because the system supplies them. People produce food. People produce energy. People manage water supplies. People run shops. People power our collective access to resources. People are also helped by systems to do so (transportation, technology, …).

A concerning situation

A growing number of us encounter issues or experience growing concerns regarding access to resources. For a growing part of People it is now a challenge to access water and food on a daily basis. For a growing number of People there are concerns of affordability and access to energy resources such as oil, gas, electricity. For a growing number of People their access to some goods and services is either delayed or is no longer possible.

It matters to acknowledge what we are currently experiencing. Denying facts would be counterproductive. It matters to recognize that we, People, are facing issues. It’s not just you alone, your family, it’s a large number of People on Earth who are going through similar challenges although we live in different contexts.

The trend is also going towards less supply available, be it food, water, energy, goods and services. There are a number of factors contributing to this and we will cover that towards the bottom of the page. First, we will focus on ideas to resolve these issues.

Self assessment

People are in different situations but we can sum-up most situations across two axes: one is your independence level on the system for water, food and energy and the other axis is your integration level with other People. Looking at the below graph please try to define where you would locate yourself.

Are you feeling alone and you produce your own resources or are you part of a group and have no resources?

Visually seeing where you are now will help you to define where you want to position yourself and how you can get there.

How can you protect your access to resources?

First thing is to realize that there are different levels of dependence on the current system:

  1. You have nothing and you are fully dependent on the system.

    An example would be someone who does not stock water or food at any place and depends on an external service (be it a social service or a restaurant) for access to food and water.

  2. You have a stock of resources at a place.

    An example would be that you store water, food and a number of products at home. You are still dependent on the system to replenish your stock but if shortages happen you may be able to last a few weeks or longer.

  3. You are able to produce your own resources. You are not dependent on the system. START THINKING “WE”.

    An example would be that your property has a garden and you can grow your own food. You also collect rain water and process it so that you can drink it. You also live in a windy area and have installed a small wind turbine to power the minimum set of electric devices you need in your home.

    We mention STARTING THINKING “WE” and we will explain below what it means.

  4. You are able to produce resources for yourself but also for People around you.

    An example would be that you have a small farm and produce enough food (vegetables, eggs, milk for example) to meet the needs of your family but also supply neighbors with some of their needs for food. Another example would be that you have a large solar installation and your surplus of energy can be shared across neighbors.

  5. We are able to produce resources for our network (whether it is a few families together or a whole village).

    An example would be that you collectively manage a field with crops and are sharing the food produced. Another example would be that the village is crossed by a river and you decide to collectively operate a turbine that generates electricity.

    Let’s go through the 5 situations above because it is all about actionability. How can you move from your current situation to a better situation for yourself and the People around you?

  1. I have nothing and I am fully dependent on the system

This is a reality for a large part of the People on Earth. Be careful, this is valid for wealthy People as well as extremely poor People. Do not think that it is only the situation of extremely poor People. A wealthy person may work and live in a megapole like Tokyo, only eat at the restaurant every day because s/he has no time / no skills to cook and may not have any stock of food or even water at home. S/he may fully depend on water and electricity provided by the system because s/he lives in a high rise building. Thousands of kilometers away, in Rwanda, a family may have no access to food and water because the country is artificially maintained in a state of under development.

If you do not have a stock of resources for at least a week, you are at risk of finding yourself in a situation where you have no food, no energy and potentially no water. This is what happened (and is still happening) to millions of Chinese People in mainland China. Your survival is at risk but many of you do not perceive this risk because you are used to accessing resources in an easy manner on a daily basis so you just cannot imagine not having access to resources. It's normal thinking.

This is what you want to avoid:

  • Living in a high rise building. High rise buildings are often located in megapolis. We are talking about buildings of 5 up to 60 or more levels. Examples include Shanghai, Shenzhen, Hong Kong, Tokyo, Dubai, Paris. … .Sometimes these high rise buildings are concentrated in suburban areas. Megapoles are extremely dependent on supply chains. They are by design failure points (whether the failure is an accident or intentionally triggered). High rise buildings almost always have one single entry and exit for People. They are also increasingly gated by digital systems where you need to present a card to open the door. In Asia, you often find a security agent at the entry of these high rise buildings. In the current context where a relatively small number of People seek centralization we would not advise to live in a high rise building.

  • Being in a megapole inside a country where your government does not help you but seems to enforce tight control policies. If your government follows the practice of lockdown or, even worse, of a Covid 0 policy then you should be concerned and you should not live in a megapole. You may want to sell your flat and move outside of the megapole or elsewhere. Another option would be for you to move to another place at short notice but this is often not possible as you do not have enough time to get out. We understand that it means that you may have to find another job elsewhere.

  • Not having a stock of resources for at least a week. We are talking about water, food, and basic medical care. If you are in this situation and especially if you live in a high rise building you want to have a stock of food, water and basic medical care for at least a week. If you factor in that lockdowns can last for weeks in a row, this is the bare minimum you want, especially if your government has put in place laws that are preventing you from getting out of your own flat or building. Additionally, you should have a basic solar kit that enables you to charge your mobile phone, talkie walkie or CB radio.

  • If you are living in a poor country and have nothing, meaning that most of your daily activities are to find some water and food then you should not be alone. You want to surround yourself with a group of People who do the same thing. The idea is that your chance of getting access to food and water are higher if you are part of a small network of People who seek the same outcome. You do not want to be part of a network that is too large unless this network is very well organized and members of this network trust each other.

    To sum up, avoid living in a megapole, in a high rise building, not having resources for at least a week and being alone. If you tick several of these boxes, start taking action or ask People around you for help.

2. You have a stock of resources at a place.

Ideally, you want enough resources to last for at least 3 months. This means water, food, basic medical care and potentially some gas. In the current context, no matter the source of the issue, we tend to observe rough situations stretching over several weeks up to multiple months (China, Ukraine, Sri Lanka, Haiti, Liban, …).

In this context, if you cannot move to another area or you are not force to, you need to have sufficient resources to live.

Advices:

  • Should you have this stock of resources at the place where you live or at another place where you can go?

    If you are confident that you can reach this other place in case of an issue then you may want to store most of your resources there. Most People only have one place but they often can access other places like the place of other family members or relatives.

  • Store resources in a rather cool and dry place. You want to avoid that these resources turn bad.

  • You can last weeks with very limited food but days without water.

  • Vary the type of resource you store

    • Water

    • Pasta

    • Rice

    • Grains

    • Can food

    • Preserved food (vegetable, fruits, herbs)

    • Milk

  • Regularly replenish your stock. Do not wait for the expiry date to come. You will consume this stock and constantly replenish it (every 3 months for instance). Use bright color labels to write down the expiry date on the product (simply write the year and the month such as 24 7 for July 2024). Make it highly visible so that you know right away what should be consumed first.

  • Talk to your neighbor about what you do. You want them to adopt a similar mindset. If you are the only one with resources on the floor, they will come knocking at your door. If all of you have planned in advance then you are in a much better position and can potentially exchange food. This means diversity. This means collaboration. A note that you do not need to sell them on the root cause of the issue (government orchestrating shortages). They will realize the root cause as you guys create better relationships between each other.

3. You are able to produce your own resources. You are not dependent on the system.

Elements of your context that impact your ability to reach this level

  • Where do you live? A flat in a high rise building of a highly dense megapole or a house in the countryside.

  • What is the climate? Hot and humid or temperate.

  • Are there structural risks where you live? Typhoon, earthquake, …

Some contexts make it easier to reach the level where you can produce your own resources. This is the reason why you may want or have to modify your context to be able to reach higher levels.

From the moment you reach this level, here are questions that matter:

  • How much resources can you generate?

  • When can you generate these resources?

  • Do you have a back-up plan?

  • Are you in a context where People around you are also able to produce their own resources?

  • Are you at risk of being impacted by regulations?

START THINKING “WE”

A large part of us are in a system that has taught us to think from an individual perspective and thus it is logical that when we think about solutions to a problem we encounter we usually think about the solution from an individual perspective and do not think of approaching the solution from a group or community or network perspective. We are not saying this is the behavior of all People. There are People who are part of groups / communities / networks and it is natural for them to think about solutions from a non individualistic perspective.

If you are used to thinking from an individualistic perspective it may be time to pause and realize the value of working as a group. It’s more efficient, it’s safer, it’s more fun. It provides you with greater leverage versus the system. You may be uncomfortable at first but it will benefit you quickly.

Imagine there are 5 neighbors and each one of them is working hard to produce his/her own resources: water, food, energy, … . So each of them will make use of time, money and effort to produce these resources. How efficient is this! We end up with 5 water storage facilities for instance where only 2 may be enough. We end up with 5 vegetable gardens where 2.5 could be enough to feed 5 neighbors. The key point here is realizing that we, People, are in a similar situation. We are experiencing issues or perceive a risk of a lack of resources. Consequently, why don’t we define a strategy together? Yes, this requires trust. We suggest you get started, to agree on ground rules and to see how People behave. Do not wait until the problems occur to get started on this. Put this in place now so that when the problem occurs risk is limited.

4. You are able to produce resources for yourself but also for People around you.

From the moment you produce surpluses you do have options:

  • You can supply People around you who need it (for free or at a fee)

  • You can store this surplus (preserve it for instance)

5. We are able to produce resources for our network (whether it is a few families together or a whole village).

This is the level where you think in terms of group.your group can be located in a larger network made of communities and groups. The idea is that some of you are specialized in producing these resources but all of you are involved because these resources are vital.

Key ideas:

  • Keep things local. Do not try to fall back into the problem of the current system: centralized production for millions of People. Once you lose any ability to have a say in how things work then it is finished. The person or group of people that control, own, manage the central point of production has leverage over you.

  • It means that group size remains relatively small. A few dozen People. You do not want to put in place groups of thousands of People. It does not work because you will end up rebuilding a hierarchy. You want to prevent a hierarchy from emerging.

Why is this happening?

There are 2 fundamentally different perspectives.

  1. The first is the perspective that Globalists want you to have. They want you to think that resource shortages are due to Russia, to difficulties to operate supply chains in the context of the pandemic.

  2. The second perspective is the reality. What is actually happening on the ground based on facts. This perspective is harder to access because some People have no interest in it. Shortages are orchestrated for specific reasons. The goal is that you be fully dependent on the new system that they want to implement across Western nations. A system that already exists in China and that is named “social credit”. Although the term social could get you to think that the system will be fair, it has little to do with fairness. The system will be more about slavery and you being obliged to follow any mandated law (no matter what is being asked).

    Shortages are part of a larger strategy to reduce the leverage of the People. If you create enough issues in the economy then your situation will degrade and at some point you will need the help of the government. The government, who orchestrates the issues, will be happy to present you with the digital ID and the social credit solution. You will no longer access your bank account (most of you will already be negative anyway) but the counterparty is that you will be given a monthly credit (you can see this as digital euros for instance) that will allow you to access specific goods and services only. As this is digital, your government will be able to control everything: how many points you have, how you can use them (which goods and services), where you can spend them and by which date you have to use them. It’s like a game. The issue is that you manage nothing. Everything is dictated to you. You can think that if you are a good citizen, you will have privilege. At the end of the day, you are still a slave.

The theater play vs the reality

Theater play:

  • There is no inflation.

  • The inflation is limited. CPI indexes only increase by 5 or 10%.

  • The conflict with Russia is the cause of resource shortages.

  • The virus Covid-19 has disrupted global supply chains.

  • We are trying our best.

The reality:

  • Food processing plants across the world were purposely set on fire to impact food production and thus supply of food.

    What is the probability that numerous food processing plants across the world catch fire in the same year? Near zero unless this is a strategy.

  • Supply chains purposely slowed down or blocked. There are multiple reports by logistics staff of resources being stored in facilities and not being distributed (you can find these videos online).

  • Some of the largest food manufacturers are part of the Great Reset. Their CEOs sit on the board of trustees of the World Economic Forum. It means that they follow the strategy.

The big picture

The big picture is that resource constraints are a strategy. This strategy is not something new. It is regularly used as a strategy to force someone or a group of People, sometimes even a whole country, to do certain actions. This has been the case with 9/11, with famines, with Covid-19. It’s an evil but excellent strategy. Many People cannot process this because it sounds too evil for them or simply because they do not want to know about the reality. As long as you aren’t impacted, life’s good, right?

The strategy consists of putting in place a constraint, introduced as a problem and then you (or People part of your network) introduce the solution. Why do you think the International Monetary Fund or the World Bank, private institutions, rush to offer credit lines to countries who are in trouble? How do you think these countries ended up in trouble in the first place? Why do you think Africa does not develop? Why do you think a global vaccination campaign started right after a virus appeared?

The key point here is that the mindset of the People throwing issues and troubles at you is a control mindset. They think in terms of control and you need to think in terms of empowerment, in terms of independence in a centralized system if you want to live free.

Coaching services

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How did you prepare for food & water shortage? We would love to hear about your unique perspective.