Bruce Beach Nuclear Survival Resources | ||
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The project has not been favorably received by the local and provincial governments. By 1990, when I stopped counting, it had been subject to over 30 court and commission appearances and the number has greatly increased in the last few years. Legal costs have mounted to hundreds of thousands of dollars. In 1999 there was a raid without warrants involving 7 police vehicles, 4 fire units and over 40 personnel and a K-9 unit, coincidentally caught on video tape by the CBC. Subsequently we were hounded with repeated government inspections. Some of the inspectors candidly admitted to us that we were simply being harassed, but because of wanting to keep their jobs they of course were not going to put that into writing. It is for this reason that I sometimes refer to the facility as Waco North. A kinder, gentler Canadian version in that I don't have any weapons and that so far they haven't shot me.
The general public views the project as being operated by an eccentric (in the most favorable terms) and by a nut-case in what is the more usual expressed attitude. For the forty years in which I have built over two dozen shelters and have consulted on many dozens of others, the general ridicule has been extensive, to say the least. "Why do it then?", I have often been asked. Why not get a life, enjoy life and quit worrying about doomsday? The answer is that I don't see the purpose of life, nor happiness in life measured in how many rounds of golf I might play, but rather in service to my fellow man. This appears to me to be the service to which I have been called.
It is my hope that the programs described below will save tens of thousands of lives and will be useful in restoring society and making people's lives better after the nuclear holocaust.
He also provides FREE consultation on shelter building.
In the process of trying to educate the public he has appeared on dozens of TV programs, dozens of radio shows, and has been written about in a great many magazine and newspaper articles. Many millions of persons have heard about his efforts. You can look at the survival link page for links to still other information that he provides on this subject.
The Ark Two Community has a librarian who has done a magnificient job of compiling on CD ROM, Microfilm, and in other media, thousands of volumes of practical and semi-technical descriptions of technology that we hope will be useful after a nuclear holocaust. We hope to be able to widely disseminate this information after the holocaust.
We have also assembled survival guidance material to handout at the door of the shelter to people that we have insufficient room in the shelter to accomodate.
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The plan is to train Radiological Instructors while in the shelter so that they can go out afterwards and train monitoring teams. Equipment has also been stockpiled for these teams.
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For those persons interested in making provision for their own families we recommend their contacting KI4U.
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Among our shelter supplies we are storing multiple copies of proven plans for converting tractors to operate on wood combustion. With practically no farm horses or horse drawn implements remaining, and with there probably being low availability of petroleum fuels, knowledge of these and similar techniques could be very valuable. The plan would be to train mechanics locally who would then be dispersed to other agricultural locales to supervise local mechanics in the procedures.
We have also prepared a dozen radiological testing kits, for testing for radiation in food and water. We plan to send these to centralized locations, perhaps in each of the Canadian Provinces. Today it would cost over $5,000 each to replace these and in the future they may invaluable.
We have also made a point of storing seeds for our own facility, in sufficient quantity to supply a sizable community around us.
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Our plan is after the holocaust to first establish a demonstration system and then train individuals in how to go to other communities and show them how to replicate it. As the local systems progress we would like to then facilitate exchange between them.
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It is our hope that after a nuclear holocaust we will be able to replace the current maps with maps showing the actual locations of destruction, information about the extensiveness of the destruction, and the pathways around those areas, as the pathways are developed. We would also hope to include information about surviving resources in the areas.
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The idea would be to gather information by short-wave and other means and to then broadcast on a band that could be received by AM receivers in automobiles. Specific broadcast times would be established for times relevant to specific localities.
The content would consist of news, shared recovery experience and expertise, agricultural and medical advice, and survivor lists for various locales at specified times. To what degree we will be able to implement this plan will have to be determined at the time. In the meantime we have upgraded the generator for the transmitter and are making additional steps to continue this program.
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It was found that after the limited atomic blasts in Japan that families that were separated at the time of the blasts often had to go in different directions, and having no central known point to return to, often never found each other again, although there were occasionally happy reunifications decades later.
Using the maps, information gathering systems, and the facilities described under other topics, it is our hope to facilitate family finding. At the time of this writing we are relocating our web pages closer to the Internet Backbone (3 hops from the US Backbone whereas we were originally 14 hops) and on a fibre optic network with an ISP that has our own survival philosophy. The Internet was originally designed for nuclear survivability and depending upon how well it fulfills that purpose, or how rapidly it can be restored, then we hope to provide an information network where survivors can register for each of their localities, and seekers will be able to systematically look for family members.
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Bruce Beach Nuclear Survival Resources | ||
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