Friday, 11 December 2015

By on December 11th, 2015 in weekly prepping

08:06 – It’s been a while since my last weekly prepping post. That’s not because we haven’t been doing anything all that time. It’s because that’s all we’ve been doing, preparing to relocate and relocating.

We’ll still be making a bunch of trips down to Winston-Salem to haul up stuff that the movers didn’t move for us and to get the old house ready to go on the market next spring, but at this point we’re officially relocated to a small town in the Blue Ridge Mountains.

We’re in reasonably good shape in terms of food for Barbara, Colin, and me: something like 18 months’ worth. I’ll expand that gradually by adding bulk staples–flour, sugar, salt, oil, etc.–to give us enough to feed family and friends as well. We’ll package that stuff ourselves in gallon foil-laminate Mylar bags. At five to seven pounds per bag, I have enough 7-mil bags and oxygen absorbers on hand to pack about three quarters of a ton of dry staples.

Here’s what I did to prep this week:

  • We relocated from Winston-Salem, NC (population about 250,000) to Sparta, NC (population about 2,000).
  • We bought a wood stove and had it installed as a backup to our heat pump. We’ll get some fresh wood delivered as soon as I have time to get one of those steel tubing firewood racks installed under the deck, but in the interim we do have a cord or so of wood sitting in a pile along the back fence. It’s damp and rotting, but it’ll burn in an emergency.

So, what precisely did you do to prepare this week? Tell me about it in the comments.


46 Comments and discussion on "Friday, 11 December 2015"

  1. nick says:

    This week my big prep was working. I have a project which will finish before Christmas, and two smaller ones lined up for after. Having cash on hand and your financial house in order is a massive prep, and one I’ve been drawing down in the last couple of months. These projects should get me caught up.

    Working for others puts a real crimp in my routine. I have gotten very used to having a lot of time during the day. Sure it is quickly filled with shopping, my weekly ‘foraging’ trips to thrift stores, pawn shops, etc, housework, maintenance, and normal chores, but alot of that had prepping aspects. Having to be somewhere and do something specific for hours a day really limits those other activities. I feel for those of you who are prepping around a full time job.

    Today, I’ll be spending the morning and probably a bunch more time, sourcing and replacing my furnace blower motor. Gave up the ghost after only 7 years. The cheap, aftermarket replacement motors do not have the life of the OEM ones. The “sealed lifetime bearings” last for their lifetime, measured in years, not YOUR lifetime. 🙂 Doing it myself will save hundreds of dollars, but it does take time. Since I’d have to be here anyway for the tech to work, I’d be spending time and not saving anything…

    Naturally, it’s unseasonably warm and damp yesterday and today.

    I did find a couple of things this week. At a machinist’s yard sale I got an old tube ham radio transmitter, 50 feet of new very nice coax for the antenna, and a bunch of bits and pieces for my mini machine shop. I’ll sell the radio rather than rehab it. I don’t need any more projects. The coax and tools will be put to use.

    I already shared results of the sale with the storage food.

    So not much got done, and with family in town, the approaching holidays, and paying work, not much is going to get done either. It might be a good idea to just acknowledge that, take a mini break, and get back to it with the new year.

    nick

  2. JimL says:

    RE: Motors. I have the motor from an old washing machine blowing in my furnace. My grandfather put it in 20 years ago. I have 2 more sitting on a shelf, just in case. I plug them in on occasion to make sure they turn. (They do). 2 years ago it started to make a horrible racket. The belt started to separate and was wiggling. The hardest part was measuring the belt correctly for the replacement.

  3. Roy Harvey says:

    …one of those steel tubing firewood racks installed under the deck…

    But not up against the house. Wouldn’t want things migrating from the woodpile…

  4. Roy Harvey says:

    If you are looking to buy the Good Stuff, look for an electric motor that is both Capacitor Start and Capacitor Run. The increase in efficiency for a motor running for long periods (as a blower motor will) will pay off on the electric bill. Or so my engineer brother told me years ago. From looking at them over the years it appears that if there is one long lump on the case it is capacitor start, two long lumps is capacitor run.

  5. nick says:

    Yeah, I’m gonna have to hit the brick and mortar stores to find a replacement. Even though they are pretty standardized, Grainger is showing SIX days to get one in the store.

    They don’t fail often enough to have one here, but it might be worth thinking about getting one for your ac condenser and your blower, if you were worried about that sort of thing.

    nick

  6. JimL says:

    Capacitor Run – does that mean what it sounds like? Is the line charging the capacitor, and the capacitor provides power to the motor?

  7. Roy Harvey says:

    My (weak and grossly oversimplified if correct at all) understanding of Capacitor Run…

    Windings must be energized to run the motor. AC can do it without a capacitor, but AC has a lot of ups and downs and the motor has varying demands over the rotation cycle. The capacitor stores energy when there is excess and supplies it when there is a shortage, smoothing things out a bit.

    Capacitor Start is most important when a motor is on/off a lot as it helps with the start cycle.

  8. DadCooks says:

    Please be patient with me, the discussion about motors shook a few memories out of my cobweb plugged mind.

    Here is another simple capacitor run analogy to go along with @Roy’s: Think of the run capacitor as a surge tank in a water system that keeps the water pressure and flow constant, the run capacitor is doing the same thing with the electrons delivering the necessary voltage and current to keep the motor running at a constant speed.

    The instructors that I had in both Navy Basic Electricity & Electronics and Navy Nuclear Power School liked to use water analogies when explaining electrical theory and practice.

  9. JimL says:

    Thanks to both of you. That helps a lot.

    I’ll have to check out the motors I have just to satisfy my current curiosity.

  10. OFD says:

    Prepping this week, sort of: replaced the glass on the wood stove door, which wasn’t too bad until I tried to hang the door back on the hinges, a major PITA; next time I’ll try it without taking the door off. Been stacking firewood every day for as long as I can, which isn’t that long anymore, but unlike IT drone work, you can see that you’ve accomplished something and you’ll be toasty warm later because of it while Siberian winds howl outside and the snow blows sideways. Moving the outside/yard tools like mowers, weed whackers, and suchlike under the back porch and under tarps, until such time as we can acquire and assemble a shed for the purpose. Chopped away brush on the rear perimeter pending installation of a five-foot wire fence across it, plus trip wires and flares, maybe a few mines. Examined possible sites for ham and shortwave radio antenna installations; not looking forward to climbing up on the roof and securing a Yagi and/or dipole to the chimney and also wondering if the winds we get here will blow it into downtown three miles up the road.

    Downloaded a bunch of Army FM’s to the Kindle Fire; continued with online course studies in Linux, networks, ham radio licenses, and firearms. Decided on priority work I can get done here this winter, while those Siberian winds are tearing up the landscape, mainly the final organization of the cellar for storage and FINALLY getting my attic workshop together, which will include kidnapping an electrician at some point for various to-do things plus hooking up the attic to a couple of outlets.

    Like Mr. nick, the holiday season is kinda tough for getting much done like this, esp. with our usual seemingly sudden shortage of funds due to paying overdue bills and taxes with the last checks we got.

    And “I feel for those of you who are prepping around a full time job.”

    Yeah, but I’d really rather have that full-time job about now; to that end I did due diligence again and applied for a couple more up here, including yet another one, probably the fifth or sixth, for a position as a contractor back where I was before at IBM. For some reason I can’t seem to get back in there despite sporadic openings. I have about a dozen resumes and applications out there now from the past few months and ZERO response regarding any of them. But I also applied for SS and am in the process of sending in the VA disability paperwork but guess what, ZERO response so far from the American Legion service officer who needs to look at it, despite multiple phone calls and mss left for him and his posted Legion email doesn’t work. Might cause an old veteran type to become cynical or something….

    It sucks on one hand because I easily have another ten or fifteen years of productive work life and can’t get hired anymore apparently; on the other hand it gives me time during the day, interestingly and easily forty hours or more per week, doing stuff to prep here at the house and recons of the AO, which I’ve stepped up. So that’s another useful prep; know your neighbors and your AO. Ascertain road and bridge choke points. Where are the LE and mil-spec sites? Airport runways? Railroad tracks? Power lines and substations? Who owns that vast tract of farmland up the road? Or the vast tract of forest up on the ridge? Streams, rivers, ponds, potable water? Where does your firewood come from? Your oil and propane? Are more houses going up for sale? Businesses downtown failing? Seeing more undesirable types be-bopping through yer ‘hood? Etc. AO intel.

    Windy as hell again so I’ll do what I can outside and then get cracking on the installation of our new Brother printer and organizing this office, doing the laundry, making dinner, etc. Mrs. OFD should be home tonight but then has to leave again Sunday for the great state of Georgia. She had fun her last trip down there visiting Flannery O’Connor’s hometown and museum and loves southern folks, not necessarily the redneck rebel devils portrayed for two centuries by our northern media.

  11. MrAtoz says:

    Prepping:

    I am so relieved. The UN Climate Ejaculation meeting in Paris has declared “this is it.” If we don’t do something *now* the world will end. Unless all guns are collected world wide, we are doomed by Climate Ejaculation. That will never happen, so IT IS OVER! I can now die peacefully and quickly in our new condo. Why prep, the UN has declared IT IS OVER. Ah, I sleep deeply tonight. Perhaps not even waking up because IT IS OVER. Thank you, UN, for giving me peace of mind. I love you. That is all.

  12. OFD says:

    Sarcasm regarding the Greatest Crisis = micro-aggression. Hater.

    Oh, and…check yer privilege.

    I’m filing a Crybully Suit now: MrAtoz said nasty sarcastic things and I didn’t get a trigger warning; I’m a precious little snowflake that needs a safe space and a hug from a differently abled transgendered person….

  13. Lynn says:

    “200 Petabytes of Customer Data and Counting”
    https://www.backblaze.com/blog/200-petabytes-of-customer-data-and-counting/

    Amazing!

  14. Jenny says:

    No prepping this week. Playing catch up for being gone two weeks.

    Dad enters a hospice home on Monday, and mom has someone home with her thru the end of the year.

    Neither of them are cooperating with their various doctors. I half expect them to die sooner rather than later and within weeks of each other. I think we’ve got everything managed as well as the pair of stubborn cantankerous old goats will permit at this point.

    My daughter blurted out in front of dad on th day of our departure that he was going to die when we left. Mouth of babes. He didn’t verbally comment on her declaration but his body language showed his lack of appreciation for her frank speech.

    Took adult dogs in for their dentals this morning. Met with a new doctor for myself this week to see if we can nail down what’s going on with my body – it’s been over a year since my highway crash and I’ve still got virtually no energy and all kinds of other whacky stuff. Still bitter over failing my Oracle renewal exam. Concussions suck. Try again next year and see if my memory cooperates a bit more.

    Being in Northern California drove home how much modern society depends on our ability to manipulate our environment. California’s drought would be devastating to attempts to live off the land. Alaska winters would (and have) cheerfully snuff you out for the least mistake. Not to mention the difficulty of sufficient food production.

    Our governor unveiled his new economic plan. Haven’t finished reviewing it but what I see is business as usual by plundering the PFD. Won’t take many years before they tap the capital and it’ll be gone in a heart beat.

    B*sturds.

    Still – great to be home and there were plenty of good things about the trip. Will pick up on prepping again after Christmas is done.

  15. Lynn says:

    I plan to restore our water storage back up to 60 cases tomorrow and add more canned food. I would go up to 100 cases of water if I had the room and if the wife would not blow her stack.

    We are continually pulling water and food from our storage to drink and eat. Store what you eat and eat what you store.

  16. Lynn says:

    BTW, Christmas is in two weeks!

  17. MrAtoz says:

    Michele Malkin has an article on immigration that might be worth your time reading:

    In a 1790 House debate on naturalization, James Madison opined: “It is no doubt very desirable that we should hold out as many inducements as possible for the worthy part of mankind to come and settle amongst us, and throw their fortunes into a common lot with ours. But why is this desirable?”

    No, not because “diversity” is our greatest value. No, not because Big Business needed cheap labor. And no, Madison asserted, “Not merely to swell the catalogue of people. No, sir, it is to increase the wealth and strength of the community; and those who acquire the rights of citizenship, without adding to the strength or wealth of the community are not the people we are in want of.”

  18. nick says:

    @JimL,

    The analogy of a water pressure reserve is a good one for why you might have a capacitor in a circuit. It supplies a bit of power when more is required than supplied and smooths out the supply.

    HOWEVER

    In a capacitor run motor, the capacitor exists to change the phase relationship between 2 different sets of windings in the motor. Basically the supply voltage is split, one path directly to the motor winding A, and the other passes thru the capacitor to motor winding B. As the supply charges the cap, it takes a bit of time. That makes for a time difference between the peaks of the sine waves of the 2 supplies, and thus the motor coils, which timing difference lets the motor rotate. In other words coil A starts generating a magnetic field and pulling the rotor around, then coil B starts, as A is fading, then A starts as B fades, etc, and that makes it turn.

    It’s just one of several ways to make an AC motor work off single phase service.

    This is different from a starting cap, which provides that phase delay only until the motor spins up to speed.

    Another use for a capacitor bank, typically a big box, is to adjust phase on a service that has inductive loads, which screw up the relationship between phase and current and can cause problems in a commercial or industrial setting. IIRC, when screwed up, the currents don’t cancel out in the neutral, and you can have very high currents on the neutral which it usually isn’t sized for.

    All this is from memory, so there may be some details that are lacking correctness….

    nick

  19. nick says:

    Oh, in any case, doing it myself took a couple hours, driving to the store, and messing around in a hot attic, and $91. Last time it was replaced my wife called a service tech and the bill was $480.

    Trading time for money…..

    nick

  20. nick says:

    Gun up folks, and keep your eyes peeled.

    MISSOURI ON ALERT: 4 Bulk Cell Phone Purchases – Now Dozens of Propane Tanks Stolen in KC

    http://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2015/12/missouri-on-alert-4-bulk-cell-phone-purchases-now-dozens-of-propane-tanks-stolen-in-kc/

    They got the spark, and they got the bang.

    nick

  21. OFD says:

    Very nice. We’ll be seeing more of this kind of thing from now on. I also just read yet another article, in our local rag, of all places, about remote power substations and utility lines being cut or transformers blown away with high-power rifles. It ain’t the local yokel teenagers doing this with BB guns and throwing beer cans around. Someone has to get through chain-link topped by barbed wire, alarms, and security cameras; no one’s been caught yet and no one shows up on the camera film. Usually in quite remote locations, too, so they have all the time in the world, apparently. “Authorities” theorize that the perps are running test scenarios to gauge the response, if any, and the potential effects, before ramping up and shutting down a bunch of Grid sections simultaneously.

    Now picture this: utility crews respond and rush out immediately, and on arrival are met by booby traps and sniper fire, at multiple locations that have shut down. Troops are dispatched and while that’s going, and they’re tied up, other parties light off various devices in still other areas, all at the same time. Where emergency services now have to respond in the dark, with commo gone except for battery- and generator-powered gear.

    None of this is advanced mil-spec rocket science; a dozen teams of platoon-size could wreak utter havoc and make the Boston Marathon cop shutdown look like a day at the beach.

    So then I see Chumpster wants to shut down parts or some of the Internet to defend against terrorism and so forth; has this bozo thought this through at all? Does he have any knowledgeable staff who could have vetted this nonsense for him? Sure, go ahead, Donny, shut down the friggin’ net and watch what happens.

  22. nick says:

    Add a crow bar, a curve in the tracks, and a 100 car tr ain of hazmat….

    nick

  23. Lynn says:

    Now picture this: utility crews respond and rush out immediately, and on arrival are met by booby traps and sniper fire, at multiple locations that have shut down.

    Sounds like Detroit. “DTE utility crew robbed at gunpoint while restoring power Saturday in Detroit”
    http://www.fox2detroit.com/news/132329-story
    “DTE Energy worker shot while on job in Detroit”
    http://www.mlive.com/news/detroit/index.ssf/2015/08/dte_energy_worker_shot_while_o.html

    Note that this is not the same incident or date. There are many other incidents.

  24. OFD says:

    “Add a crow bar, a curve in the tracks, and a 100 car tr ain of hazmat….”

    Exactly. Low-tech terror for poor people. Something like the above combos and variations thereof would pretty much put the country at a standstill, while foreign mischief continues apace and certain bad actors may view our travails as an ideal time to kick us while we’re otherwise occupied but not yet down.

    Hey, the Frenchies have this:

    http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/E/EU_FRANCE_THE_OTHER_LE_PEN?SITE=AP&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2015-12-11-10-09-27

    And we get the Halloween mask that’s at the top of Drudge’s page right now.

    We’re being punished for our sins, no other explanation will suffice, lol.

  25. MrAtoz says:

    So then I see Chumpster wants to shut down parts or some of the Internet

    Please address The Might Trump ™ as “Master and Commander” in the future, sir.*

    *You deserve to be addressed as “sir” for insulting my God.

    Trump 2016 “I am omnipotent, address me as God”

  26. MrAtoz says:

    You’ve probably read about the two “missing” Afgan AF crimmigrants in Georgia. The DHS is hot on their trail. Why no “shoot on sight” order is my question.

  27. OFD says:

    Oh man, what an insult! To be called “sir.” Wow. Low blow, man, low blow.

    Your Master and Commander could be a pretty funny guy once he somehow stays the course, beats Cankles, and gets into the WH. Depending on what the rulers order him to do and what they allow him to do, while not forgetting the worthless Congress. Shut down the net, load musloids and Hispanics into boxcars, make friends with Prince Vlad and the Russians, build a giant wall along the Mexican border, and otherwise have outrageous parties at the WH like it was 1999!

    But somehow I don’t think this will be allowed to happen.

    Hope you got a Plan B.

    “Why no “shoot on sight” order is my question.”

    Yeah, I saw that; I have the same question. Imminent threat to USAF resources, would be my excuse, and put it on rock-an’-roll, baby!

  28. MrAtoz says:

    Now, this is my kind of woman:

    A female corrections officer subsequently “removed a wad of cash and drugs from inside” Sperry. The haul included six $100 bills, three $50 bills, and seven $20 bills, all of which were counterfeit. The $890 in funny money, however, was supplemented by a genuine $10 bill that “was discovered in Sperry’s anus.”

  29. Lynn says:

    Somebody in Texas now has a new H&K UMP .45 submachine gun to rock and roll with, “Arsenal of guns now on the streets after being stolen from Waller County Sheriff”:
    http://www.fox26houston.com/news/56312751-story

    Stolen right out of the local Sheriff’s patrol SUV while he was partying inside the Saltgrass Steakhouse. Along with two other rifles and five handguns. And his police windbreaker. The gun thief also got another police officer’s gun out of another cruiser.

    Somebody gonna go visit somebody this weekend.

    BTW, I want one of those H and K UMP .45 submachine guns. Now.

  30. Lynn says:

    We’re in reasonably good shape in terms of food for Barbara, Colin, and me: something like 18 months’ worth.

    Good to hear that. I would hate to hear about Colin eating people food “grin”.

    My 13 year old british cocker spaniel somehow jumped up on the kitchen counter last night and got herself a plate of tuna casserole. She loves people food, much more than her dry dog food.

  31. Robert Bruce Thompson says:

    Colin’s lts food is the same as ours. Actually, we do keep a 3-month supply of his dry dog food, but long-term he’ll be eating human food.

  32. MrAtoz says:

    Somebody in Texas now has a new H&K UMP .45 submachine gun

    I could almost snicker at this. That much firepower. I guess they were just lying on the seat for easy access in case of, what, Big Foot attack? He should have a weapons rack in the truck.

  33. OFD says:

    “My 13 year old british cocker spaniel somehow jumped up on the kitchen counter last night and got herself a plate of tuna casserole.”

    My American Pit Bull Terrier, the late “Bear,” a 70-pound dark brindle, got a platter of pineapple fritters I’d just made, plus a whole turkey. But he also kept riff-raff and other dawgs outta the yard. Once I had him on the leash and he saw a German Shepherd eyeballing us so he took a flying leap; he didn’t get away from me but my right thumb from where the leash cut in was numb for a year. This was back in the wunnerful 80s.

    “…but long-term he’ll be eating human food.”

    Excellent! Y’all can feed him progs, SJWs, lawyers and politicians for quite a while, looks like.

    “That much firepower. I guess they were just lying on the seat for easy access…”

    Well I guess that beats our local imbecile statie up here; inside the county courthouse while his chit was lying outside in his locked cruiser; local dirtbag B&E punk grabs two handguns, uniform jacket or vest, shotgun, and some other stuff. Days later he’s busted into several local car dealerships along Route 7 (which runs from O Kanada to Maffachufetts) and was on camera blasting away with the guns inside the building for no apparent reason. They finally caught up with him and I reckon he’s just up the road from us about three miles at the Northwest Correctional Facility, lol. No word on whether the trooper was jammed up because of this, probably not. “The croozuh was locked!” Yeah, dimwit; but any local punk can get inside a vehicle with seconds. Hell, I can!

    And as ColonelAtoz sez, LE weapons should be locked in a rack inside the vehicle or that many, hell, inside the trunk.

  34. JimL says:

    Go ahead. Talk about poisoning an innocent dog. SJWs are FOS. Don’t need that.

  35. MrAtoz says:

    Woof! Shades of Final Destination. Beam through the windshield, yikes!

  36. MrAtoz says:

    I have to eat crow. The Paris Climate Ejaculation meeting has now declared their plan will save the planet. I guess I have to start prepping again since only a CME or asteroid will end life here. In honor of this brilliant plan, I’d like all of you to go out and burn something in your backyard to celebrate. Maybe we can jack the global temperature 3 degrees and void the accord.

  37. MrAtoz says:

    Maybe these chicks can raise the global temperature three degrees. They should get a degree from BJ Klinton alone. Especially if Cankles is elected.

  38. lynn says:

    Colin’s lts food is the same as ours. Actually, we do keep a 3-month supply of his dry dog food, but long-term he’ll be eating human food.

    Lady hates her dry dog food so much that a 12 lb bag last three months. Unless, the wife pours some soup or chicken bouillon over it.

  39. lynn says:

    I have to eat crow. The Paris Climate Ejaculation meeting has now declared their plan will save the planet. I guess I have to start prepping again since only a CME or asteroid will end life here. In honor of this brilliant plan, I’d like all of you to go out and burn something in your backyard to celebrate. Maybe we can jack the global temperature 3 degrees and void the accord.

    I have never seen anything like this before. All of this climate change XXXXX XXXXX global warming XXXX XXXX climate disruption stuff is totally natural. There is no way that we humans can affect this stuff, it is mostly controlled by the sun. Oh wait, Pournelle wants to put a wall of umbrellas between us and the sun. At least that would get us back in space and could be easily removed when things go bad.

    Our so-called leaders are talking about voluntarily impoverishing us. Even the oil companies have given up and want a carbon tax now, at least they can put that into their business plans instead of this crazy carbon limits. Shoot, if Obola and Kerry would stop flying those behemoth planes everywhere, that might cut out 10% of the USA’s CO2 production.

    The scary thing is that Obola is not going to exempt the farmers from this nonsense. So, when people start starving, it will be too late to change things. The farmers are already going broke from having to buy equipment with all of this new diesel emissions crap that requires high maintenance.

  40. OFD says:

    “I’d like all of you to go out and burn something in your backyard to celebrate.”

    Roger that; I probably have at least two such burnings (of brush) to do this week.

    “Our so-called leaders are talking about voluntarily impoverishing us.”

    Talking about it? They’ve been DOING it for decades. We’ve being ground down and bled white in taxes and fees, some states worse than others, of course. As a poster at the Western Rifle Shooters site said the other day, they want to fleece us completely and then kill us off. Even if you don’t believe this, prep for it as though it’s true and maybe you’ll be pleasantly surprised and all of this has just been the ravings of far-right conspiracy wack jobs and nut cases, to be laughed at and scorned.

    On the other hand…

  41. lynn says:

    “Our so-called leaders are talking about voluntarily impoverishing us.”

    Talking about it? They’ve been DOING it for decades. We’ve being ground down and bled white in taxes and fees, some states worse than others, of course. As a poster at the Western Rifle Shooters site said the other day, they want to fleece us completely and then kill us off. Even if you don’t believe this, prep for it as though it’s true and maybe you’ll be pleasantly surprised and all of this has just been the ravings of far-right conspiracy wack jobs and nut cases, to be laughed at and scorned.

    I think that you have seen nothing so far. They will not be happy until the middle class is ground into the … ground. Remember, these are the people who think that you can tax a nation into prosperity. Utopian Socialists are evil personified. They firmly believe that once they have converted the country into socialism that then they can convert it to a utopia. Somehow, that second step never happens.

  42. OFD says:

    No kidding. That second step seems to always lead to mass imprisonment, torture and genocide. But the libturds and lefties and SJWs apparently either don’t know this or choose to ignore it or they say that the system wasn’t implemented correctly so we need to keep trying until we get it right, like those EC votes that the Brussels scum keep making people do over and over.

    The question becomes, how many hundreds of millions of people need to be murdered until we get it right?

    And OFD has the answer: about a billion and a half or so, i.e. all the musloids. After that we’ll only have the socialist scum to deal with, so that’s probably another fifty percent of the pop, either agitprop specialists, commissars or willing dupes.

  43. MrAtoz says:

    about a billion and a half or so, i.e. all the musloids.

    Musloids sounds so slimy and snail like.

    I love it!!!!

  44. lynn says:

    No kidding. That second step seems to always lead to mass imprisonment, torture and genocide. But the libturds and lefties and SJWs apparently either don’t know this or choose to ignore it or they say that the system wasn’t implemented correctly so we need to keep trying until we get it right, like those EC votes that the Brussels scum keep making people do over and over.

    But, Uncle Obola loves me! He said so!

  45. OFD says:

    “But, Uncle Obola loves me! He said so!”

    Here’s the thing: if he said he hated you, it would mean he actually loved you. Do the math. These guys lie like the rest of us breathe. They can’t do otherwise; it’s physiologically, emotionally, psychologically and spiritually impossible.

    “Musloids sounds so slimy and snail like.”

    Every time I think of them in their masses, I think of turning over an aging animal cadaver in the yard and seeing a teeming pile of maggots and blowflies. Western Civ is the rotting cadaver that E. Pound mentioned nearly a hundred years ago…

    “…There died a myriad,
    And of the best, among them,
    For an old bitch gone in the teeth,
    For a botched civilization,…”

    From “Hugh Selwyn Mauberly”

    He was talking about the “Great War,” which we seem determined to relive, that and the “Good War,” both, while still paying no attention to non-state actors and Fourth Generation warfare or the ideas of the late Air Force Colonel Boyd.

    More than a billion musloids, teeming in their slimy and demonic masses…heading this way…with the full and enthusiastic blessing of our international socialist elites. Including Obola, Cankles, Hollande, Cameron, Merkel, et. al. One major exception being, ironically, Prince Vlad of Moscow.

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