Okay.
So I've been turning this whole, "What to do when the shit hits the fan" problem in my head.
There's the fear element, there's worries about food and how to take care of people in your community. It's easy to feel overwhelmed and dark.
But if the new reality is going to be where we must live, there's no reason it can't be effectively managed like any other problem. -I'm really not interested in investing in weapons and other fear-based hunker-down thinking. Why not create something amazing?
One of the ways to help keep things steady and safe is to draw your community together.
There's a little newspaper in my town, and people love it; it helps provide a cultural identity; you read it and you're automatically drawn into the local 'tribe' so to speak. I think that can be expanded upon. -But a paper depends on big printing presses and distribution systems and other things which become problematical if infrastructure falls into unreliability.
So I was thinking about back-up plans to keep it running and shift its focus from the light 'New Yorker' style culture rag that it currently is, into a much more useful system to help keep people informed and connected.
Instead of putting out a paper in.., well, the newspaper format that everybody knows, one could instead print off sheets and post them in public places for people to read. I've got a swarthy 11" x 17" printer, and Big Paper has an official sort of cast to it. They could contain articles and information about gathering places, emergency measures, food stores and health services and such, as well as regularly updated local news which would be of value in keeping people informed and feeling part of their community.
Just the act of doing this would send a message; one that says, "We're still here, and if you're reading this, so are you, and hey, isn't that great?"
There are a couple of spots in town with big windows; cafes and the local book store and the post office. People could stop by one of these locations to get caught up on the news and hobnob with others, which would provide its own networking value.
I started looking at the kind of equipment you'd need to enable a newspaper team to maintain this kind of service, and it's not that complicated.
Keeping a couple of laptops and a printer running through power outages would involve some solar panels and a couple of deep cycle batteries and other bits of equipment, and you're off to the races.
So some of the money I'll have arriving over the next little while I was thinking of earmarking for this kind of equipment. I think such a project could be put together for around $1000. -To enable a local news organization to be up and running for as long as there's sunlight and some basic printing supplies.
I'm actually pretty pumped about this. I can envision a number of ways this could really help smooth things out for people here should the normal order of things fall into disarray.
I just wanted to share that idea here and take input if people had any to offer.
My shorthand list of bits and pieces to assemble includes:
-The laptops and software we already have access to
-Solar panels and some electronics needed to use them (I spent the night researching this)
-A couple of deep cycle batteries
-A stock of printer paper
-Some kind of re-fillable ink cartridge solution
So I've been turning this whole, "What to do when the shit hits the fan" problem in my head.
There's the fear element, there's worries about food and how to take care of people in your community. It's easy to feel overwhelmed and dark.
But if the new reality is going to be where we must live, there's no reason it can't be effectively managed like any other problem. -I'm really not interested in investing in weapons and other fear-based hunker-down thinking. Why not create something amazing?
One of the ways to help keep things steady and safe is to draw your community together.
There's a little newspaper in my town, and people love it; it helps provide a cultural identity; you read it and you're automatically drawn into the local 'tribe' so to speak. I think that can be expanded upon. -But a paper depends on big printing presses and distribution systems and other things which become problematical if infrastructure falls into unreliability.
So I was thinking about back-up plans to keep it running and shift its focus from the light 'New Yorker' style culture rag that it currently is, into a much more useful system to help keep people informed and connected.
Instead of putting out a paper in.., well, the newspaper format that everybody knows, one could instead print off sheets and post them in public places for people to read. I've got a swarthy 11" x 17" printer, and Big Paper has an official sort of cast to it. They could contain articles and information about gathering places, emergency measures, food stores and health services and such, as well as regularly updated local news which would be of value in keeping people informed and feeling part of their community.
Just the act of doing this would send a message; one that says, "We're still here, and if you're reading this, so are you, and hey, isn't that great?"
There are a couple of spots in town with big windows; cafes and the local book store and the post office. People could stop by one of these locations to get caught up on the news and hobnob with others, which would provide its own networking value.
I started looking at the kind of equipment you'd need to enable a newspaper team to maintain this kind of service, and it's not that complicated.
Keeping a couple of laptops and a printer running through power outages would involve some solar panels and a couple of deep cycle batteries and other bits of equipment, and you're off to the races.
So some of the money I'll have arriving over the next little while I was thinking of earmarking for this kind of equipment. I think such a project could be put together for around $1000. -To enable a local news organization to be up and running for as long as there's sunlight and some basic printing supplies.
I'm actually pretty pumped about this. I can envision a number of ways this could really help smooth things out for people here should the normal order of things fall into disarray.
I just wanted to share that idea here and take input if people had any to offer.
My shorthand list of bits and pieces to assemble includes:
-The laptops and software we already have access to
-Solar panels and some electronics needed to use them (I spent the night researching this)
-A couple of deep cycle batteries
-A stock of printer paper
-Some kind of re-fillable ink cartridge solution
