Survivalism
Lite
They
call themselves 'preppers.' They are regular
people with homes and families. But like the survivalists that came
before
them, they're preparing for the worst.
Lisa
Bedford is what you'd imagine of a stereotypical soccer mom. She drives
a white
Tahoe SUV. An American flag flies outside her suburban Phoenix
home. She sells Pampered Chef kitchen
tools and likes to bake. Bedford and her husband have two young
children, four
dogs, and go to church on Sunday.
But about
a year ago, Bedford's
homemaking skills went into overdrive. She began stockpiling canned
food, and
converted a spare bedroom into a giant storage facility. The trunk of
each of
her family's cars got its own 72-hour emergency kit—giant Tupperware
containers full of iodine, beef jerky, emergency blankets, and even a
blood-clotting agent designed for the battle-wounded. Bedford
started thinking about an escape plan
in case her family needed to leave in a hurry, and she and her husband
set
aside packed suitcases and cash. Then, for the first time in her life, Bedford
went to a gun
range and shot a .22 handgun. Now she regularly takes her two young
children, 7
and 10, to target practice. "Over the last two years, I started feeling
more and more unsettled about everything I was seeing, and I started
thinking,
'What if we were in the same boat?'" says Bedford, 49.
Bedford
is what
you might call a modern-day survivalist—or, as she describes it, a "prepper."
Far from the stereotype of survivalists past, she owns no camouflage,
and she
doesn't believe that 2012—the
final year of the Mayan calendar—will be the end of the
world. She
likes modern luxuries (makeup, air conditioning, going out to eat), and
she's
no doomsayer. But like the rest of us, Bedford
watched as the housing bubble burst and the economy collapsed. She has
friends
who've lost their homes, jobs, and 401(k)s. She remembers Hurricane
Katrina,
and wonders how the government might respond to the next big disaster,
or a
global pandemic. And though she hopes for the best—the last thing she
wants is for something bad to happen—she's decided to prepare her
family
for the worst. "We never set out to go build a bunker to protect
ourselves
from nuclear fallout; I have no idea how to camp in the wild," Bedford
says, laughing.
"But as all of this stuff started hitting closer to home, we [wanted]
to
take some steps to safeguard ourselves."
In the
past, survivalists and conspiracy theorists might go out into the
woods, live
out of a bunker, waiting (or sometimes hoping) for the apocalypse to
hit. It
was men, mostly; many of them antigovernment, often portrayed by the
media as
radicals of the likes of Oklahoma City
bomber Timothy
McVeigh. In the late 1990s, Y2K
fears brought survivalism to the mainstream, only to usher it
back out
again when disaster didn't strike. (Suddenly, unused survival gear
began
showing up in classifieds and on eBay.) A decade later, "preppers"
are what you might call survivalism's Third Wave: regular people with
jobs and
homes whose are increasingly fearful about the future—their paranoia
compounded by 24-hour cable news. "Between the media and the Internet,
many people have built up a sense that there's this calamity out there
that
needs to be avoided," says Art Markman, a cognitive psychologist at the
University
of Texas
who studies the way people think.
And while they may not envision themselves as Kevin Costner in Waterworld—in
fact, many preppers go
out of their way to avoid the stereotypes that come along with the
"survivalist"
label—they've made a clear-eyed calculation about the risks at hand and
aren't waiting around for anybody else to fix them. "I consider it more
of
a reaction than a movement," says Tom Martin, a 32-year-old Idaho
truck driver who
is the founder of the American
Preppers Network, which receives some 5,000 visitors to its
Web site each
day. "There are so many variables and potential disasters out there,
being
a prepper is just a reaction to that potential."
That
reaction, of course, means different things to different people. Some
prep for
economic disaster, while others prep to escape genetically modified
foods. An
organic farmer could be considered a prepper; so might an urban
gardener. Some
preppers fear putting their names out in public—they don't want every
desperate soul knocking down their door in the event of a
disaster—while
others see it as a network they can rely upon were something horrible
to
happen. Some preppers fear the complete breakdown of society, while
others
simply want to stock up on extra granola bars and lighter fluid in case
of a
blackout or a storm. Hard-core survivalists might think of preppers as
soft;
"Eventually, the Chef Boyardee is going to run out," jokes Cody
Lundin, the founder of the Aboriginal
Living Skills
School, a
survival camp based out of
his home in Prescott,
Az.
But prepping, says Martin, is just a new
word for a very old way of life. "You don't have to have a survival
retreat loaded with guns secluded in the wilderness to be a prepper,"
adds
David Hill Sr., 54, a former jet mechanic who runs the Web site WhatisaPrepper from his home
in rural West
Virginia.
"There are many people who live in urban and suburban areas who don't
own
guns who also identify themselves as preppers."
Researchers
say that interest in survivalism can often be a barometer of social
anxiety;
and in many cases, says sociologist
Richard Mitchell, it can be a response to modern stress. If
that's true,
it's no surprise we're seeing an uptick in it now: from climate change
to the
economy, swine flu to terrorism, the current state of the world is
enough to
make even the biggest cynic just a little bit worried. As U.S.
Secretary of
Homeland Security Janet Napolitano reminded us in a recent
speech at the American Red
Cross,
90 percent of Americans live in an area where there is moderate or high
risk of
natural disaster. "I think what we're experiencing is a kind of
generational panic attack," says Neil Strauss, the former New York Times
writer whose latest book, Emergency,
is about how
to survive in a disaster. "We were born in a good time. We
experienced
booming technology and rising stock prices. And then all of a sudden,
9/11
happened, Katrina happened, the economy plunged. And it's like the rug
being
pulled out from under our feet."
While
there's no scientific data to track survivalism's recent growth, some
preppers
have speculated it's reached a level not matched in decades.
Emergency-supply
retailers say they're seeing business boom; the Red Cross has had a
surge in
volunteers over the past year (up some 160,000 over 2008), and there
are
networks of preppers—from Prepper.org
to the Suburban
Prepper, to Bedford's own blog, "The
Survival Mom"—sprouting up all over the Web. FEMA's new head
under Obama, Craig Fugate, has encouraged
Americans to get in touch with their inner survivalist. "I
encourage
all Americans to take some simple steps to make their families more
prepared,
such as developing a family communications plan," he tells NEWSWEEK.
His
organization recently launched a "Resolve
to be Ready" campaign suggesting that Americans to make
preparedness
part of their New Year's resolutions. "I think what people have come to
realize is that [organizations like ours] can't always be everywhere we
need to
be as quickly as we need to be," says Jonathan Aiken, a spokesman for
the
American Red Cross. "So I think the messaging has changed, from FEMA on
down, that in the event of an emergency, people need to be prepared to
take
care of themselves for a couple of days until the rest of us can come
out and
get to you."
Government
has always played an active role in emergency preparedness.
Nuclear-raid drills
were part of everyday life for school children in the 1950s and '60s,
and
building bomb shelters was encouraged because of the nuclear threat. In
1999,
the government set up a $50
million crisis center to deal with the computer
threats posed by Y2K,
and after 9/11, residents were pushed to stock up on plastic and duct
tape to
seal their homes in the event of a biological attack. But in 2010, as
we enter
the new year under an elevated
threat level, the problems at hand can seem insurmountable
and unknown, to
the point that even Barton M. Biggs, the former chief global strategist
at Morgan
Stanley, warns in his 2008 book that we must "assume
the possibility of a breakdown of the civilized infrastructure."
Where
that leaves preppers is struggling to fill the void. "We want people to
understand that preparedness is an individual's job, too," says Joseph
Bruno, New York
City’s commissioner of emergency management, where polling
has shown
that more than 50 percent of residents are thinking about
preparedness—up
from just 18 percent in 2004. "I'm a newsaholic, and that probably
feeds
some of this," says Bedford.
"But I like to think that if we're prepared, it's one less family the
government has to worry about."
In the
end, what it all boils down to, at least for the preppers, is
self-reliance—a concept as old as the human race itself. As survival blogger John Solomon
pointed
out in a recent
column, during the Victory Gardens of
WWII,
Americans managed to grow 40 percent of all the vegetables they needed
to
survive. "My mother's parents had a 10-acre garden, and my grandfather
worked at the dairy farm next door," says Hill, the former jet
mechanic.
"They worked by raising their own food, they had their own chickens,
they canned
vegetables, and my grandfather fed a family of 12 like that." But in
the
modern world, he says, many of those skills are easily forgotten.
Today, our
food comes from dozens of different sources. Most of us aren't quite
sure how
electricity gets from the wires to our stoves. We use debit cards to
buy a can
of tuna and we wouldn't have the slightest idea how to filter
contaminated
water. We are residents of the new millennium; we simply haven't needed
to
prepare.
So for
the moment, people like Bedford
are reteaching themselves lost skills—and in some cases, learning new
ones. Bedford
has read up on harvesting an urban garden, and is learning to use a
solar oven
to bake bread. She is ready with a pointed shot in the event she ever
needs to
hunt for her own food. And until then, she's got 61 cans of chili, 20
cans of
Spam, 24 jars of peanut butter, and much more stocked in her pantry;
she
estimates she's spent about $4,000 on food supplies, an amount that
should keep
her family going for at least three months. Now, even if something
simple goes
wrong, like a paycheck doesn't go through, "we don't need to worry,"
she says.
Bedford
knows
it all might sound a little nuts—and she's careful about how much she
reveals, and to whom. But she believes that in times of uncertainty,
what she's
doing is simply common sense. As for the rest of us, isn't it a little
bit
crazy not
to prepare?