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So many people ask how to get rid of WiFi. Here’s the approach: get an Ethernet cord and a USB adapter. Log in to your router by going to the IP on the back of the box with whatever device you have. Find the wireless settings. You have guest WiFi, which you’re going to turn off, and 2.4 and 5 gigahertz bands, which you’re also going to turn off. Make sure all this is turned off. Then take that Ethernet cord and stick it into the back of your router. Next, take the other side of the Ethernet cord with the adapter and plug it into your computer, and wait for it. In about a second, you’ve got the Internet without WiFi. Why would you get rid of WiFi? Because of microwave sickness, headaches, dizziness, sleep issues, insomnia, fatigue, nausea, heart palpitations, memory loss, ringing of the ears, skin rashes, muscle and joint pain, leg and root pain, tingling, irritability, numbness, nosebleeds, depression, and anxiety. It doesn’t sound too safe. For reference, my phone’s on airplane mode right now to show everything’s off with an Ethernet cord. You can do it for your phones too. If you’ve got 5G, switch it to 4G or airplane mode. There will always be those who say it’s all safe, but the US Navy did 2,000 studies in 1971 on the dangers of wireless technology. And here’s what they found: depression, impotence, anxiety, lack of concentration, dizziness, sleepiness, insomnia, irritability, chest pain, and tremors. Probably a good idea to have wires. Last but not least, there’s a $13 book that’s 600 pages long on the topic, Things to Look Into.

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To survive, it's crucial to have enough supplies to last a few months. This is especially important during the initial phase after a collapse, when many people will die and conflicts will arise as everyone scrambles for resources. You need to be prepared to endure this period and make it through to the other side.

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Surviving a Kamala Harris presidency requires some drastic measures. Start by saving money for essentials like milk. Develop a taste for alternative foods, and consider going into hiding for a millennium until civilization recovers. Paint your doors in rainbow colors to avoid detection by the authorities. Stock up on scarce resources such as food and water. If possible, hitch a ride on Elon’s rocket to Mars for better chances of survival. Alternatively, disguise yourself to access benefits or flee to safer countries. Form alliances with local gangs for protection, and if all else fails, surrender to death for peace, knowing there are no Democrats in heaven. Good luck navigating this challenging scenario. Also, consider joining AMAC for community support, discounts, and a voice that matters. Sign up for just $1 to become a member today.

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Officials from BGE say one of the power plants they rely on was somehow disconnected from its electric system, raising the threat of widespread power outages. Emergency repairs are underway as officials figure out if there's enough power available. In the meantime, BG is encouraging customers to conserve their electrical use through the evening. They say the easiest way to do that is by adjusting your thermostat, blocking sunlight from coming through windows, and try to avoid using any large. Customers are also asked to take steps now to prepare for a possible outage that includes everything from charging your phone and finding flashlights to making alternative arrangements. Also, your medical equipment relies on electricity.

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Adjana Beeb presents her survival bag essentials. Glasses are crucial for visibility. A waterproof pouch protects documents in wet conditions. A flashlight, or matches and a light source, are needed for illumination. Water is essential for survival. A Swiss army knife with 18 tools is a must-have. Medication is important for unforeseen health needs. Food is necessary to combat hunger. Cash is king during crises, as credit cards may become useless. A charger and power bank prevent a dead phone. Playing cards offer distraction. A small radio is also important. These items are needed to survive the first 72 hours of a crisis. The EU is preparing a strategy to ensure citizen safety during crises. Being prepared is key to being safe.

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Stay calm to survive attempts to incite frenzy. Stock up on groceries, nonperishable items, ammunition, and weapons for self-defense. Secure your home with cameras and create a family survival plan. Be aware of safe travel times and avoid congestion. Trust your gut if something feels off and avoid risks. One speaker told their adult children not to be out after dark, to avoid downtown areas, and to carry a gun. Another speaker recommends methylene blue, saying it improves workouts and overall well-being. They bought it to support Alex Jones and InfoWars, and endorse it despite generally being skeptical of supplements. They feel better throughout the day after taking it, and their workouts have improved.

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If you ever find yourself in a situation where you come into contact with a high voltage power line and fall to the ground, it's crucial to know how to save yourself. Running is not an option as the electric potential spreads out in a circle, with the highest potential closer to the center. The further you cross this area, the greater the potential difference and the higher the risk. To survive, stay calm and stand on the ground with one leg, then jump out in the opposite direction. If your balance is poor, you can land with both feet simultaneously and jump out. Alternatively, you can rub your feet together while slowly moving in the opposite direction, making sure not to lift your feet or move more than 5 centimeters at a time. Remember to share this life-saving information.

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Regularity is key for good sleep. Go to bed and wake up at the same time every day, including weekends. The brain expects and thrives on regularity, which improves sleep quantity.

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One, try to follow a set routine each day. Two, sleep in a supportive environment with the right lighting in a comfortable mattress. Three, boost wakefulness by spending time outside during the day. Avoid nicotine, alcohol, or caffeine in the evening. Exercise each day. Seven, shut down your devices when it is time to sleep.

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In a coup situation, one way to chip away at the systems maintaining power is to take over a local TV station to broadcast a call for people to join. In New York, three antennas control all telecommunications. It's important to consider what communication systems "we" have versus "them." The speaker advocates getting ahead of potential issues by organizing resources and knowing what actions to take so that "we" can deploy rapidly.

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To reduce EMF exposure, turn off your WiFi at night. EMF, or electromagnetic fields, are emitted by electronics, and keeping your router away from living areas, especially children's rooms, is important. Using a timer for your WiFi router can automate this process, ensuring it shuts off at night and turns back on in the morning. Additionally, keep your phone on airplane mode while sleeping to minimize exposure. Studies indicate that WiFi can cause oxidative stress, DNA damage, and disrupt the endocrine system. Reducing EMF exposure is a simple way to lower overall stress on your body, which is already dealing with various environmental stressors. Prioritize your family's health by eliminating unnecessary EMF during sleep.

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Before traveling in Ohio, make sure to keep your gas tank full and electric vehicle charged. Pack a kit with essentials like mats, snacks, cash, and a phone charger. Plan where to meet up if separated from family or friends, and know where to take shelter in case of an emergency. Bring supplies for pets, like a water bowl. Be prepared and stay safe while on the road.

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There are two cases of electric car parking, and the grocery store is completely out of water. Major port cities like LA and San Diego are experiencing severe fires, with firefighters focused on LA. The power grid is failing in many areas, leading to concerns about food, water, and sewage shortages. The Pentagon warns that 97% of the population could die within 30 days of a power outage. The grocery store is unusually crowded, indicating something is off. It's crucial to take action now if you're in LA—consider leaving before it's too late. This is a serious situation, and it's important to act before others do.

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- The video discusses energy lockdowns as a forecast reality already beginning in some countries and likely to ripple worldwide. The host emphasizes the content as potentially disturbing and cites a recent IEA report titled “sheltering from oil shocks,” along with data from multiple countries and other worst‑case scenario reports. - Core plan described: the IEA envisions energy lockdowns that require major changes in daily life and mobility. Measures include: - Working from home three out of five days per week. - Dramatically reducing driving speeds and limiting private car access to cities. - Reducing public transport use and expanding car sharing. - Assessing whether one has a “key worker” reason to travel. - Reducing air travel by 40% or requiring a strong justification for flights. - Promoting 15‑minute cities to minimize travel. - Encouraging walking or cycling, greater public transport use, and eco‑driving techniques. - Prioritizing electric vehicles, with questions raised about how this aligns with other fuel choices. - The host reiterates that these measures would be more severe than COVID lockdowns. They reference the ongoing energy disruptions: strikes on Russian oil refineries, destruction/damage to about 40 energy sites in the Middle East, Europe’s reliance on LNG with tanker reroutes to Asia due to higher payments, and broader geopolitical tensions affecting energy flows. - Worst‑case scenario categories described in the report: 1) Immediate daily survival hits: low energy caps on homes (heating limited to about 15–18°C, with rolling blackouts in winter), no air conditioning in heat waves, fridges/freezers potentially turned off, cooking restricted if power or gas are limited, water pumps and treatment plants failing, possible boiling water orders, toilets and sewage issues, and widespread darkness with limited internet/TV/charging. 2) Health system breakdown: hospitals running on diesel generators, surgeries canceled, ventilators/oxygen/dialysis impacted, home medical devices useless, ambulance and emergency services underfunded or overwhelmed. 3) Food, water, and supply chain collapse: irrigation and farming halted due to fuel shortages, processing and distribution disrupted, empty shelves and panic buying, potential black markets and rationing reminiscent of wartime scenarios, with starvation risks in weeks in some countries and severe inflation. 4) Transport and mobility lockdowns: fuel rationing (odd/even days), reduced public transport, more cycling/walking, restricted medical visits, difficulty moving goods, economic and job devastation, and unemployment possibly skyrocketing (20–40% in worst cases). 5) Economic and societal collapse: energy‑intensive sectors shut, currency printing for stimulus, social order strain including riots and migrations, education stopping (home schooling), innovation and investment freezes, potential grid or civil breakdown, and excess deaths from extreme temperatures, starvation, and illness. 6) Long‑term societal damage: prolonged crisis causing massive economic contraction, widespread disruption to infrastructure and services, and deep social disruption. - The host notes current real‑world developments that align with these concerns: numerous countries declaring emergencies, fuel supply challenges, and policy actions such as fuel rationing or travel restrictions. Examples cited include the Philippines declaring a state of emergency, Vietnam and Bangladesh facing oil issues, Slovenia introducing fuel rationing, and South Korea implementing odd‑license‑plate driving bans for public sector workers. - The video closes with warnings about the potential severity and urges viewers to prepare, arguing that comments by some media or officials predicting quick recoveries could mislead families about the risk. A sense of urgency is conveyed about taking energy and logistical precautions in light of the described scenarios.

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If you find a downed power line, stay at least 30 feet away and don't touch it. Assume it's energized and dangerous. Avoid touching fences or guardrails that have come in contact with the line. If a power line falls near you, don't run. Stay on the ground and move away. If a power line falls on your car while you're inside, stay in the car and wait for help. Don't touch the vehicle's frame or any metal. If you must exit the car due to a fire or hazard, jump out with both feet together and shuffle away. Never touch the vehicle and the ground simultaneously. If you see someone injured after touching a downed line, call 911. Report downed lines to Hawaiian Electric's 24-hour trouble line.

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Before traveling in Ohio, make sure to keep your gas tank full and electric vehicle charged. Have a preparedness kit with maps, snacks, cash, and a phone charger. Plan where to meet if separated from family or friends, and know where to take shelter. Bring supplies for pets like a water bowl. Be prepared for any confusion in large crowds.

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Speaker 0: Five major threats make the grid extremely vulnerable: cyber, hackers, physical threats, solar EMP, and man-made EMP. The concern is that when they hear the risk analysis, officials may hear it but won’t take action. Speaker 1: There are 18 critical infrastructures in the United States (food, water, transportation, communications, etc.). All 17 of the others depend on electricity. Speaker 2: If our grid goes down, you can't cook, you can't heat anything, you can't run medical supplies, you can't talk on your phone, you can't take money out of a bank, and we turn into total chaos. Speaker 3: If this happens, the system stops. Stops. Speaker 2: If a transformer is taken down, we have to order it from Germany or China. It's going to take a year. Speaker 1: Up till recently, there were no comprehensive protective solutions available. Speaker 4: We know what the solutions are. They're not expensive. They're not difficult to employ. We just need the political will to do it and the follow through on the part of the electric utilities to get it done. Speaker 3: The White House is protected from an EMP. The congress and the CIA and the NSA, all of the areas that need to function at the government are protected. So why can't we be protected? Speaker 1: Around some of these facilities, you don't have much more than a chain link fence to keep people out. That seems absurd to me. Speaker 5: I think it is absurd when we now know that attack on as few as nine grid substations could bring down all three major interconnections for The United States grid. Speaker 3: If the power goes out, you get the generator. And if that goes out, you get another one. There's never been a plan for what happens after that. Speaker 1: Director of the National Security Agency, Admiral Rogers, came out and said, it's not a matter of if, it's a matter of when.

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The discussion identifies five major threats to the electric grid: cyber attacks, hackers, physical threats, solar EMP, and man-made EMP. The speakers express concern that once this risk analysis is presented to congressional officials, they hear the warnings but are reluctant to take action. They note that there are 18 critical infrastructures in the United States (food, water, transportation, communications, etc.), and all 17 of the others depend on electricity. If the grid goes down, basic activities are disrupted: cooking, heating, medical supplies, phone communication, banking access, and overall societal function could deteriorate into chaos. A single transformer outage is especially critical because replacement would require ordering from Germany or China and could take a year. Historically, there were no comprehensive protective solutions available, but the speakers claim that the solutions exist now. They assert that the solutions are not expensive or difficult to implement; what is lacking is political will and follow-through by electric utilities. They contrast protection for the White House, Congress, the CIA, and the NSA with a lack of protection for many grid facilities, noting that around some facilities there is little more than a chain-link fence to keep people out, which they find absurd. A key point is that an attack on as few as nine grid substations could bring down all three major interconnections of the U.S. grid. The following consequence chain is described: if the power goes out, people would rely on generators, and if those fail, there is no plan for what happens next. The statement concludes with Admiral Mike Rogers of the National Security Agency saying that it is not a matter of if, but when a grid disruption will occur.

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If there is a nationwide outage lasting 9 months, up to 90% of Americans could die. The power grid going down would lead to a zombie apocalypse scenario with no rule of law, supply chains, water, food, or fuel. Chaos would ensue as people fight for survival without help from authorities or supplies. Backup generators may only last a few days to a month, but without fuel deliveries due to the widespread chaos.

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The Amish can obtain pressurized hot water without utilities, preserve food without refrigeration, and cool homes without electricity. This raises concerns about the broader population's potential inability to cope without modern conveniences. A book containing the instructions for the Amish way of life offers step-by-step guides to these practices. A link to purchase the book is provided.

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"keep your phone out of reach and off." "Now remember information itself is a distraction and your phone is arguably the number one source for incoming information." "To avoid that then turn off all notifications." "Then keep the phone in a cupboard, the other room or the car that way it won't gnaw at your attention." "Lastly you want as few gadgets, sources of distraction as possible." "Ideally you don't have a phone, a TV, and a tablet in sight so instead we want to simplify." "We want to just get rid of these things." "Here's a helpful way to remember this heuristic. Have less to ignore so you can focus more."

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Prepare for record cold, food shortages, rationing, civil unrest, and international conflict by looking at history. Previously, crops were lost globally, and people starved and froze to death. Currently, almost 50,000,000 people are dependent on the government for food. Panic will ensue when crops are wiped out by the cold and people find empty shelves at the store. The president says to only worry about global warming, so people are unprepared for global cooling. The speaker recommends conveying this message to friends and family. The mainstream media and government have not informed the public about this. Arguing over politics, religion, race, sexuality, or the shape of the earth does not prepare you for this.

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You should have Faraday bags and EMP protection devices for your car and home. Have a generator, but the speaker cannot recommend Generac. Store an extra supply of gasoline safely. Secure water filtration and a way to bottle water, if not bottled water itself. Stock firearms with working, properly stored ammunition, potassium iodide, water and general disinfectants like alcohol and peroxide, and a stash of antibiotics. Have buckets and barrels to store water and aim to be self-sufficient for 3 to 6 months. The speaker believes that in the event of a grid wipeout, those unprepared will be desperate. Ensure you have enough ammunition, possibly for hunting or self-defense. Consider a quiet slingshot for small game. The speaker warns against being caught unprepared.

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The Strait of Hormuz has been closed for eleven weeks, and the USA is poised to resume military strikes against Iran, with Israel expected to escalate further. A nuclear power facility in the UAE was struck by drones, which they say came from the West, though the speaker argues the drones could also be from Iran, from Iraq, or a false flag launched from a secret base in Iraq. The speaker says they do not believe Iran is taking responsibility, but notes they may be wrong. Overall, the speaker frames escalation as continuing without a resolution to the Strait. A limited development occurred when about a dozen ships were allowed to pass through after Trump met with China’s President Xi, with an arrangement that also involved Iran giving China permission to allow a certain number of ships to sail through. The speaker emphasizes this does not approach normal traffic levels (such as the previous 120/day figure). They argue that the crisis is not apparent to many Westerners because shipments already contained about eight weeks’ worth of supplies (oil, gas, fertilizer, helium, sulfuric acid, polyethylene, and other inputs). With week 11 underway, the speaker claims there are few remaining ships headed to Western countries. The speaker explains that even if countries have their own oil suppliers, global refining and crude type requirements create dependency on imported heavier crude while exporting sweet light crude. They predict scarcity issues if the supply chain runs out. They highlight shortages already affecting motor oil and describe how recovery will take easily the rest of the year even if the war ends quickly. The speaker urges people to buy motor oil immediately or within two days because blenders are reporting that orders for base oils are being rejected, meaning blended engine oil will not reach shelves. The speaker reports early warnings from retailers and manufacturers (including AutoZone, Honda, Nissan, and others) that engine oil supply problems are approaching. They also give guidance on oil labeling, stating that the first number (e.g., in 5W-30, 0W-20, 10W-40) indicates viscosity at cold start, while the second number indicates viscosity at 100°C, and that the second number matters more for matching what an engine needs. They advise matching the second number to avoid major issues, and they prefer oil that is slightly off spec over running dirty oil too long. Beyond motor oil, the speaker predicts broader shortages tied to polyethylene feedstock loss from the Persian Gulf (attributed to Qatar). They connect polyethylene to many supply chain items, including car parts, machine parts, barrels, containers for food storage, industrial shipping containers, and containers used to ship oil, arguing the resulting erosion of supply will cause widespread disruption. They compare the situation to COVID supply chain shortages but argue this is different because reopening factories would not solve it and the lag time will persist for months. They state shortages could continue into 2027. They recommend people prepare backup supplies and essential parts, and encourage neighbors and family to become aware as shelves begin to empty. The speaker also forecasts rising food and transportation costs, higher travel expenses, increased shipping fees for many items, higher e-commerce prices, and more common shipping delays. They say these effects may worsen around midterms, with political blame falling on GOP and Trump. They claim strategic petroleum reserve releases and attempts to keep energy prices low cannot last indefinitely and predict gasoline could reach around $10 per gallon. They add that EV sales may rise because driving costs are lower and EVs avoid engine oil. Finally, the speaker argues that shifting energy demand to the power grid could stress infrastructure already strained by data centers, and they cite California as vulnerable due to lack of local refining and reduced oil infrastructure, plus limited nuclear power capacity. They conclude that with week 11 and no solution in sight, the situation could continue for months and recommend preparedness for oil, water, gas, solar, and battery storage.

Shawn Ryan Show

David Tice - The Power Grid Blackout / America's WORST Enemy Could Attack Any Moment | SRS #60
Guests: David Tice
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A catastrophic power grid failure in the U.S. could lead to a 90% mortality rate, according to the EMP Commission. David Tice, producer of the documentary *Grid Down, Power Up*, discusses the vulnerabilities of the power grid, including physical attacks, cyber threats, electromagnetic pulses (EMP), and geomagnetic disturbances. He emphasizes that there are no legal obligations for power companies to secure the grid, largely due to lobbying. Tice highlights the ease of potential attacks, citing a 2013 incident in Metcalf, California, where a substation was targeted. He warns that adversaries like China and Russia could exploit these vulnerabilities, especially with the U.S. grid relying on foreign-made transformers. Tice advocates for public awareness and legislative action to protect the grid, urging individuals to prepare for potential crises. He provides resources on how to contact legislators and emphasizes the urgency of addressing these threats to prevent a national disaster.
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