Americans That Have Only Known The Post WWII Prosperity Are Ill Equipped And Educated to Deal With Depression Level Living. (Doug Casey believes we are headed for what he calls a super depression created by the ending of a debt super cycle!)

The forces are mounting that will eventually overwhelm most Americans and send their standard of living to unknown depths. Americans that have only known the post WWII prosperity are ill equipped and educated to deal with depression level living. Easy credit and instant gratification have created a nation of whining, self absorbed, entitlement minded people with no moral or mental toughness.

Doug Casey believes we are headed for what he calls a super depression created by the ending of a debt super cycle. The bigger the debt cycle the bigger the depression that follows. That’s how reality works and most people are not prepared for reality.

When this depression, which has already started, gets momentum, it will overwhelm the plans of a society that is expecting to get things like social security, pensions and payouts from retirement plans they have paid into for many years. All of those things will disappear almost overnight and leave society gasping and stupefied over what to do. Their reactions will be to yell and scream and try to identify who to blame but the only person they should blame is the one in the mirror.

Many very smart people have raised the alarm and done their best to warn the sleeping public, but those slumbering masses have ignored the warnings and hit the snooze button one more time. The masses do not understand economics, do not want to understand economics and they will pay dearly for that ignorance in the coming days.

When the real unemployment rate becomes common knowledge as it increases substantially, people will be left to survive on what resources they have saved up outside the banking system that cannot be stolen by the politicians and bankers. That is a key point here. The assets you have outside the system that cannot be stolen from you with a few key strokes on some computer.

Those hoping for some miraculous event that will send the U.S. back to the days of manufacturing might and jobs for all will never see it happen. Those days are gone. The west line theory tells us our economy will slow down and become more modest as the shipping center of the world moves west to the next powerhouse region which is Asia. This is what history teaches us.

When people suddenly wake up one morning and they have no job, their retirement is gone and they need to care for their family, what will they do? When government services have collapsed and they suddenly realize they are now living in a third world country with few government services, what will they do? When the banks are closed and only a select few connected people have any type of money or access to goods, what will they do?

This is the reality that many people will face in the future and they have no idea how bad it can get. They refuse to contemplate the harsh reality they will be living in and take steps to mitigate the effects. To do so would be to acknowledge it could happen and they are taking personal responsibility. Personal responsibility is a dirty phrase in today’s entitlement society. To see some of the effects one only has to look at the collapse of society in Venezuela today to see what awaits.

When it happens it will all fall back to you to take responsibility for your family and take care of them for the duration. To do that you need to plan now for that eventuality and build up the resources you will need to provide food, shelter, clothing and security when the system fails to do it for you. You need to be Noah on his ark not the people watching as he floated away.

Having resources stored up is a must but it may not get you all the way through if the situation lasts for many years. That is why you need some type of plan to replace those resources as time goes by and have some way to generate some type of income or at least items to trade. Usable goods are for the short term and things like gold ,silver and production equipment are for the long term to help you get through the crisis with the least amount of pain.

Even with proper planning the days ahead will not be easy as the standard of living of society will fall substantially to levels only seen in failed third world countries or old pictures. The assets actually owned by people today is very small compared to how they live. They will default on their home loan, their car loan, and their credit card debt leaving them with very few real possessions and few ways to move what they have left even if they have some place to go. Ultimately these people will become the new serfs to the wealthy class that will take possession of anything of value. Feudalism will once again rule.

The lack of planning by society will make this a reality if it is allowed. What will you do when everything you have worked a lifetime for is suddenly taken away? Do you have a plan to keep what you have? Do you have a plan to make money when you cannot find a job? Do you have a way to take care of your family until things stabilize? Do you have a home you will not lose if the whole system breaks down? What will you do if electricity or fuel is too expensive to buy or not available to the general population? These are the questions you should be asking yourself now and you better have a good answer because your family will be asking them when the greater depression sets in.

Additional- Forgotten Survival Lessons From The Great Depression

1. Make things last

We live in a largely consumer society, always buying the latest and greatest of everything – cars, clothes, toys. But when you don’t have money to replace it, you need to make do with what you have.

Not only that, but you need to make sure that what you have will last as long as possible. That means properly taking care of everything. If the cost of a pair of pants is going to put a strain in the budget, then you’d better make sure you can wear those pants for as long as possible. For example, don’t put your keys in your pockets, because they might wear a hole in them. Don’t put your change there either, for the same reason. Instead, use a leather change purse that won’t wear through the fabric.

The same can be said for anything. Preventative maintenance will make any car last longer, yet thousands of cars per year end up in the junkyard, simply for ignoring the need to change the oil.

2. Fix it, don’t replace it

Not only are we consumers, but we’re consumers that are accustomed to throwing things away. Long gone are the days of the local “fix-it shop,” where you could get just about anything repaired. Today, we throw it away and buy another one. That’s one thing if it’s a $5 item, but people do it with smartphones that cost hundreds of dollars, too.

Many things that break can be fixed, at times simply by scavenging parts from another one. Yet few people do this anymore. But when money becomes tight, this is a great way of making the dollars you have stretch a little bit farther.

3. Don’t pay someone to do what you can do yourself

A generation ago, most young men grew up learning some basic auto mechanics, carpentry and plumbing from their dads. By the time they moved out of their parents’ home, they’d have their own tool kit, filled with a combination of their father’s pass-me-downs and a few new ones that they’d bought on their own. They were proud of their ability to do things on their own.

Today, not enough young men graduating high school or college have any tools, let alone the knowledge to use them properly. They pay someone else to do it, rather than learning how to do it. While this might be good for the economy overall, it’s not good for their personal economy.

Buying tools and learning how to use them is an investment. If you hire a plumber to replace a faucet, it will cost an average of $242. But you can buy the tools to do it yourself for less than $40. So you save over $200 on that faucet replacement. Not only that, but every faucet you replace after that doesn’t cost you a penny for tools or labor.

4. Raise your own food

Other than the wealthy, the people who were impacted the least during the Great Depression were those who grew their own food. Millions of people had a vegetable garden and a henhouse behind their home. At a minimum, they would be growing some vegetables and have a steady source of eggs to feed their families. While that may not be much of a diet, when you don’t have a job, it can seem like food fit for a king.

5. Learn how to cook

Speaking about food fit for a king, we’re losing the art of knowing how to cook. We are used to using instant meals, frozen foods and “just add meat” packaged mixes. That’s great and it’s convenient, but when you don’t have the meat to add or the right ingredients to add to the packaged meal, it comes out rather flat.

Truly knowing how to cook means knowing how to make something well worth eating out of the ingredients you have available. How many people today know what to do if they don’t have butter or margarine to use in a recipe? What can you use if you don’t have enough flour? How can you turn that milk into yogurt or cheese, instead of letting it go to waste?

True cooks can turn simple ingredients into that meal fit for a king. They know how to get the most out of their spice cabinet and what they can do to make a disastrous recipe turn out anyway. Those skills can do a lot for the family’s morale and nutrition in hard times.

6. Avoid buying on credit

Credit kills during a financial downturn. Those who lost fortunes in the Great Depression were those who had bought everything on credit. When they couldn’t pay, their creditors came to repossess what they had bought. Many went from rich to poor in the blink of an eye.

The same can happen at any moment. The banks and creditors of today are not more hesitant to demand payment than those of the past. When you can’t pay, you lose.

7. Avoid self-indulgence

In the last 20 or 30 years we’ve been faced with a new phenomenon here in the United States — that of buying indulgent foods. We think nothing of spending $7 for a cup of coffee or an ice cream. Yet, it wasn’t all that long ago that we wouldn’t think of doing such a thing, except for the most special of occasions.

Our self-indulgence isn’t limited to our food, either. Designer clothing, fancy cars, elaborate cell phones and a host of other products are a normal part of everyday life. Many of the things we think of as “normal” today would have been luxuries to our parents, if they even existed.

Each of those indulgences is a liability. When tough times come, they become a burden on your budget. Countless people who qualify as poor pay $100 cell phone bills. They have put a luxury in front of their necessities. That’s a recipe for financial disaster, especially when times get hard.

8. Save, save, save

The Great Depression was marked by the Stock Market Crash of 1929. That crash was caused mostly by people who bought stocks on “margin,” putting up only a small percentage of the value in hard assets. When they lost on the market, they didn’t have the money to pay their losses. This happened countless times, as people who didn’t really know the market became rich on it. But they didn’t cash in when they should have, and went from rich to poor in one afternoon of bear markets.

Had those same people put the money they had invested in savings, they would have survived the crash. Not only that, but they would have had money to feed their families and pay their mortgages, when others did not.

9. Keep your chin up

No matter how bad the situation is, you can always do something to make it better. I mentioned earlier that there were many great businesses which were founded during the Great Depression. That wasn’t an accident. These were men and women who spat in the eyes of destiny. They decided that they weren’t going to become part of the depression and made some bold moves. But they had the guts and the drive to make it happen.

I don’t care what survival situation you might face. The thing that will do the most to see you through is to stare the problem in the eye and laugh. You can overcome if you are convinced that you can. But if you are convinced that you can’t, you’ve already lost the battle.

What lessons would you add to this list? Share your thoughts in the section below:

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