#1
The Amish are better prepared for the coming collapse than you liberals will ever be.

Edited by Lucille ()

#2
well yeah, theyre already comfortably living in a small-scale equivalent of the post-collapse society, including the complete lack of basic human rights for gays and women
#3
It's pretty easy to advocate something that is happening and will continue to happen.
#4
I wouldn't have to make 50 posts a day if people responded to me and made themselves more vulnerable to being trolled.
#5
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pareto_principle

Rhizzone follows a 80/20 rule, but it's one person with 20 accounts.
#6

Superabound posted:

well yeah, theyre already comfortably living in a small-scale equivalent of the post-collapse society, including the complete lack of basic human rights for gays and women



The fact that Rhizzone still cares about womens rights (womens "rights" being defined as the right to kill unborn children with no restrictions apparently, since Amish women have the right to work and own property and everything else) just shows that it doesn't actually believe its own narratives about the imminent collapse of civilization and cares more about feminist reformist crap than actually preparing for what's going to happen.

#7
because you touch yourself at night
#8
I didn't ask a question.

So Goat are you pissed off I keep bumping down your thread?
#9

gyrofry posted:

you touch yourself at night

#10
http://channel.nationalgeographic.com/channel/doomsday-castle/

Castles were the ultimate homes for the original preppers – kings and noblemen, who were under constant threat from neighboring enemies. But for American prepper Brent, a castle is the perfect defense for the doomsday scenario he fears will set the world back to the Dark Ages – an electromagnetic burst that causes massive power grid failure. Brent, with the help of his children, is on a quest to finish his towering castle that is isolated deep in the Carolina mountains. But the apocalypse he fears might shy in comparison to the clash of characters of his five children as they try to live and work together to prepare for the worst. If doomsday comes, will this family survive to rule the mountains, or will it self-destruct before the castle is ever completed?