A few of the limited people I know who didn't take the vax and also believed this is a culling have stopped trying to prepare for the future in any way. Early on, during the vax rollout, they were fully motivated to stock up on food and other prepper items that would help survive a collapse. I've spent the last two years acquiring rural land, making a huge garden, and stocking up on lots of food storage.
I talked to both of these individuals recently, and they had both kind of given up on trying to survive a possible collapse. The said they just couldn't keep watching forums like this and seeing the inexorable march of the NWO. It was driving them into deep depressions. They had lost all of the fire they had in our previous conversations. Oddly, they both claimed that they thought everything would work out fine. Both of them had become super religious as well.
I don't know if they had jumped on the Q bandwagon and were "trusting the plan", or if, when faced with insurmountable odds, they turned to religion as the only escape from this nightmare.
Whatever the source for their newfound optimism, I was curious if a lot of other people were reaching burnout levels as well. I am in a higher paying career than either of them, which allowed me to spend more money on prepping than they could. Is their burnout tied to their inability to feasibly prepare for collapse?
I left an open invitation for them to join me when the shit hits the fan, because going solo isn't going to work.
I think those of us in a more fortuitous position to prepare for the collapse need to help our like-minded neighbors and friends whereever we can. We will need each other to weather this storm so when you are buying bulk food storage, get more than you need for your family if you have the means.
I hope all of this prepping has just been a waste of money, and that some miracle appears to save our sorry asses. Maybe they have the right idea with expecting everything to work out. We make our own universes, so I've heard.
Nice, I'll check it out. Thx.