this post was submitted on 20 Jan 2026
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Preppers/survival

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A place to share information on emergency preparedness as it relates to disasters both natural and man-made.

Would you survive in the event of economic, political and social collapse? What natural disasters such as tornadoes, earthquakes or hurricanes are prevalent in your area? What can you do? What should you be doing now? What do you need to know/have?

This is a community for those who think that it's better to be safe than sorry, and that we need to start preparing now.

founded 3 years ago
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I've modified this Original Reddit Post a bit. Let me know your thoughts and criticisms, if there is anything I should add, or correct.

Also, fuck Reddit and Spez of course. However we should be pragmatic. There is a vast amount of information on reddit and a lot more people use it for now. I'm manually moving things I feel are important on to the Fediverse for archival and general use purposes. And sharing sources for full disclosure.

Important: Scams spike during crackdowns. Only use trusted directories to find legal help. Don’t send money to strangers:

Guides

eyes on ice wiki

If someone is detained: what to do:

Know Your Rights

Printable “Know Your Rights” cards

If ICE comes to your door

If enforcement shows up at a workplace

Family preparedness

  1. Be aware of your surroundings
  2. Write a disaster plan on paper for if the unthinkable happens at your work, home, school, or any other place you spend a lot of time
    • Emergency contacts (paper, phone, radio frequencies)
    • meeting points
    • who will pick up kids/pets
    • who has keys
    • who can translate (if needed)
    • secret passphrases which can be used to quickly communicate while under duress or to prove who you are
  3. Document readiness
    • Keep copies of key documents (ID, lease, medication list, insurance, school info, pet records) in a “grab folder,” plus a secure digital backup. Search for “fireproof document bag” if you want extra security.
    • If you’re a U.S. citizen and anxious: a Real ID / passport card can reduce friction in many situations, but you still have the right to remain silent and to ask for counsel if questioned.
  4. Communication and Energy Backup
    • Memorize important phone numbers, radio frequencies, addresses, etc.
    • A paper copy of important phone numbers, radio frequencies, addresses, etc.
    • Portable Battery bank
    • Spare Charging Cable
    • An “anchor contact” that friends know to check in with.
  5. Transit plan (especially if you don’t have a car)
    • Map your nearest: friend’s place, a library, fire station, community center (warming/cooling), and safe daytime places you can wait if needed.
    • Keep a small “walk-out kit”: water, snacks, transit card, phone power, medications, and pet essentials.
  6. De-escalation + safety habits
    • Don’t open the door to unknown knocks.
    • Use a peephole / door camera if it helps you avoid opening the door
    • Buddy system with neighbors: “If you hear anything weird, text me first; if I don’t reply in X minutes, call.”

Helpful Readiness guides

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