Posted on 12/12/2016 12:30:37 PM PST by HomerBohn
The 21st Century is inching ever closer towards chaos and the time to get out of the big city is upon us.
With economic conditions, growing crises, desperate populations looking to scratch by, and more hatred and division than at any previous point in American history, the city has become a dangerous and unruly setting and finding yourseld in one that is falling apart could be the worst mistake you ever make.
People are living in bigger urban zones than ever before these megacities are the hotspots of global activity. But many are also proving to be the most dangerous place to be in a collapse. Crime is rampant, order is shaken and many people become willing to take advantage of the situation. Many areas are vulnerable to natural disasters, and have already lost control during past emergencies.
In other places, widespread unemployment is simply taking its toll through increases in theft and violence. Whatever the reason, there are many places where things are falling apart, badly.
As Wired reported, disaster is looming on a worldwide basis, but some are approaching total collapse, thanks to a storm of factors:
Using data on 2,100 cities, Robert Muggah has found which factors make an area more likely to become violent, unsafe and fragile. The data show 30 cities on the brink of disaster and what could cause it.
Cities were rated based on factors including: conflict, fragility, population growth, unemployment rate, access to services, income inequality, air pollution, homicide rate, killings in terrorist attacks, political violence and the risk of natural disaster.
Natural disaster has proved very disruptive lately, as tsunamis and earthquakes have recently devastated New Zealand and rattled nearby Australia. Though things are fairly stable in these Western democracies, their geographical vulnerability to serious tectonic activity makes their civilization far than stable. Auckland, New Zealand made the list for risky cities.
But Haiti was even harder hit. The 2010 earthquake caused widespread devastation in a place that was already one of the poorest on the planet. The 2016 hurricane in Haiti proved that despite billions of dollars in donation, philanthropy and intervention by the likes of the Clinton Foundation, Haiti was still extremely vulnerable. Hundreds of thousands of people were once again displaced as their homes were destroyed; local governments and global NGOs did little to nothing to secure basic necessities, and the place remains one crisis away from total instability. Port-au-Prince, the capital and most populous city there is already a very risky and poverty prone place, and could become much worse in the wake of a disaster.
Of course, any number of urban areas in the war-torn Middle East and perpetual conflict zones of Africa has also made for very dangerous cities, with populations on the brink of disaster, and many individuals vulnerable to crime and violence on a daily basis. Ibb, Yemen, Kirkuk, Iraq, Aden, Yemen, Kabul, Afghanistan and Mosul, Iraq have become some of the worst locales, along with cities spread across the Congo, Mogadishu, Somalia and other highly disputed areas.
Brazils megacities are so saturated with the urban poor, and short on basic resources including drinking water, they literally millions of people are on the brink. Riots are possible, and a survival crisis could factor in for Sao Paolo, where 8 million people are at risk of having no access to water. Predictably, many cities in Colombia remain extremely fragile due to the ongoing drug war conflicts that have claimed lives, and left millions of people at the mercy of gang rule.
Venezuela has proven to be a special case, of near precision collapse, as its currency tanks and economic warfare brings people to their knees as they are forced to wait in line for rations, trade on the black market and deal in worthless cash. Socialism has worsened the problems created by the emergency drop in the oil prices. Caracas remains the biggest pool of hungry, poor and increasingly fed up people.
Guatamala City, Mixco and Villa Neuva, Guetemala as well as San Pedro Sula, Honduras were identified as particularly vulnerable cities in Central America, as refugees continue to seek amnesty in the United States to escape the ongoing turmoil in their own countries.
Perhaps surprising to some, many major European cities are quite vulnerable as well to global economic pressures via sharp increases in immigration, rape scandals and social concerns about terrorism.
London, UK is one of the wealthiest cities, and yet it faces enormous pressures from overwhelming immigration, from growing economic disparity and from cultural clashes, threats of terrorism and now, fighting between political factions over Brexit and other issues.
The Eastern bloc is especially vulnerable to these pressures that could lead to a growing unrest. France, Germany, Sweden and Norway also face major instability over immigration and cultural issues.
But some of the most unstable cities on the planet rank among those in the United States.
Places like Baltimore, Detroit, Washington D.C., New York, Philadelphia and other cities across the map are still deeply divided often police and race issues. Many have seen serious riots, looting and unrest. These social wedge issues are still being pushed from moneyed political interests, while political divide after the direction of the country has become sharp.
Dallas, Texas just suspended pension payments for some of its civil servants, a sign that financial insolvency could create an epidemic during the next crisis. Several states, like California, have over promised benefits to state employees in the pension programs, without ever planning to pay for them. If people lose it, Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Diego and the whole of the surrounding areas could simply erupt. Similar problems have left Detroit, Michigan and Puerto Rico, the commonwealth island, extremely vulnerable to bankruptcy and economic apocalypse that could contaminate the nation and global within hours.
If a natural disaster, such as a hurricane, hits the East or Gulf Coast, tens of millions of people could be caught up in traffic, locked in cities without food, and desperate to cling to order and survive. Likewise, if a major earthquake hit the West Coast, millions could be displaced and left without many options. Thats when things turn ugly.
The world is reaching a tipping point, and much chaos and instability could come crashing down anytime now. Many cities have made themselves open targets for collapse, with economic normalcy already hanging by a thread and populations already restless and growing increasingly discontent.
Be prepared. These things are building, and there are quite a few places youd rather not be when the SHTF.
Same here.
“The 20 most violent cities were all in Latin America.”
Ejemplos:
Guatemala, Guatemala
Homicides [in 2011]: 2,248
Inhabitants: 3,014,060
Chihuahua, Mexico
Homicides [in 2011]: 690
Inhabitants: 831,693
Caracas Venezuela
Homicides [in 2011]: 3,164
Inhabitants: 3,205,463
Juárez, Mexico
Homicides [in 2011]: 1,974
Inhabitants: 1,335,890
Acapulco, Mexico
Homicides [in 2011]: 1,029
Inhabitants: 804,412
San Pedro Sula, Honduras
Homicides [in 2011]: 1,143
Inhabitants: 719,447
Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/most-dangerous-cities-in-the-world-2012-10?op=1#ixzz3han7YETo
In their lifetimes, residents of those cities stand about a 4% to 10% chance of getting murdered.
You don’t want to import a murder problem like those countries have.
They are all foreign cities. Mexico City and London are in the list. That’s about as close as it comes.
Earthlink.net has been hacked and is offline!”
Have tons of business emails I need to attend to and all I see is message saying they are doing maintenance. Any idea what happened?
Yes, and I did so with that in mind 8 years ago. Small town life is so much better.
The big cities are lost and will look more and more like Mad Max as time goes on.
Thank God those politicians took away law-abiding citizen’s guns in the cities, now the thieves, murders, and rapists will be safe.
I grew up in D-FW there and still visit my father there. The traffic is horrible and crime is much worse than the old days. My father lives in a very nice upscale neighborhood. He has a gated driveway and a gate that makes it difficult to get around the other side of the house.
He was robbed at gunpoint in his own garage 18 months ago.
The gov’t employees will strike and all the agency’s funds will go to pensions, cutting off the services, thereby causing the riots.
Katrina refugees?
Ping
World-wide cities were rated based on factors including: conflict, fragility, population growth, unemployment rate, access to services, income inequality,
air pollution, homicide rate, killings in terrorist attacks, political violence and the risk of natural disaster.
Evaluate your current situation and community to the above cited issues.
Get to know your neighbors, and what assistance you can provide them, and they can provide you.
Don't be afraid to ask for help befoe a crisis occurs; that request may just establish a sense of community trust. But remember OPSEC (!)
It is the Prepper Way of community protection, and organized survival. .
.
Hat tip to TADSLOS !
Been out of the big city (LA) for over 10 years; now live in a remote, thriving, metropolitan city of ONE THOUSAND ONE HUNDRED TWELVE PEOPLE (and I am still 14 miles from that on dirt roads).
Nearest city of any size is Redding, Ca. and that’s over 87 miles away on two lane, very winding, mountain roads.
Thanks for the ping, TIK!
OPSEC involves diversifying your resources
never putting "all your eggs in one basket",
scattering your resources, and be tight lipped about all of what you have available,
and secure and 'hold back' some of your resources for your own family's survival.
That's called Personal Responsibility.
I left city life in 1981. Been a country woman making it on my own. 10 years ago met a great guy at work but he lived in the big city. Leaving the country was a deal breaker to me and since we were both self-employed in a mobil field he moved. I’ve had lots of entertainment the past 10 years at his expense simply from city/country differences.
8PM - no, you can’t run get fast food,
Sunday afternoon - no the hardware store isn’t open
11PM - nope, can’t grab milk or bread
Permit to add on to house? ROFL- what permit? We don’t do permits
Excess trash? Burn it. Only reason not to is a burn VFD burn ban and we DO respect those. No, don’t need a permit, container etc. Just sense.
Getting a ticket for a) excess company parking on grass b) working on car in the driveway c) parking on the wrong side of the road. “No””No” and “No”
He’s ready for more acres and more privacy now. Got him trained up.
I live in the Middle of Nowhere—and that’s not an accident.
But that would add to my commute.
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