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Darwin Weeps: Warning Labels and Technology Render the Survival Mindset Obsolete

3-6-2019 < SGT Report 66 722 words
 

  • Do not ingest. ~ Lava lamp

  • This formula may cause drowsiness, if affected do not operate heavy machinery or drive a vehicle. ~ Infant pain relief liquid

  • Do not attempt to stop chain with hands. ~  Chainsaw

  • Peel fruit from cellophane backing before eating. ~ Fruit By the Foot

  • Product will be hot after heating. ~ Mark and Spencer’s Bread Pudding

  • “Do not use orally.” ~ Toilet brush

  • This is not a lifesaving device.  ~ Beachball

  • Wearing of this garment does not enable you to fly. ~ Superhero cape from a Halloween costume


Good grief. So, when the SHTF, in the midst of a warning label-free disaster, what’s going to happen to all of the people who required these labels to survive?


I’ll tell you what’s going to happen to them.  You’ll have people trying to open a can of peaches with a giant butcher knife, in the process nearly removing a digit.  People who are accustomed to being nannied through every step of their days will be stymied by basic survival skills like sanitation, navigation (sans GPS), and the acquisition of safe drinking water.


When I was in Bosnia recently with Selco, I was in awe of the fact that they don’t have warning labels, guard rails, or any other protective things keeping stupid people alive. He got a good laugh from my shock over the fact that a scenic lookout had no railing to keep people from plunging to their deaths.


And then there’s technology, making folks dumber…


Dumbing us down, even more, is the dependence on technology.


Don’t get me wrong, I am a chronic Googler. If I don’t know some random bit of trivia, I’m that gal typing it into a search bar at the first opportunity.  “Who was the first person to…Holy cow, Google. Why would you even…Just NO.” Anyhow, back to technology.  As wonderful as it is to have a world of information in a handheld device, you still have to be able to think things through for yourself.


People have become so dependent on their navigation systems that reading a physical, honest-to-goodness-piece-of-paper map has become a lost art.  Not only that, but some folks rely more on their GPS than their common sense, sort of like these tourists who drove right into the Pacific Ocean because the nav system told them to.



And what about situational awareness?


That’s another skill that seems to have gone the way of the dodo. Have you ever seen a person walking down the street so engrossed in texting that they don’t even see an obstacle in their path? Sort of like this woman and the giant fountain?



What if the situation was more dangerous than falling into a giant fountain? What if you were busy texting and there was an armed robbery and you walked right into the middle of it? What if your eyes were glued to the screen and there was some unexpected wild animal, like, I dunno, a bear?


Because…that actually happened.



 Self-reliance is being bred out of society


It’s fun to laugh at these examples of life in today’s America, but there’s an underlying note of impending tragedy.


With all of this constant nannying, we have a society of giant toddlers. It isn’t really their fault. They’ve become accustomed to a society in which people never have to think. They don’t have to produce food, deal with injuries, or even work for a living. Heat is the turn of a dial, entertainment doesn’t require reading skills, and products get thrown away instead of repaired.  People don’t learn to predict impending danger by thinking the scenario through, and when danger does occur, they wait for heroes instead of rescuing themselves.  They don’t even have to hear unpleasant things, because they can just say the magical incantation, “I’m offended” and the offensive unpleasantness is summarily banned and made illegal.


The coddling makes it even more difficult for the overprotected to accept it when something bad happens. Acceptance is the first step of surviving any disaster. I have written about the 3 steps of survival, and those steps are completely foreign to many of today’s general public.


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