Are you prepared
for World War Three?
When that defining moment finally comes,
will you have the time to remember
what you could have done to stop it?
By John Kaminski
skylax@comcast.net
Let's pretend, just for the moment, that this is a hypothetical
question.
Let's pretend, just for argument's sake, in the comfort of your own
easy chair, in front of your own big screen TV, just a few easy steps
away from your favorite, anxiety-reducing snacks in your refrig, that
this is just an academic exercise in geopolitical and psychological
speculation, a polite brainstorming session that imaginary participants
might conduct if certain coincidental worst case scenarios were to come
to pass ... all at the same time.
And let us acknowledge, in the calm certainty of our own typically
secure routines, that any resemblance of this imaginary debate to
actual persons and events living or dead may be purely coincidental.
OK? Got it? Pretend it's hypothetical. Just for fun. Then let's begin.
Are you ready for World War Three?
What kind of pathetic paranoid poppycock is that? What IS this? Another
Y2K drill? Much ado about nothing, I think.
Remember. You're pretending it's hypothetical. You agreed.
Oh, all right. Let's see. Mmmmmm .... of course I'm not ready. Nobody
is ready for World War Three. You CAN'T get ready for that.
What will you do when it happens?
Sit here and be vaporized, I guess. What could anybody do?
So ... does that mean you're not ready?
Of course I'm not ready for World War Three! Is anybody ready for World
War Three?
Yes, I think there are some people who are ready?
Oh yeah? Who?
Well, three types of groups, at least. First, there are the people who
are already victims of major wars, the people in Palestine, Iraq,
Afghanistan, Serbia, Colombia, not to mention Burma, the Philippines,
Sudan, Zimbabwe, Congo, and certain other countries, people who are
already scavenging in often-radioactive garbage dumps just to make ends
meet; many of their relatives or children have already been killed by
invaders, and they're just living hand to mouth, not caring whether the
food they eat or the things they find might be radioactive or not,
because when your expected life span is only a few more weeks or
months, you don't much care about those things. Survival becomes a
day-by-day operation. If the superpowers who have these weapons destroy
themselves by using them, that would be good news for the folks
routinely diving in dumpsters.
Second, there are the people who plan and wish to execute nuclear wars.
They have already built themselves secure bunkers miles beneath the
earth's surface. There are many in the U.S. and Europe. The figure they
can ride it out, and they have a new, secret technology that actually
detoxifies radioactive contamination, but they're keeping it under
wraps until after the Big One so then they can come out when the coast
is clear and continue making scads of money doing two things: cleaning
up radioactive rubble and repossessing real estate whose owners have
been obliterated, are slowly and agonizingly died of radiation
poisoning, or simply have scampered off to more hospitable climes.
Third, there are the people who saw it coming and had the foresight to
move to remote locations in the Southern Hemisphere. As long as
widespread nuclear explosions didn't trigger a pole shift, those in the
lower Southern Hemisphere would be relatively safe from the nuclear
winter that will follow World War Three and render the entire Northern
Hemisphere completely uninhabitable. The winds in the world are pretty
much hemisphere specific, so that the winds that blow around the world
in the Northern Hemisphere don't cross over into the southern, and vice
versa, although with the magnitude and volume of these explosions in
all-out nuclear war, there is bound to be some crossover.
Humph. Sonofagun. You have this all worked out, don't you?
What will you do when it actually happens?
When what actually happens?
When World War Three actually happens.
How will I find out about it?
Well, there are several ways you could find out about it. If you lived
in an urban area like New York or Beijing or Cairo or Teheran, you'd
probably find out about it when you saw a flash of light brighter than
anything you've ever imagined, but it would last for only a millisecond
and then you'd see nothing ever again. If, like most people, you lived
in towns moderately close to these cities, you'd probably feel these
humongous thumps and wonder why your house was disintegrating all
around you. If you lived way out in the sticks you'd start to see these
radiant atmospheric flashes, feel relatively gentle ground tremors, and
then in a few hours you'd see a smoky blackness creeping toward you
from the direction of the cities that would grow blacker and blacker as
the hours passed. Depending on each person's individual perceptual
skills, it would be a matter of minutes or hours before you realized
you would never see the sun again, because you will never survive the
abject cold that would be produced by the sun being blotted out for
probably from five to 15 years, except, as I said before, in extremely
lucky places in the way Southern Hemisphere. Didn’t you ever wonder why
all those Israelis are buying up huge chunks of real estate in
Patagonia?
You mean I won't see something on television and be able to briefly
feel a pang of remorse about someone else being killed far away, and
then be able to put it out of my mind so I could watch Monday Night
Football with my usual intense focus?
Not likely. Here’s a variation on the initial question. What would you
do if you got information that you really believed and trusted that
World War Three was about to start in a few months? What steps would
you take to prepare yourself?
How would I know I could trust the information?
Well, you’d hear it from the sources you always trusted. Your
newspapers, your TV, maybe even from some particularly reliable
Internet site.
But would I believe it? Would I be willing to give up everything I’ve
worked for all my life, and just bolt into the wild blue yonder because
I read something some journalist, no matter how well connected, might
have just dreamed up?
Well, let’s say you had an inside source in the secret government, and
he told you about the plan. Let’s say you regarded it as having the
authenticity of all those insider stock tips he’d given you over the
years that had made you a bundle. Someone who could discourse
effortlessly on Masonic kingpin Albert Pike’s 1871 prediction that
there would be THREE World Wars and final one would begin in the Middle
East and erase both Zionized Christendom and Islamic world in one
mighty stroke. And someone who had scary connections with alphabet
intelligence agencies.
Yes, I see. What would I do? Hmmm.
Would you run, or would you try to alert others?
Oh dogbiscuits! You know what it’s like to tell people that you really
know what’s going on, and that they don’t. They think you’ve got
marbles rattling around in your brain, and they just ignore you, at
best. At worst, they call Homeland Security and the men in the little
white coats with the large guns show up at your door. At least, you
become socially ostracized for not going along with what everybody else
believes.
So which would you do?
Well, I guess I’d try to find out if the tip was real or not, and if I
determined it WAS real, I’d try to alert the most important people I
know to see if they could do something about it.
What would make you decide if the tip was real or not?
Well, our best sources are on TV, I think. At least that’s what
everybody believes. Most people don’t believe something is really real
unless they see it on television.
So you’re saying that what you see on TV is actually real?
No, I’m not that naive. I know stuff that appears on the news is often
shaded by those who own the TV networks to inflict the spin they want
to put on most world events. Hell, that’s how we got in all those wars.
So what if someone on TV, highly reputable, came on and predicted
all-out nuclear war? Would you act on that?
Probably not. I wouldn’t believe him.
OK, say you were certain of the tip you received being real. Then what
would you do?
I’d call the police, then my congressperson.
And what would you do if they all said you were nuts? And then they
said they knew who the bad guys really were, because they had this
evidence that they couldn’t really tell you about because of National
Security, but they were going to nuke them all to smithereens.
I don’t know. Cry? Or run into the street screaming.
OK, one more question. If you had the power to impact a large number of
people and the money to arrange some effective plan of action to the
catch the people who were planning to use nuclear weapons, and you were
certain that they were going to carry out their plan on the basis of at
least 50 years of continuing atrocities perpetrated against innocent
people which they later blamed on completely innocent patsies, what
would you do ..... ?
John Kaminski is a writer who lives on the Gulf Coast of Florida and
whose works are seen on hundreds of websites around the world. These
have been collected into two anthologies, “America’s Autopsy Report”
and “The Perfect Enemy.” He has also written the best-selling booklet,
“The Day America Died: Why You Shouldn’t Believe the Official Story of
What Happened on September 11, 2001,” which is aimed at those who still
believe the government’s story of what happened on that tragic day. For
more information go to www.johnkaminski.com |