Appearances can be deceiving. The problem is that many people assume the likelyhood of an event happeneding based on thier own "gut feeling" or inacurate processes. Based soley on the fact that the event has not happened or hasn't happened in a long time is erroneous. Its like an airplane crash, it hasn't happened in a long time...does that make it less likely to happen or more likely? You can play with numbers all day long to find some faux static average of your percentage of being in an airplane crash, but the fact is you cannot be certain. The millions of dynamic details within the system (the airplane itself) simply prove an incident is going to happen. Its not if, but when....it could be the landing gear problem that kept you on the ground for two hours before take off, but something is going to happen. When you start adding in human qualities to a system the assumptions can be blinding....like for instance saying the likelyhood of a virus mutation being very slim even in the face of data showing the mutation of viruses actively happening quite frequently.michaeledward said:The reasonableness of a preparation would appear to be proportional to the likelyhood of the event for which one is preparing is likely to occur.
I wouldn't really think of going to the grocery store as being preperation, I do that anyway and the food I get from one week to the next is not goign to make a bit of difference in a survival situation.michaeledward said:I am quite certain that I am going to need to consume food over the next several days, therefore, it is reasonable to make weekly trips to the grocery store.
To set the records straight, I'm not saying be scared of everything, in fact according to your previous posts you are more "prepared" than I am, but writing off a potential danger as "scare tactics" is turning a blind eye.
Thats exactly my point. Our certainty is based on what? The data we can put in front of ourselves and our own feelings of saftey. Does your certainty about the possiblilty of your water supply being contaminated have any effect whatsoever on the actual possibility of that happening? The fact that things have been constantly available in the past is no basis of future availability. These seemingly small insignificant assumptions can inadvertantly put you in a situation that could kill you. This could be said of mountain climbers, hunters, fighters, or city civilians. The truth is in the facts but how do we get the true facts? Does the seemingly remote possibility hold enough weight to keep you immune from a disaster such as this?michaeledward said:I am less certain of the possibility of my municipalities public water supply becoming contaminated, or my electric stove not being able to function for several days. While these things have been constantly available to me in the past, and there is no reason to expect them to not be regularly available in the future, that possibility does exist (especially in winter in New England).
The possibility of genetic mutation of a virus, seems even more remote. Then, if a mutation does occur, it needs to be a mutation that enables human to human infection. I wonder if the possibility of a mutation of the virus that makes it inert is equally likely to a mutation that creates a pandemic.
You take all this with a grain of salt, and for the record I own no fliter masks, dried foods, or even propane supplies....I do however see the possibility of a survival situation around "bird flu" and find it disconcerting to see people ignore it. Its the same as martial arts....I see the possibility of needing to use my training heavily remote....I do however still train for self defense.
By what means? Only in our own minds. What you find so remote to even accept I may accept as quite possible. To get heavy and go psychobably (is that a word?) our minds will accept the possibility of things differently according to our life experiences, training, and mental make-up. The fact may be that bird flu will mutate to human form is a 5% chance (just pulled that out of the air) but how you and I react to that data could be very different. Will one of us be right and one wrong?michaeledward said:So, reasonableness, I think, is something that can be quantified.
I see the actuality of bird flu mutating and causing a "pandemic" that will actually affect me personally as very minute....however I'm open enough to accept even what I consider as minute still possible. Therefore preparing for said possibility is neither rash nor "crazy". What I would consider rash is ignoring the possibility and writing it off as political "scare tactics" to keep the general populous under control.
7sm