REPORT IN LADS. IT'S HAPPENING.
IMMIGRATION HAS BROUGHT DEATH ITSELF TO CANADA.
REPORT IN LADS. IT'S HAPPENING.
IMMIGRATION HAS BROUGHT DEATH ITSELF TO CANADA.
It's not so good right now
When will people just admit they hate chinks?
When their apartment isn't owned by them.
So never.
They've readily done it before now.
hope everyone stocked up on ammo and basics before shit hits the fan in this perfect storm of bullshit.
>unironically being a chinadian in 2020
This morning at 10 AM the BC Health Officer will be doing an announcement. What will it be?
What should be done
>Full airport lockdown
>Schools closed
>Curfew in effect, enforced
>real quarantines for those infected and their family members, no self quarantines
>Non-essential businesses closed
>Reserves deployed to give out supplies
What will likely happen
>Schools closed
>minimized business hours
Thoughts? Bets? Horror stories? Tits for attention.
Not so much the immigration. More the tourism. I've never understood this rampant disease of needing to fly all over the fucking world to take pictures of things which have been photographed millions of times, photos which mostly get looked at once or twice then put away forever. People don't generally experience places they go anyway. They go there. They complain. They say 'wow' a few times. They come home tired and sunburned or with a wicked case of diarrhea, whatever. How about building yourself into a better person, building your own community into something livable that isn't owned by offshore investor criminals? Not interesting enough? You have to go overseas and pick up nasty diseases to bring home, really?
Canada is probably the only country that will come out on top after this virus has destroyed all the shitskin countries of earth. Maybe once all the ameriniggers and chinks are gone we can finally realise our collective ambition of creating the Intergalactic Hockey League
Tuesday:
>Just a flu
>pls wash hands
Sunday:
>actually we're shutting down every school in the province lol
Done and done. Reliable Guns had loads in there shopping yesterday, cases of ammo going out, but still lots on the shelves. Lot of guns too. No shortages I could see.
>thinking I can get guns and ammo
Northern Ontario chads, please bury my body in a field when you inherit the Earth.
never denied it
good because BCs basically empty when it comes to ammo, at least until the restocks come in.
im down, can i play for the leafs
>tfw you procrastinated getting your gun license.
My occupation is cable/internet guy for Bell Canada in downtown Montreal. I kinda hope that I quickly get infected and get well really fast and then forget about the whole thing thanks to my newly-acquired immunity.
I mean shit, I LITERALLY go install/repair the internet at foreign chinks appartments that came here to study at Mcgill, probably once a week or so. This is a terrible job in times like this
This essay is something a kind fellow contributed years back on Yas Forums about his experiences of the Yugoslavian war. Shit's fucked up, but very useful for maybe a couple or a few months from now when the big cities turn into war zones. Board won't let me paste in a PDF or whatever, so I'll just break it up into chunks with numbered headers if I can.
Any other single bros who are trying to figure out how they're going to get any ass if there's massive quarantines and lockdowns in effect? While dumb dumbs stock up on toilet paper, Chad is gonna be hoarding all the pussy in his bachelor pad. I need a legit strat to become a "super spreader" during this upcoming dry season.
1)
I am from Bosnia. You know, between 1992 and 1995, it was hell. For one year I lived, and survived, in a city with 6,000 people, without water, electricity, gasoline, medical help, civil defense, distribution service, any kind of traditional service or centralized rule.
Our city was blockaded by the army, and for one year life in the city turned into total crap. We had no army, no police, we only had armed groups – those armed protected their homes and families.
When it all started, some of us were better prepared, but most of the neighbors’ families had enough food only for a few days. Some had pistols, a few had AK-47s or shotguns.
After a month or two, gangs started operating, destroying everything. Hospitals, for example, turned into slaughterhouses. There was no more police. About 80% of the hospital staff were gone. I got lucky – my family at the time was fairly large (15 people in a large house, 6 pistols, 3 AKs), and we survived (most of us, at least).
2)
The Americans dropped MREs every 10 days, to help blockaded cities. This was never enough. Some – very few – had gardens. It took 3 months for the first rumors to spread of men dying from hunger and cold. We removed all the doors, the window frames from abandoned houses, ripped up the floors and burned the furniture for heat. Many died from diseases, especially from the water (two from my own family). We drank mostly rainwater, ate pigeons and even rats.
Money soon became worthless. We returned to an exchange. For a tin can of tushonka, you could have a woman (it is hard to speak of it, but it is true). Most of the women who sold themselves were desperate mothers.
Arms, ammunition, candles, lighters, antibiotics, gasoline, batteries and food. We fought for these things like animals. In these situations, it all changes. Men become monsters. It was disgusting.
All of Ontario will be infected by May 23rd if the current growth rate continues.
Ontarios first case was Jan 26th and we are at 145 now as of Mar 15th.
Fuck chinks smelly loud robots
3)
Strength was in numbers. A man living alone getting killed and robbed would be just a matter of time, even if he was armed.
Today me and my family are well prepared, I am well armed. I have experience.
It does not matter what will happen – an earthquake, a war, a tsunami, aliens, terrorists, economic collapse, uprising. The important part is that something will happen.
Here’s my experience: you can’t make it on your own. Don’t stay apart from your family, prepare together, choose reliable friends.
you fool
I was legitimately planning on getting it this month. Fucking hell.
4)
1. How to move safely in a city
The city was divided into communities along streets. Our street (15-20 homes) had patrols (5 armed men every week) to watch for gangs and for our enemies.
All the exchanges occurred in the street. About five kilometers away was an entire street for trading, all well organized, but going there was too dangerous because of the snipers. You could also get robbed by bandits. I only went there twice, when I needed something really rare (list of medicine, mainly antibiotics, of French origin).
Nobody used automobiles in the city: the streets were blocked by wreckage and by abandoned cars. Gasoline was very expensive. If one needed to go somewhere, that was done at night. Never travel alone or in groups that were too big – always 2-3 men. All armed, travel swift, in the shadows, cross streets through ruins, not along open streets.
There were many gangs 10-15 men strong, some as large as 50 men. But there were also many normal men, like you and me, fathers and grandfathers, who killed and robbed. There were no “good” and “bad” men. Most were in the middle and ready for the worst.
5)
2. What about wood? Your home city is surrounded by woods, why did you burn doors and furniture?
There were not that many woods around the city. It was very beautiful – restaurants, cinemas, schools, even an airport. Every tree in the city and in the city park was cut down for fuel in the first two months.
Without electricity for cooking and heat – we burned anything that burned. Furniture, doors, flooring – that wood burns swiftly. We had no suburbs or suburban farms. The enemy was in the suburbs. We were surrounded. Even in the city, you never knew who was the enemy at any given point.
3. What knowledge was useful to you in that period?
To imagine the situation a bit better, you should know it was practically a return to the Stone Age.
For example, I had a container of cooking gas. But I did not use it for heat – that would be too expensive! I attached a nozzle to it I made myself and used to fill lighters. Lighters were precious.
If a man brought an empty lighter, I would fill it and he would give me a tin of food or a candle.
I was a paramedic. In these conditions, my knowledge was my wealth. Be curious and skilled. In these conditions, the ability to fix things is more valuable than gold.
Items and supplies will inevitably run out, but your skills will keep you fed.
I wish to say this: learn to fix things, shoes, or people.
My neighbor, for example, knew how to make kerosene for lamps. He never went hungry.
>Retards who cant help but travel to shitholes has nearly put my city on lockdown
Gonna quit my job soon this is getting fucking stupid
6)
4. If you had 3 months to prepare now, what would you do?
Three months? Run away from the country? (joking)
Today I know everything can collapse really fast. I have a stockpile of food, hygiene items, batteries… enough to last me for 6 months.
I live in a very secure flat and own a home with a shelter in a village 5 kilometers away. Another six-month supply there too. That’s a small village, most people there are well prepared. The war had taught them.
I have four weapons, and 2,000 rounds for each.
I have a garden and have learned gardening. Also I have a good instinct – you know, when everyone around you keeps telling you it’ll all be fine, but I know – it will all collapse.
I have strength to do what I need to protect my family. Because when it all collapses, you must be ready to do “bad” things to keep your children alive and protect your family.
Surviving on your own is practically impossible. Even if you’re armed and ready – if you’re alone, you’ll die. I have seen that happen many times.
Families and groups, well prepared, with skills and knowledge in various fields – that’s much better.
too late now
7)
5. What should you stockpile?
That depends. If you plan to live by theft – all you need is weapons and ammo. Lots of ammo.
If not – more food, hygiene items, batteries, accumulators, little trading items (knives, lighters, flints, soap). Also alcohol of a type that keeps well. The cheapest whiskey is a good trading item.
Many people died from insufficient hygiene. You’ll need simple items in great amounts. For example, garbage bags. Lots of them. And toilet paper. Non-reusable dishes and cups – you’ll need lots of them. I know that because we didn’t have any at all.
As for me, a supply of hygiene items is perhaps more important than food. You can shoot a pigeon, you can find a plant to eat. You can’t find or shoot any disinfectant.
Disinfectant, detergents, bleach, soap, gloves, masks…
First-aid skills, washing wounds and burns. Perhaps you will find a doctor – and will not be able to pay him.
Learn to use antibiotics. It’s good to have a stockpile of them.
You should choose the simplest weapons. I carry a Glock .45, I like it, but it’s a rare gun here – so I have two TT pistols too (everyone has them and ammo is common).
I don’t like Kalashnikovs, but again, same story – everyone has them, so do I.
You must own small, unnoticeable items. For example: a generator is good, but 1,000 Bic lighters are better. A generator will attract attention if there’s any trouble, but 1,000 lighters are compact, cheap, and can always be traded.
We usually collected rainwater into 4 large barrels and then boiled it. There was a small river, but the water in it became very dirty very fast.
It’s also important to have containers for water – barrels and buckets.
8)
6. Were gold and silver useful?
Yes. I personally traded all the gold in the house for ammunition.
Sometimes we got our hands on money – dollars and deutschmarks. We bought some things for them, but this was rare and prices were astronomical – for example a can of beans cost $30-40. The local money quickly became worthless. Everything we needed, we traded for through barter.
7. Was salt expensive?
Yes, but coffee and cigarettes were even more expensive. I had lots of alcohol and traded it without problems. Alcohol consumption grew over 10 times as compared to peacetime. Perhaps today it’s more useful to keep a stock of cigarettes, lighters, and batteries. They take up less space.
At this time I was not a survivalist. We had no time to prepare – several days before the shit hit the fan, the politicians kept repeating over the TV that everything was going according to plan, there’s no reason to be concerned. When the sky fell on our heads, we took what we could.
At least I'm not a mongoloid. Even Finns are whiter than you, esti.
9)
8. Was it difficult to purchase firearms? What did you trade for arms and ammunition?
After the war, we had guns in every house. The police confiscated lots of guns at the beginning of the war. But most of them, we hid. Now I have one legal gun that I have a license for. Under the law, that’s called a temporary collection. If there is unrest, the government will seize all the registered guns. Never forget that.
You know, there are many people who have one legal gun – but also illegal guns if that one gets seized. If you have good trade goods, you might be able to get a gun in a tough situation, but remember, the most difficult time is the first days, and perhaps you won’t have enough time to find a weapon to protect your family. To be disarmed in a time of chaos and panic is a bad idea.
In my case – there was a man who needed a car battery for his radio, he had shotguns – I traded the accumulator for both of them. Sometimes I traded ammunition for food, and a few weeks later traded food for ammunition. Never did the trade at home, never in great amounts.
Few people knew how much, and what, I keep at home.
The most important thing is to keep as many things as possible in terms of space and money. Eventually you’ll understand what is more valuable.
Correction: I’ll always value weapons and ammunition the most. Second? Maybe gas masks and filters.
10)
9. What about security?
Our defenses were very primitive. Again, we weren’t ready, and we used what we could. The windows were shattered, and the roofs in a horrible state after the bombings. The windows were blocked – some with sandbags, others with rocks.
I blocked the fence gate with wreckage and garbage, and used a ladder to get across the wall. When I came home, I asked someone inside to pass over the ladder. We had a fellow on our street that completely barricaded himself in his house. He broke a hole in the wall, creating a passage for himself into the ruins of the neighbor’s house. A sort of secret entrance.
Maybe this would seem strange, but the most protected houses were looted and destroyed first. In my area of the city there were beautiful houses, with walls, dogs, alarms and barred windows. People attacked them first. Some held out, others didn’t – it all depended how many hands and guns they had inside…
I think defense is very important – but it must be carried out unobtrusively. If you are in a city and SHTF comes, you need a simple, non-flashy place, with lots of guns and ammo.
How much ammo? As much as possible.
Make your house as unattractive as you can.
Right now I own a steel door, but that’s just against the first wave of chaos. After that passes, I will leave the city to rejoin a larger group of people, my friends and family.
There were some situations during the war… there’s no need for details, but we always had superior firepower, and a brick wall, on our side.
We also constantly kept someone watching the streets. Quality organization is paramount in case of gang attacks.
11)
Shooting was constantly heard in the city.
Our perimeter was defended primitively – all the exits were barricaded and had little firing slits. Inside we had at least five family members ready for battle at any time, and one man in the street, hidden in a shelter.
We stayed home through the day to avoid sniper fire.
At first, the weak perish. Then the rest fight.
During the day, the streets were practically empty due to sniper fire. Defenses were oriented towards short-range combat alone. Many died if they went out to gather information, for example. It’s important to remember we had no information, no radio, no TV – only rumors and nothing else.
There was no organized army, every man fought. We had no choice. Everybody was armed, ready to defend themselves.
You should not wear quality items in the city – someone will murder you and take them. Don’t even carry a “pretty” long arm, it will attract attention.
Let me tell you something: if SHTF starts tomorrow, I’ll be humble. I’ll look like everyone else. Desperate, fearful. Maybe I’ll even shout and cry a little bit.
Pretty clothing is excluded altogether. I will not go out in my new tactical outfit to shout: “I have come! You’re doomed, bad guys!” No, I’ll stay aside, well armed, well prepared, waiting and evaluating my possibilities, with my best friend or brother.
Super-defenses, super-guns are meaningless. If people think they should steal your things, that you’re profitable – they will. It’s only a question of time and the amount of guns and hands.
>tfw work at airport, get the day off
>heil'd, based and redpilled
12) - last section of the essay:
10. How was the situation with toilets?
We used shovels and a patch of earth near the house. Does it seem dirty? It was. We washed with rainwater or in the river – but most of the time the latter was too dangerous. We had no toilet paper, and if we had any, I would have traded it away.
It was a “dirty” business.
Let me give you a piece of advice: you need guns and ammo first – and second, everything else. Literally EVERYTHING! All depends on the space and money you have.
If you forget something, there’ll always be someone to trade with for it – but if you forget weapons and ammo, there will be no access to trading for you.
I don’t think big families are extra mouths. Big families means both more guns and strength – and from there, everyone prepares on his own.
11. How did people treat the sick and the injured?
Most injuries were from gunfire. Without a specialist and without equipment, if an injured man found a doctor somewhere, he had about a 30% chance of survival.
It ain’t the movies. People died. Many died from infections of superficial wounds. I had antibiotics for 3-4 uses – for the family, of course.
People died foolishly quite often. Simple diarrhea will kill you in a few days without medicine, with limited amounts of water.
There were many skin diseases and food poisonings… nothing to it.
Many used local plants and pure alcohol – enough for the short term, but useless in the long term.
Hygiene is very important… as well as having as much medicine as possible. Especially antibiotics…
>can I always lose
Sure thing bud
Haven't been in a while, but I'd bet Italian Sporting Goods would still have loads of stuff too. Older shops like these understand the importance of keeping good levels of stock on hand, for these sorts of times.
same xD
If this ends up as a nothing burger and I value my life enough for some reason I'll get one.
Great stuff user, thanks, saved it all.
Canada is so irrelevant that not even virus is interested in it. Btw Canada isn't owned by Chinese, neither is Australia. So their spread is rather slow.
I know right! Caught this guy's writing at the end of a doomed thread on Yas Forums in the first year I visited the evil chans, maybe 2013. Was amazed at the clarity of his story, the obvious utility of such an experience for others in an age where preparedness seems to have been relegated to 'tin foil hat' types in the popular culture. Europeans generally get it, or at least the older generations. Shit can happen, and if you don't have a plan, shit will shit all over you and your family.
>requires jewish subscription scheme
pastebin the article for us
>tfw read the entire thing and realized I am going to get murdered for my luxury soup within the first 5 days
No way in Hell we're the same species.
I saw a documentary link the other day about what happened in that city during the war. Anyone have a link, it was called 87 days in hell maybe?
>its just a flu
>just wash your hands youll be fine
>its no big deal
>theres a 97% chance of survival its not a threat at all
>oh btw we are shutting down fucking everything
>plz dont leave your home for a month
>closing down schools now
>its just a flu bro its no big deal okay
Fucking leafs
watch "the death of Yugoslavia" on youtube if you want to supplement your understanding. Its brilliant and gets right into the heart of how things went from bad to worse to catastrophic in the span of a few years.
What is with this luxury soap gag?
What's this sort of thing called? Brinksmanship? No, that's not it. I think it's called chickenshit. Yeah, that's better. Trudeau and his crew are chickenshits. Hiding out for 5 weeks while getting full pay. Hiding out with the wife and kids in the old palace, talking on the driveway once in a while so Canadians can hear reassuring noises with lots of heavy breathing and dramatic pauses, so as to keep us from killing each other. In his own tiny little boy way, Justin is doing even less good for his employers than Xi did for his. He's going to get a whole lot of us killed with this colossal failure. And if I live through it I'm going to laugh at anyone who voted for him. Or rather I'm going to laugh at them even harder than usual.
>he doesn't have a stockpile of luxury soups to trade for good and eat to keep up his norfmen strength
ngmi
The leadership in this country have utterly failed us, only QUEBEC of all places is really taking this seriously. The borders should have been closed and the flights halted two weeks ago.