Выживание после Кирдыка - опыт Аргентины
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Выживание после Кирдыка - опыт Аргентины
На мой взгляд, этот текст имеет смысл если не внимательно изучить, то по-минимуму просто распечатать и положить в emergency box вместе с документами, наличными и медикаментами. Конечно, не дай бог, если ситуация дойдёт до подобного Кирдыка, но всё же пример Исландии (или Аргентины) сильно настораживает, принимая во внимание развивающуюся ситуацию с глобальной экономикой.
А это было написано одним исландцем 4 дня назад:
"...Here's a short status on social conditions and banking conditions in Iceland:
- All the (failed) banks are still open and operating, internally at least, they never closed down. Just new ownership (government) and only domestic banking.
- No way of transferring money out of the country.
- If you're going abroad, foreign currency is rationed down to something like €300, and you have to show your flight ticket to prove you're going overseas!
- Using creditcard and debitcards seems to work just fine internally. Not so abroad, although creditcards seem to work in some countries (I've heard).
- Icelanders in other countries are in real trouble getting money to where they are. Some only have a few euros to live on. Things better get back to normal or they're gonna start eating from trashcans (I'm pretty sure they'd rather starve).
- No gasoline shortages or rationing. Normal.
- No food shortages or rationing. ALTHOUGH, I'm going to verify this tomorrow, Sunday, as I haven't checked in almost a week now. Going to take pictures of the supermarket shelves and post here.
- No real protesting. Just 200-300 people who protested outside the central bank the other day.
- No riots, no crimes, no violence of any sort.
- Traffic is down, and people are driving more slowly and carefully, the police has noted.
- The TV news only had 1/3 of the program dedicated to the banking meltdown, instead of the full program just two days ago.
- Personally, my anxiousness is returning to normal levels :>
- People have given up doing bank-runs, serves really no point anymore. You can get your ISK crowns no problem, it's just not worth anything!
- Prices haven't gone up (yet). But just wait, they gonna spike a lot soon!
Either Icelanders are surprisingly calm, or we just have a very large inventory of supplies. It's only a question of WHEN we will run out.
We ship a lot of our supplies from overseas, and shipments are maybe only sent one, two or three times a month. Since stores only receive shipments from overseas maybe once a month they have a large inventory of supplies in the back.
But reading SHTF scenario details, I would have thought supplies would run out after 1-2 days. Maybe U.S. stores are different from Icelandic ones, that is by having supplies of only 2-3 days instead of 3-4 weeks.
I'm just glad that we had the foresight of brewing our own beer, so we don't need to import it. HALLELUJAH!!! That's the only thing that matter..."
https://www.kitcomm.com/showthread.php?t=24585&page=17
Ещё одна цитата от этого исландца:
"...Order of busts:
Lehman Broters -> Glitnir -> Landsbanki -> Kaupthing -> Iceland -> UK banks ... -> UK ... -> World!..."
А это было написано одним исландцем 4 дня назад:
"...Here's a short status on social conditions and banking conditions in Iceland:
- All the (failed) banks are still open and operating, internally at least, they never closed down. Just new ownership (government) and only domestic banking.
- No way of transferring money out of the country.
- If you're going abroad, foreign currency is rationed down to something like €300, and you have to show your flight ticket to prove you're going overseas!
- Using creditcard and debitcards seems to work just fine internally. Not so abroad, although creditcards seem to work in some countries (I've heard).
- Icelanders in other countries are in real trouble getting money to where they are. Some only have a few euros to live on. Things better get back to normal or they're gonna start eating from trashcans (I'm pretty sure they'd rather starve).
- No gasoline shortages or rationing. Normal.
- No food shortages or rationing. ALTHOUGH, I'm going to verify this tomorrow, Sunday, as I haven't checked in almost a week now. Going to take pictures of the supermarket shelves and post here.
- No real protesting. Just 200-300 people who protested outside the central bank the other day.
- No riots, no crimes, no violence of any sort.
- Traffic is down, and people are driving more slowly and carefully, the police has noted.
- The TV news only had 1/3 of the program dedicated to the banking meltdown, instead of the full program just two days ago.
- Personally, my anxiousness is returning to normal levels :>
- People have given up doing bank-runs, serves really no point anymore. You can get your ISK crowns no problem, it's just not worth anything!
- Prices haven't gone up (yet). But just wait, they gonna spike a lot soon!
Either Icelanders are surprisingly calm, or we just have a very large inventory of supplies. It's only a question of WHEN we will run out.
We ship a lot of our supplies from overseas, and shipments are maybe only sent one, two or three times a month. Since stores only receive shipments from overseas maybe once a month they have a large inventory of supplies in the back.
But reading SHTF scenario details, I would have thought supplies would run out after 1-2 days. Maybe U.S. stores are different from Icelandic ones, that is by having supplies of only 2-3 days instead of 3-4 weeks.
I'm just glad that we had the foresight of brewing our own beer, so we don't need to import it. HALLELUJAH!!! That's the only thing that matter..."
https://www.kitcomm.com/showthread.php?t=24585&page=17
Ещё одна цитата от этого исландца:
"...Order of busts:
Lehman Broters -> Glitnir -> Landsbanki -> Kaupthing -> Iceland -> UK banks ... -> UK ... -> World!..."
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A balanced diet is a cookie in each hand - Miss Piggy