How Local Redundancy and Decentralization Can Save You from the Coming Collapse

There is a Solution for Survival

The world is unraveling before our eyes. The Strait of Hormuz has been effectively closed by Iranian mines and missiles, and the global energy artery that once pumped 20 million barrels of oil per day is now a clogged, contested waterway.

As I have reported repeatedly, the closure has sent diesel above $5 a gallon, triggered food price spikes, and exposed the catastrophic fragility of our centralized supply chains. This is not an accident of geography — it is a systemic weakness that globalist elites have engineered for decades to force dependency and control.

The only path to survival is local redundancy: grow your own food, produce your own energy, and build community resilience. I have been warning about this for years, and the time to act is now.

The Fragile Web We Call Civilization

Our entire civilization rests on a handful of chokepoints and just-in-time logistics that can be severed in an instant. One of the most critical is the Strait of Hormuz, where 20% of the world’s oil passes. In March, that chokepoint effectively closed, and the dominoes began to fall. The war with Iran has destroyed two LNG trains in Qatar, as I detailed in my article last month, further strangling global energy supplies. Every single link in this global supply chain — from fertilizer plants to container ships to the power grid — is vulnerable to disruption.

Yet the establishment tells us to trust the system, to rely on government bailouts and food stamps. I say that is a death sentence. The very people who benefit from our dependency are the ones who engineered the collapse. The only rational response is to build local redundancy: solar panels, heirloom seeds, water filters, and precious metals. As the book “The Age of Decentralization” explains, distributed systems are inherently more resilient than centralized ones because they lack single points of failure. That is the principle that will save you when the grid goes down.

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