The last few times, we went about getting ourselves the
wherewithal to gain a few minutes to work things out. When it comes to
breathing, a few minutes is exactly what you’ve got.
“But....that’s ridiculous! I’m not going to worry about that. What
could possibly interfere with me breathing?”And all the while the carnage was broadcast live on TV to millions of viewers, some by stunned cameramen, some by cameras whose operators were dying under the lenses. In the confusion and panic, it was over 3 minutes before someone in the truck yanked the signal feed circuit. One of the vehicles was simply driven away with no attempt to disconnect, and toppled a dozen fleeing bystanders before the cable snapped on a fenceline.
At Los Angeles OCD, dispatch started getting panicky radio
calls, and several fire and police units were dispatched. Long before they
arrived, they were called off, and a perimeter was called for upwind. The
Hazmat Response crews were dispatched. By the time they arrived twenty minutes
later, and took another ten minutes to get suited up properly, it was a body
hunt and forensic investigation. Inside over 10,000 people were dead. Another
1000 bodies were scattered throughout the facility, and there were over 200
nearby traffic accidents. An unfortunate number of the first arriving
paramedics and patrol officers became secondary casualties in short order,
leading to futile attempts to establishing several hundred secondary
contamination zones, and evacuating thousands of residents nearby and downwind.
Between 24 hour news and sports radio, and cell phones, panic spread at the
speed of electrons.
The populace collectively lost their minds. Between nearby
residents and those listening and watching the game, it quickly became obvious
that somebody had used something. People started grabbing car keys, and maybe
whatever they could grab in 30 seconds, and hit the road en masse. A cascading
traffic snarl spread outward from south of downtown, near the original
incident. As word spread from city radios to commercial broadcast about the
secondary sites at accidents nearby, getting in a fender bender, instead of
getting out to exchange info, became a game with rules somewhere between a demolition
derby and Death Race 2000. And as the cars fled the locus of disaster, outlying
cities and surrounding counties fumbled and wondered what response to take. No
one had ever tried to deal with 5 million cars all headed out of L.A. at the
same time, driven by people ranging from cautiously determined to ragingly
hysterical.
Between the incredible number of traffic accidents,
including the contaminated victims, and the number of slightly contaminated or
uncontaminated but terrified spectators and their families arriving in the
local ERs, hospital after hospital was flooded with
patients. Operating on the ragged edge of disaster on a good day, the entire
county’s emergency medical system had a stroke. Ambulances nearby were
contaminated, some crews dead, others couldn’t get to calls, let alone the
normal nights’ tally of gunshot victims and heart attacks. Diversion of
ambulances to and from farther and farther away spread like ripples in a pond,
and within an hour crashed the entire system. Which in turn impacted the
systems in surrounding Ventura, Orange, San Bernardino, and Riverside counties.
By 10PM, nearly 10% of the population of the United States – 30 million people - centered on Los Angeles
was effectively left without any emergency medical service until further notice.
Not that there were more than a 100-200 doses of atropine in
all the local hospitals combined, and it would be hours before anyone could
access federal stocks of nerve agent antidote. By which point, everyone who’d
need it would probably be cold and dead anyway.
But no, that could never happen to you, because you don’t
live near L.A.
And you don’t live in a town where there’s a stadium, or
mall, or movie metroplex, or any other target, and because it’s so hard to
smuggle small bundles of stuff into your state from Mexico. (You know this
because the local home Depot doesn’t have 20 illegal aliens standing out front
7 days a week, right?) And there’s no chemical or nuclear plants near you, nor
do any trainloads of hazardous material by the metric boatload pass nearby, and
you’ll never have a fire at either a chem/nuke plant or at a train crash. And
you’ll never hit black ice on a bridge and end up in a pond, stream, or river
either. And of course, no protesters in your town will ever start a riot over
anything, and leave you needing to evacuate through clouds of riot control gas,
smoke, or what have you. Nor will you ever be in a burning building or airplane
cabin, because that never happens either.
Riiiiiiight.
The rest of us might have to deal with some or all of that
stuff, and there’s ways to go about it.
Available for purchase online are any number of high-tech,
save-your-life military or better grade chemical protective masks. For the
price of one rifle, you could have a mask with hood, multiple spare filters, a
protective suit, butyl gloves and booties, and duct tape to seal the seams. And
if any of the preceding concerns you in the slightest, you and everyone you
hold dear should consider putting an NBC/CBRN (two acronyms meaning the same
thing – chemical, biological, or radiological/nuclear nastiness) exposure
prevention bag together.
For staying put, assuming you’re not downwind of Hell
Central, visqueen and clear plastic sheeting in rolls sufficient for all the
holes in your house, plus duct tape, staples, nails and furring strips to hold it there
for some time, along with a larger filtration system, would be the next logical
step after that.
And if needing actual breathing oxygen because your car
ended up underwater is something you consider a potential situation, you can
get pony bottles of breathing air at any scuba shop, once you’ve gotten a scuba
cert card in your hand. Obviously a possibility in states with creeks and ponds
and little lakes everywhere, but someone out in a dusty desert could find
themselves in an irrigation canal, so think carefully on where you travel and
what could happen.
And lastly, for “poor man’s hazmat”, a set of swim goggles
and a quality N95 or N100 (which numbers denote how much particulate junk they
successfully filter) mask, can get you through sooty brushfire or volcanic ash
clouds (briefly) and minimize the irritation from things like CN, CS, and OC
pepper spray. There are even little cannisters than contain a clear hood and
mouth filter than are specifically designed to let you breath while escaping
from a building or airliner gloriously aflame.
I’m not hawking brands, but if you found this site, your
Google-fu should enable you to find, compare, and acquire any or all of the
above, as your wise consideration dictates.
If you do that, you’ll have bought yourself the time to handle
the next necessities on your survival pyramid.
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