What Did the Northeast Learn From Sandy? Apparently, Not Much

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Just over 3 months ago, the Northeast was paralyzed after Superstorm Sandy pummelled the East Coast.  Within a matter of days, despite a week of warnings about the impending storm, people in New York City were dumpster diving and begging FEMA to help them.  They were pleading with the cameras for food and water because they were starving.  Some people still have not recovered – there are still nearly 2000 homes in which people are crouching in the dark, without heat, electricity or running water.

Fast forward to the current nor’easter bearing down on the region, Nemo.

The Northeastern US is bracing itself for snow measured in feet, not inches. Nemo is predicted to be one of the top ten worst blizzards in history.  Blizzard warnings are in effect for New Jersey, and New York, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New Hampshire, and Maine.

Does anything sound familiar about that list of states?  Oh yeah – many of them were among the hardest hit back in October, when the last “storm of the century” hit.

One might think that people would have learned a lesson from Sandy and prepared ahead of time for the possibility of an ice- induced power outage and the likelihood of being snowed in for a few days.

Apparently not.

Residents of the Northeast are storming the grocery stores like a horde of locusts, grabbing anything and everything, filling their carts in a panic, even as the first snowflakes were drifting to the ground.

These aren’t well-thought-out shopping trips – they are laying siege to the stores like Huns pillaging a village in Eastern Europe, leaving only destruction and barren shelves in their wake.

Photographs speak a thousand words.  Store shelves have been emptied by those who don’t already have enough of a stockpile to get their families through a blizzard.View image on Twitter

The last multi-state power outage, just about 100 days ago, is clearly a vague memory.  It was an event that somehow, did not make enough of an impression on people.  For most, it seems that the fervent vows of being better prepared disappeared with the darkness as soon as the lights came back on.

Here are some of the preparedness measures being undertaken across the region.

In Maine

Bryan McDonald pushed a shopping cart heaped with goods while his wife pushed a baby carriage. They have a 7-week-old child to consider. They don’t want to be left unprepared when the storm named Nemo comes to do its thing.

“Water, canned goods, and snacks in case we lose power,” Bryan said. “Those are the main things.”

In Massachusetts

Judy Nielsen of Sturbridge was buying for herself and her husband — both are on a vegan diet. Ms. Nielsen stocked up on vegetables, fruits and water.

“You don’t buy much when you’re eating a lot of vegetables and fruits,” she said. “I don’t buy them for a week, two weeks at a time. I buy them for a couple days at a time, just enough to get through the weekend.”

Really?

While people are to be commended for at least going to the store before the storm hits this time, why on earth do they need to, so soon after Sandy?  Why do they feel that one trip to the grocery store equals preparedness?

One common statement among the prepping community after Hurricane Sandy was that hopefully, people would begin to see the light and understand the need for preparedness.  As a group, many of us expressed the fact that the aftermath of the storm should prove, once and for all, that you truly are on your own after such an event.

We read reports of people standing in line for up to 5 hours for a single MRE and a bottle of water.  We heard about apartment dwellers defecating in the hallways.  There were photos of people eating from dumpsters.  We felt sympathy for the elderly, trapped cold, thirsty and alone at the top of highrises.

Through it all, many had hope that this would be a turning point for the preparedness movement, while others were skeptical that people would accept the event as anything other than an unpleasant blip on their radar of football games, American Idol and weekly manicures.

Judging by the look of the grocery stores in the Northeast, the skeptics were right.  The psychological inability to accept that bad things happen, the battle of cognitive dissonance against thinking about a change of reality, and the cultural bias against perceived negativity, have overruled common sense and learning from experience, once again.

Once again, preppers are left, shaking our heads, asking what it will take to wake people up.

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Daisy Luther

Daisy Luther is a coffee-swigging, globe-trotting blogger. She is the founder and publisher of three websites.  1) The Organic Prepper, which is about current events, preparedness, self-reliance, and the pursuit of liberty on her website, 2)  The Frugalite, a website with thrifty tips and solutions to help people get a handle on their personal finances without feeling deprived, and 3) PreppersDailyNews.com, an aggregate site where you can find links to all the most important news for those who wish to be prepared. She is widely republished across alternative media and  Daisy is the best-selling author of 5 traditionally published books and runs a small digital publishing company with PDF guides, printables, and courses. You can find her on FacebookPinterest, Gab, MeWe, Parler, Instagram, and Twitter.

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  • I find it hard to feel sorry for them. It is similar to the way I feel for people who live through a flood and defiantly build back in the same place and are on tv crying for help again in a couple years when the water comes back up again.

  • Unbelievable! You’d think everyone in surrounding”Sandy” area would have learned and prepped for the next thing because you know it could happen.

  • Spot on Daisy, There are really only a couple of of choices. You can can be sheep led to the slaughterhouse or prepared living in your house. Granted no individual can prepare for every single thing, but to ignore the basics of water, food, & heat, doesn’t just leave me shaking my head the way it did say a year or two ago, now it pisses me off. Some have had more than ample time to wake up but remain in a coma. My plan is to help those that want to or are preparing. Sorry to seem anry, but this subject brings it out every time. Peace Clay

  • Great read Daisey. You are progressing as a writer, and its good to see!! (as you can see my spelling has not)

    Yep, Ike was how many years ago? Has my bro-inlaw bought that gen he said he was going to get?

    NOPE!!

    Kevin.

    P.S.- I have been laying low, good to see you have not been.

      • Hi daisy!! 🙂 I don’t know if I am “well”, but trying to hang in there.

        I woke up to the fact that(almost)EVERTHING, I believed in was BS many years ago(you know this already).

        Nothing has changed,they(peolpe) have not changed, and (I fear) people WILL NOT CHANGE!!

        I fear nothing is EVER going to change, because people, and there beliefs are not changing.

        Watching videos on youtube tonight searching “bug out bags” proves to me- I will be picking up discarded gear and digging graves more then any other activity(when shtf)

        Sorry bout coming here and ranting!!

        But if I yelled that out the window(where I am right now) I would get tased!! 🙂

        • Rant away, my friend! Any time!

          I’ve missed chatting with you – we always have fun. As you may have read, you were correct about the learning curve moving out here to the boonies. 🙂

          Daisy

  • There is something called learned helplessness. As a teacher, I can tell you that it is taught in our schools. Children are indoctrinated that the government is your keeper and they will come to the rescue, no matter the emergency. All that you need to do is sit back and wait for help to arrive. Instead of taking personal responsibility and helping your neighbors as best as you can, you wait for instructions and just do as you are told. Two generations have been brought up like this and I really don’t see how it can be changed given our national situation.
    God help us all

  • I am sorry for my cold response, but I do not feel sorry or have pity. These people were warned a week ahead that this was possibly coming down the pike.
    I live in a Plains state where, when you are told a blizzard is predicted a week ahead, you had well be getting ready. We are ready here anyway. I have preps for about 6 mo, and will add more as I can.
    So, too bad, so sad.

    • remember this comment the day you find yourself at the end of your own strength and you reach a hand out to someone for help….and you get denied.

      god forbid your “plains” house burns down along with all your gathered all week long supplies in the middle of a blizzard.

  • My grandmother was born before WW1, which occurred when she was a teenager, and then moved to the US during the great depression. She told me she repaired the lining of her coats herself, and always sewed extra $’s there just in case she had to flee. Lots of great prep ideas from her, because she learned from those whose survival depended on it. And you’re right, her kids never paid attention to these stories or learned similar things at school. Thank you to my grade school teacher who assigned me the project of interviewing 5 people who lived through the depression 🙂

  • HI Daisy…

    My husband and I were amazed at how many people were going to the stores at the last minute to buy food.

    And gas. My daughter and I went out the night before the storm, and every gas station we passed was full, and had long lines. I had filled my tank earlier in the week, so we drove right on by. There were more people at the gas stations than the food stores.

    We got 22 inches, and our power stayed on. Thank God!

    • Next time get some pictures. The MSM hides a lot of what really happens, by not covering it in many of the events. The more proof it is happening the better. Peace

  • Hi, Prepped! So glad things went well for you throughout the storm! It hit up here where I am too. We had a couple of days where it would have been tricky getting out of the driveway, but we had absolutely everything we needed. It feels good, doesn’t it?

  • Here in Nova Scotia we got about a foot and a half of snow and just holed up for the couple of days. On the day before the storm hit, I convinced my teenage son that we needed to bring in a lot more firewood than usual in case the weather lasted into the coming week. We also brought multiple buckets of snow inside to melt for extra water, gave the chickens extra food in case we couldn’t get out to their coop and generally just surveyed the place to be sure our usual preparations were in place. The interesting part of this is that the day of the actual storm I woke up with a serious case of vertigo and was pretty much useless for the next 30 hours. Even though my son handled everything, without being as prepared as we were, it would have made things much more difficult for him. So sometimes we are preparing for what we know is coming and other times we unknowingly are preparing for the unexpected.

  • If you are a Bible reader, you know what happens in the “END TIMES”! For the rest, you will SELL your soul for
    a meal for your family, NOT A PRETTY THING!

  • I was there and although you, and your commenters, are entitled to your opinion even if you weren’t there, might I suggest that this is akin to kicking someone when they’re down? Did you tell the people who in good faith went to the superdome during katrina that “they should’ve known better?” Like we ALL don’t have a bunch of woulda, coulda, shoulda, floating around in our closets. I lost EVERYTHING due to that storm, and not the least of it, ALL my preps for very good reason. I’m starting over from scratch: new state, new house, new neighbors, new preps.

    Guess what: there were some preppers there on the coast of Brooklyn. Guess what we (and by we I do mean me) did? We helped our fellow man. I fed 150 people, 20 of which were children under 13, for 4 weeks. And yes, I wiped out my supply. Guess what else? I’d do it again.

    And just so you know, FEMA didn’t show up until 6 weeks in. I could care less about FEMA but when I live in a city that charges me city taxes (on top of state and federal) for things like City Disaster Management–I expect disasters to be managed. If they can manage clean up after Wall street then they durn well better manage clean-up after mother nature. Local government is supposed to be a better option a la libertarianism, conservatism, constitutionalists…patriots.

    So it was me and my little group of fellows, about 5 of us in all managing a barn raising. But these also were our neighbors, our friends. They attended our bbqs the weekend before the storm and I was going to deny them after? We worked together; we fed each other; we cleaned our buildings together; some of us rescued others of us from drowning and freezing and burning…TO DEATH. yes, death.

    Why? not for any reason any man on earth has anything to do with…it has to do with Karma. If I am ever in a dire situation and someone is in the position to help, I want them to help me. I do not want a bunch of naysayers telling me what I did wrong and that I should have known better. I’ve already “paid it forward” and have equity to my account. And I will keep making deposits into that “emergency fund” whenever called upon to do so.

    Go read the good samaritan again (luke 10:29) (or AESOPS Lion and the Mouse if you are bible-adverse) and hope like hell if something happens to you come SHTF, there’s someone around willing to help take care of your kids–ESPECIALLY if you are away from your preps when the time comes. Do you have equity in YOUR universal human account? Judge not unless you are prepared to BE judged.

    Oh and I know of at least four blocks in Brooklyn who learned the lesson. Do not paint all of Brooklyn with the Manhattan trendy brush. Manhattan is a world unto itself–and so is Brooklyn.
    Mickie

    • Dear Mickie:

      First, let me apologize for offending you. I mean this sincerely.

      Second, I know that there are preppers everywhere, and clearly, I am not talking about preppers in this article. I’m talking about the general public that emptied the store shelves so shortly after the first disaster. Because you are so close to the situation, it might be hard to see what a cautionary tale this can be for others who have never been touched by such an event. The only reason you were able to help as much as you were is because you were prepared, and this makes you a perfect example for others who have not prepared themselves.

      I know that the response in this situation was not what it should have been. The world was watching after Katrina, and this time it was made public during the fact, not after. As well, I know (and wrote about) the fact that there was an area that was totally forgotten, where people lived without municipal services for months after the storm – and the responsibility for that lies squarely on the shoulders of the agencies that are given tax dollars to take care of that.

      I am very sorry for the losses that you suffered and I am very impressed with your strength, your compassion, and your spirit. In your opinion, what is a better way that this could be used as a teaching experience to those who have not awakened to the need to prepare?

      Best Wishes,

      Daisy

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