Sold Cloak

Sold Cloak is a loose, rotating core of hosts — along with their occasional invited guests — that discuss politics, culture, society, human nature, news, and history: all from the best scriptural standpoint they can muster.

https://www.soldcloak.net

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episode 3: The Unbreaking


Dan, Ethan, and Jack actually do talk about recovering from collapse in this episode. Good on them. Points of discussion include:

  • Assuming there has been a collapse, how would we handle it?
  • Ethan’s hypocrisy in adjusting his microphone.
  • Just as there are stages of preparation, there are stages of recovery.
  • Texas’ more primed posture for secession (er, cot… oops).
  • Rebuilding from the smallest unit (individual, family, or homestead), and expanding.
  • Going Galt: the anecdote of the missing honest handymen.
  • The aging workforce of regular, blue collar jobs, and the shift in public education away from blue collar work.
  • Your group, its members, and their skill sets and locations.
  • Dan’s droopy mic stand.
  • A disadvantage of the “grab the go bag and flee to the lake house” plan compared to the homesteading plan.
  • The Walking Hungry – the urban fallout after instant collapse.
  • The unfruitful fruit of our modern produce.
  • “Apocalyptic” does not mean everyone is dead.
  • The long-term fate of the cities.
  • Rebuilding Republic: discerning when to connect with other groups, and when not to.

Corrections:

  • Ethan stated that Vermont was independent for a couple of weeks. However, the State of Vermont was technically independent for 14 years but sought to be annexed by the United States and never intended to remain independent.
  • Ethan was mostly correct regarding the Texas secession bill, but some of the details were wrong. The results of the referendum would have been non-binding. Even if the people voted to secede, the Texas legislature could still decide not to.
  • Ethan needs to catch up on the last 2,355 years of history; the city of Tyre used to be as he described: old city on the coast, new city on the island. However, Alexander the Great built a causeway that eventually became an isthmus making the island a peninsula. The city has spread beyond those ancient bounds. Minus a serious history point for Ethan.

Notes and Links:

  • NERC map showing the power grid regions of the U.S. and Canada; Texas has its own interconnection.
  • Texas Independence Referendum Act HB 3596, 88th R.S. (2023) - 2 year exit strategy. It appears almost identical to the Texas Independence Referendum Act HB 1359, 87th R.S. (2021) - 5 year strategy.
  • An article on state dependence on the federal government, and an article explaining why such articles can be misleading (if you have curiosity and time).
  • The different fates of once-similar cities: modern Ashkelon and modern Gath.


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 May 22, 2023  1h26m