Posts Tagged: Riots

Just In Time inventory showing its weakness

I stopped by Walmart in my local area on a whim to check for ammo and I wasn’t surprised to find nothing more than shotgun shells and odd-calibre stuff.  An employee stopped my to ask if I needed help and we began talking about the ammo and shortages everyone seems to be experiencing.  The employee went further and told me about how they hadn’t even had a truck arrive the day before and how is caused all kinds of problems for the store and then pointed to the shelves and explained that while there was still much on the shelves, many of the common items had been spread around to take up empty space, while others were just plain out.

I thanked the employee for his time and took a stroll around the store to see this for myself, the guy was right, the shelves were spare or compeltely bare of some items.  Things that I noticed as being the most affected was ammo (of course), snacks items, beverages, food staples, frozen items, household (soap, laundry detergent, etc), stationary, and writing supplies.  I didn’t check the hygeine and personal care isles, nor did walk through the medication section.  A lot of this all fits into the catagory of common every day items we use.

What does all this mean?  regarding ammo, demand has been up for sometime and I wasn’t surprised to find little available.  As to the rest I’ll go out on a limb and assume for the sake of my argument that demand has remained steady.  So what’s the deal?  Well, it all comes down to supply and how that supply gets to stores to be sold.  If you remember Greg’s article about the Baltic Dry index, you’ll remember that shipping rates have essentially dropped to zero which caused large numbers of ships to be parked, This is because trade is down–no one is shipping anything.

All that brings me to my last point, Just-In-Time or JIT shipping.  The link can explain JIT better than I, but essentially it’s an inventory business model that brings goods to a store just as it’s needed, hence the terms Just-In-Time.  This system is all and good until you disrupt any part of the system.  A disruption in supply, demand, transport, anything will result is a rippling effect that can have far reaching results depending on the specific disruption.

Why do I prep?  The supplies that I need can very easily, in the space of hours, become unavailble.  It may be a minor inconveinence until supply is disrupted or transport is disrupted for anylength of time.  Demand skyrockets, prices skyrockets, people become desperate, desperate people do desperate things.

Right now we are seeing the ripples started months ago buy a drop of in trade (transport) because of a drop off in supply, and a decrease (world wide) demand.  Now things are becoming scarcer, it subtle now, but can easily and quicly become more pronounced.

Empty containers clog South Korean Port; Container ships sit idle; Idle container fleet grows.

Mike@prepcast.info

Sign of the Times?

Nebraska was the last state in the union to pass Safe Haven laws and in there inability to agree on a maximum age, a bill was passed without an age restriction. This has resulted in people dropping of many of their older children, I mean teenagers…

according to the target new article:

five 17-year-olds, two 16-year-olds, six 15-year-olds, two 14-year-olds, three 13-year-olds — have been abandoned, along with eight children who were 11 or 12. Five of the children dropped off have been from out of state.

To me, that’s pretty amazing, but it begs the quiestion:

Are these people turning in their older children just dirtbags and no longer want the responsibilty of parenthood, or are things really that rough for them that surrendering their children is a better option.

Personally, I think it’s a little of both, but let’s take a look at the first part. Dirtbag parents. How many people these days are popping out babies when he or she really have no business doing any such thing and the only reason they’re kept around is because getting rid of them wasn’t an option. You don’t want to know what I think should happen to these parents.

The other side of the coin is economic and is something that is hard to imagine but could this just be the leading edge of coming hard times and some of these folks are just some of the first effected? Just to think that things could get that bad is a terrifiing concept but is parts of the world today things are worse with mothers having to choose which child lives or dies. Rob, has a great blog post involving this subject and is definately worth a read if you haven’t read it already.

Are we really going down this road as a country?

I have a simple exercise for today and it’ll only take a minute:

First, try to imaging that things have gotten so bad that you are willing to give up your child. If you’re unable to come up with anything other than, “I’d never give up my child.” they you’re doin it wrong.

Second, imaging a situation in which you would be forced to choose which of your children eat, or worse yet, which one dies because food is that scarce.

Take your time and let the image fully develop in your mind, not pleasent is it? Now ask yourself if you ever want to be caught in that situation. Yeah? niether do I! As a parent I beleive that I have an obligation through an unspoken oath to provide and do what I can to protect and provide for my children and my wife, to my last breath…

Not that I’ll survive, and not that I won’t fail, but I’m not allowing my family or myself go down without the proverbial “fight”

What about you?

-Mike

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