
I’m not sharing any of this to stir fear. I’m sharing it because ignoring reality has never protected a single family. Awareness isn’t panic — it’s love. It’s wisdom. And if there’s ever been a time to pay attention to the world around us, it’s now.
Over the last few years, I’ve watched what’s happening to our food system, our farmland, and our water — and the patterns are too loud, too clear, and too familiar to brush off. History may not repeat word-for-word, but it absolutely rhymes.
And right now?
It’s rhyming with something our grandparents lived through.
Something my own father remembered vividly.
A Memory From My Father — And the Warning Inside It
My dad grew up during the Great Depression. Not the “we’re tight on money” kind of hard…
I’m talking starvation.
The kind where your ribs show.
The kind where your brain stops functioning because your body is shutting down.
The kind where shame becomes tangled with survival.
He once told me how he and some other hungry farm kids would go behind a small store before school and grab anything they could find to eat — not because they were bad kids, not because they wanted to steal, but because they were starving. Truly starving.
They thought the owner didn’t know.
Until one day they realized he sat behind a cracked door at his desk… quietly watching them… tears running down his face.
He didn’t stop them.
He couldn’t afford to feed them —
but he also couldn’t bear to take away the scraps keeping them alive.
That’s what real hunger does.
It breaks dignity.
It bends morality.
It makes even good, honorable people behave in ways they never would under normal circumstances.
And hearing my father’s story as a child planted a seed in me — a knowing, a quiet understanding:
When a society loses food and water, it loses its stability.
And when survival kicks in, even the most respected and honorable people can be pushed into choices that haunt them.
That’s not evil.
That’s survival.
Family Farms Are Disappearing — and It’s Not an Accident
Across the United States, family farms are collapsing at a pace we’ve never seen.
Costs rising, profits shrinking, corporations swallowing entire agricultural sectors.
This isn’t random.
This isn’t “tough luck.”
This is consolidation — and consolidation leads to control.
When family farms die, communities die.
And when corporations control the food supply, the people lose power.
We are watching that shift in real time.
Water — the Crisis No One Wants to Look At
Food shortages cause panic.
Water shortages create chaos.
You can live weeks without food.
You can live three days without water.
And yet our country is:
- selling off water rights
- draining aquifers
- fighting interstate water wars
- facing chemical spills into waterways
- watching rivers and reservoirs drop
- and allowing foreign companies to buy land specifically for the water beneath it
This isn’t speculation.
This is happening.
And the hardest truth?
It’s not a question of IF water shortages become a national crisis — it’s WHEN.
Foreign Buyers Are Purchasing American Land — and With It, Our Future
Our government is allowing:
- foreign governments
- foreign corporations
- billionaires
- and investment groups
to buy American farmland, ranches, and water-rich territories.
Land isn’t just land.
Land is food.
Land is water.
Land is security.
When other nations own your food and water, you don’t need an invasion.
You’re conquered from the inside out.
This is how societies weaken — quietly, legally, and in plain sight.
The Real Danger Isn’t Scarcity — It’s What Scarcity Does to People
Most Americans today don’t know true hunger.
They know inconvenience, not deprivation.
But history teaches one truth over and over:
A society can survive stress.
It cannot survive starvation and thirst.
Hunger dissolves logic.
Thirst erases morality.
Parents will do anything when their children cry from hunger.
Communities fracture.
Neighbors turn hostile.
Fear replaces empathy.
Chaos replaces order.
This is not “fear talk.”
This is exactly what happened during the Depression.
This is what happens in every famine-struck nation.
This is what my father lived through.
It is not dramatic to prepare.
It is irresponsible not to.
So What Do We Do? How Do We Protect Our Families?
We don’t panic.
We don’t run.
We don’t spiral.
We prepare.
We stay alert.
We stay connected.
We put a plan in place while life is still normal — because that’s when preparation is easiest, cheapest, and smartest.
Below is the EXACT blueprint every family should have.
No sugar-coating.
No “maybe someday.”
This is your real-world readiness plan.
**THE FAMILY READINESS PLAN
(No Fear. No Fluff. Just What Actually Saves Lives.)**
1. Establish ONE primary family rally point
A place all family members go if:
- power fails
- phones die
- communication collapses
- roads shut down
- chaos breaks out
It must be:
✔ reachable on foot
✔ safe
✔ known by every family member
2. Establish a secondary rally point
For backup if the primary is unsafe.
3. Every household needs a 2-week emergency buffer
Food, water, medicine, power, sanitation.
4. Water Resources (the #1 necessity)
- 1 gallon per person per day
- 14-day minimum
- Filters: Berkey, Sawyer, Lifestraw
- Collapsible containers
- Water purification tablets
- Backup method to boil water
5. Food Resources
Shelf-stable, high-calorie, nutrient-dense:
- rice
- beans
- canned meats
- oats
- peanut butter
- pastas
- canned soups
- electrolytes
- shelf-stable milk
- protein shakes
- long-term freeze-dried foods
6. Power & Heat
- flashlights
- headlamps
- battery banks
- solar charger
- candles
- blankets
- propane stove
- generator (optional)
7. Communication
- walkie-talkies
- written plan
- emergency codes
- addresses printed
- crank radio
8. Medical Supplies
- first aid
- prescriptions
- antiseptic
- pain meds
- bandages
- tourniquet
- clotting powder
9. Sanitation
- wipes
- bleach
- trash bags
- toilet bags
- feminine products
- soap
10. Documents & Cash
- waterproof folder
- IDs, insurance, important contacts
- small bills
11. Home Security
- door braces
- window locks
- motion lights
- pepper gel
12. Skills Every Family Should Know
- water filtration
- cooking without power
- basic first aid
- turning off utilities
- gardening
- creating a calm environment under stress
This Is Not Fear — This Is Wisdom
My father lived through famine-level hunger.
I grew up knowing what starvation does to a family — and to a nation.
We’re not strangers to history.
We’re students of it.
The Great Depression happened.
Food shortages happened.
Water crises happened.
And with the way things are shifting — land buyouts, water contamination, corporate consolidation — we would be foolish to assume it cannot happen again.
Preparing isn’t panicking.
Preparing is parenting.
Preparing is loving.
Preparing is wisdom handed down from those who lived the worst and taught us how to avoid it.
This isn’t about fear.
This is about foresight.
Because it’s not if our systems strain — it’s when.
And when that day comes, I want my family — and yours — to be steady, connected, supplied, and safe.
Stay aware.
Stay grounded.
Stay prepared.
Stay together.
— Tina N. Campbell | Scribed in Light
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