 Toilet paper and hand sanitizer won't help during a power outage. Oh, really? You don't say? Oh, my God. Oh, my God. You don't say toilet paper and hand sanitizer won't help me prepare to protect me and my family. Go figure. While people have toilet paper, hand sanitizer and groceries to deal with pandemic, they're lacking emergency items such as first aid kit, water and a flashlight. Says the Crown Corporation commissioned to do the research to gauge whether people in British Columbia are prepared to survive the cold, dark house if the power goes out. The very notion that we need a study to tell you that you need to prepare yourself is obscene. Think about, oh, my God, your taxpayer dollars. So B.C. Hydro, Ontario Hydro, they're all government run services. And so our taxpayers goes to your taxpayer dollars, which probably went into the millions to determine a study to say, yeah, you should prepare yourself. Yeah, yeah. Maybe you should have canned food. Maybe you should have water. You know, maybe you should invest in a generator. We needed to spend millions of dollars on this. This is why I'm against taxes, like the misappropriation of taxes, of how they're used and where they go, not to mention all done by force to begin with. It's ridiculous. You needed a study to tell you that you need to prepare yourself. It's fucking crazy. Anyways, the survey found nearly 20 percent of British Colombians think that they are more prepared. They think, you know, in quotation, they think survey also found British Colombians aged and this is just for B.C. I'm I'm I would bet this is across all board age 18 to 34. Our millennials are least prepared during power outage, admitting that they're not prepared at all. It's like this generation, at least in North America, have been so bubbled and insular to the rest of the world. It's like snowflake generation. I'm a millennial myself, but because of my past experience with my family and just my own personal experience, I view the world differently. To think that it's not common sense. And I always say this, common sense is not common sense, unless it's commonly practiced and people don't commonly practice common sense. And to think that it's not common sense to prepare yourself. What the fuck do we need when it comes to Maslow hire kneeds? You need a roof over your head and you need food on the table. OK, well, you can't really rely on your grocery store. Can you? Like if you look at what's happening around the world with covid, with the tariff wars, with the currency wars, it is completely bottlenecking our supply chain. If you go into just OECD.org, they even go into this. Our global supply chain when it comes to relying on food is being completely disrupted. So if you think that you are going to have 100 percent access towards local towards food, whether it's your local grocery store or a corner store, you are crazy. It's your responsibility to have canned foods, non-perishable foods that can last months, if not years, they're super cheap. You can keep it in a cupboard so you can keep it in your closet. You need to have that. Second of all, you need to figure out your local food chain. Talk to your local farmers, figure out where you can get meat from, figure out where you can vegetables form. Hell, if you have a nice property, even though we're in Canada, you can build a greenhouse in the backyard without electricity. That's just from the sun, some solar panels and manure inside to grow some stuff. That's one of my side projects I'm starting next summer on my property. So these are common sense things, non-perishable foods. You need to figure out your local supplier food. Then what you need to figure out is also protection. I'll lead that to you how you want to figure out protection. However, you want to protect your family. But it's crazy to think that we had to spend millions and millions of dollars to create a study to say, hey, yeah, well, you know, by the way, you should really prepare yourself beyond fucking toilet paper and hand sanitizer and maybe you should have food. And this is the state of society. We're in a malaise. We're in this like haze and malaise in North America where like we've been so bubbled from the rest of the world. We have an experience with our grandparents, experience from, you know, even like even before that or even after that from, let's say in the United States, from the Vietnam War, then World War Two, then World War One, we've been in a very, very peaceful time, which is rare in history. So we haven't really experienced unless you're an immigrant, they come from a war-torn country, come from really fucked up, that has, you know, dictatorship, et cetera. You haven't really experienced like what it means, like real survival, where like food does matter, shelter matters and security matters. And so our taxpayer dollars going to this. Listen, guys, if you're watching this common sense, common sense, prepare yourself, get perishable foods, fix your food supply locally, get the network that you need, figure out how you can protect yourself for you and your family. Like, seriously, to think that everything's going to be the status quo for the rest of your life, that you can rely on the so-called fragile. We have a very, very, very fragile supply chain. It's always been fragile just in time delivery bullshit. To think that's going to be the status quo as long as you live, it's dumb, it's really, really dumb. And you need to figure out how you can protect you and your family to have shelter over your head to have fucking food on the table. Peace out.