Remember when I did a brief post on what makes America unique?
Courtesy of NotTheBee
This is an important thread on why you don't want to leave America when the apocalypse kicks off
some guy named Michael Girdley has assembled a list of reasons that, taken in the aggregate, add up to his argument that, despite the best efforts of Americans, America will almost certainly remain a good place to be during the Apocalypse. Well, unless the Apocalypse includes Yellowstone going all Krakatoa on us. Not sure how much of a recommendation that is. Here’s the beginning and end, so follow the link for the details. Some of it is stuff you already know, but other fun facts may be new to you:
Drag queens are twerking for toddlers, men are crushing women in sports, dudes in dresses are on our beer cans, and the elites have crushed your savings account... but amid all the pedophilia, corruption, and greed, there's some good news about America.
It starts with rivers.
But first, some background:
…
When the politicians' spending and woke 2030 goals cause the economy to crash and mass looting and civil war rages across the land, take heart. One day – after Joe Biden has successfully started nuclear war on the verge of rolling famines and riots – you'll be sitting in your little homestead in a town near what used to be Kansas City or Green Bay and you'll be able to look out at those rivers and amber waves of grain and realize how much better you have it than everyone else in the world.
Pretty neat, eh??
The U.K will be screwed - there would literally be nowhere to hide out from the hoard.
The part about not being invadable isn't true. The British made a good try in 1812 and were stopped largely because they didn't control the Great Lakes. had Perry been defeated at Lake Eerie or Jackson been defeated at New Orleans, it is doubtful we would have gotten out of that one with our territory intact. The open land border to the south is a highway if invasion every day.
Note that those rivers work as supply lines for an invader quite well, the Civil War being a case in point.