

Infrastructure
The more people that live in an area and the greater the population concentration, the greater the infrastructure requirements, even in low-tech societies. In higher-tech societies, the physical infrastructure requirements pyramid. A clean and reliable water system, sewage and waste disposal systems, paved streets, roads, and bridges, dependable electric power and other domestic and commercial utilities are just the beginning. We also need redundant communications links, banking and financial systems, not to mention a system for maintaining law and order and adjudicating disputes.
The more infrastructure a society requires, the more each part of that structure has the potential for conflicting with the requirements of a another part, and the more of a society's resources and effort that is required to keep all the parts of the infrastructure in good repair and operating properly. Also, the more susceptible each section is to damage and failure. For example, in the
The other significant problem with infrastructure is those aspects dealing with human interaction require acceptance and trust. Even the income taxation system in the
We all know that physical infrastructure fails when it is not maintained, as in the case of collapsing bridges and deteriorating highways, but few politicians or other leaders consider the need to maintain the underlying trust that supports our society's human infrastructure.
Right now... we need to shore up both aspects of infrastructure, or the science fiction that hasn't explored infrastructure might end up being history.
Last year, I took the step of disconnecting my water system from electric pumping. Now I get my water from rain, filtered for trash down to 500 nanometers size, and hoard it in a battery of rain barrels. I use gravity to enable water flow, and otherwise I haul water in buckets or use (non-electric) siphon pumps or pitcher pumps.
I still do buy groceries from time to time. But one of these days, I'll be getting most or all of my food from trees (planted from 2001 through 2004), forage, hunting and trapping.
In case there's a widespread "infrastructure problem" before I have my system fully set up, I have about five years' worth of food stockpiled. In addition, I know how to forage, although I've discovered that vitamins are much easier to gather than calories are.
I think that Americans crossed into a "No Return" situation some time in the past 40 years, such that a total collapse of infrastructure cannot be avoided by any means. Even if the Federal Reserve were junked, even if all the political traitors were shot immediately, we'd still suffer that collapse.
Since the United States can't be saved (and it might already have become a fiction), save the parts of America that are most important, and start at home.
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