Vicious Optimist: …Rules Go Out the Window

via Viscous Optimist on his blog, Milsurp Writer. Check him out!

Which apocalyptic themed movie was too real for you?

For me, it was a campy film from 1962: Panic in Year Zero!

Image result for panic in the year zero film
They don’t make ’em like that anymore. (Source)

Some of the dialogue comes to mind:

Ann: “I can’t get over it. After all these years, I thought I knew you, but you turned out to be a stranger – robbing and mauling people like some kind of cheap hoodlum.”

Harry [after reluctantly robbing a store clerk who wouldn’t take out-of-town checks]: “We’re fighting for our lives, Ann! The main highways are completely choked. They’re spreading out on all the roads… Every footpath will be crawling with men saying ‘No matter what, I’m going to live!’ That’s what I’m saying too… my family must survive.”

Ann: “Intelligent people don’t just turn their backs on the rest of the world.”

Harry: “Under these conditions, intelligent people will be the first to try!

Ann: “Getting your son to hold a gun on a man…”

Harry: “Drop it, Ann!”

Rick [to Ann – his mother]: “We’re on our own Ma! No rules, no regulations, and no laws.”

Harry [sternly, to Rick]: “Don’t write off the law. The law will come back. I just want us to be around when it does.” (24:07)

The movie is disconcertingly realistic – with the devastation of Los Angeles in the opening of a nuclear war, the challenges faced by the Baldwins as they head to what safety they can offer a glimpse into one of the most worrisome aspects of any breakdown of law and order: desperation.

I have touched on this with a previous answer I later turned into a blog post: Post-War Perils, and I still stand by “militia/armed mobs” as being one of the most dangerous aspects of any post-apocalyptic scenario.

“Order and justice” at the whim of an armed enforcer is neither order nor justice as we presently know these concepts. The former is often facilitated by either bigger ego and/or bigger weaponry: “if there is a problem in following the rules – our rules, then dissent will be handled with draconian measures to preserve our order.” As soon as established rules of law are cast aside, the weasels will emerge from the woodwork and set out to establish and maintain that which they feel is necessary for their newly-consolidated power…

In the fictional case of the Baldwins, they become the mob and the victims of panic. They mete justice and are targeted for what they possess… they wrestle with their own ethics and the necessities which will help them survive… they are forced to be resourceful as well as anticipate those wily and determined enough to survive at any cost.

They become desperate.

What truly chills me on the ideas floated in this movie is the fact that, no matter how long ago the script was written, this fundamental component of our nature – survival – is timeless and will always come into conflict with the values and rules which govern any society.

A character from William Forstchen’s One Second After held a similar and interesting observation following the breakdown of American society after an EMP attack wiped out any and every electrical circuit:

“Poor kids,” Bill sighed. “Strange when you actually think of it. What’s happened, it’s what many of them have wished for, for years.”[…] “They don’t get it yet. If this is as bad as I think it is… they’ll be the first to die. They don’t know how to survive without a society that supports them even as they curse it or rebel against it.”[…] “Once they run out of food, then the reality will set in, but by that point, anyone with a gun will tell them to kiss off if they come begging. And these poor kids, if they have food, the ones with guns will take it. They’re used to free clinics, homeless shelters when they need ’em […] No idea whatsoever how vicious the world can really be when it’s scared and hungry.” (p. 127)

It is naive for anyone to think that, after the controls and structure of society break down, everyday life will be simplistic and somewhat challenging. To quote Mike Muir from his Infectious Grooves days:

Now you can’t use your college education
When you’re swimming in your own perspiration
You broke all the rules you know
Now all the rules go out the window

truly hope that we never get to that point. It will be messy, deadly, and a true nightmare… but even then, I still hold onto to vicious optimism that things will eventually right themselves again and with a keen appreciation of the lessons that were forced upon us during that time.

 

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About the Author: NC Scout

NC Scout is the nom de guerre of a former Infantry Scout and Sergeant in one of the Army’s best Reconnaissance Units. He has combat tours in both Iraq and Afghanistan. He teaches a series of courses focusing on small unit skills rarely if ever taught anywhere else in the prepping and survival field, including his RTO Course which focuses on small unit communications. In his free time he is an avid hunter, bushcrafter, writer, long range shooter, prepper, amateur radio operator and Libertarian activist. He can be contacted at [email protected] or via his blog at brushbeater.wordpress.com .

8 Comments

  1. DWEEZIL THE WEASEL August 26, 2022 at 11:30

    Sobering food for thought. IMHO, the “poor kids” (Millennials) will band together, and we older folks will be targeted because we prepped and saw the handwriting on the wall. It will be Bandenkreig-The Thirty Years War. They may be a bunch of shambling, texting, slack-jawed, mouth-breathing, brain-dead, vaping Mall Zombies but when they are starving, a Captain Tripps Messiah will emerge and Pied Piper them into every neighborhood like thousands of locusts. Plan accordingly. Bleib ubrig.

  2. Sean August 26, 2022 at 12:17

    Dweezil, me bucko, the answer, well, part of it, is to make some of those millennials your allies, and you’ll have younger and faster blood on your side. Already done so, and I may be able to rely on as many as a dozen of them. Food, water, and medicine for them, of course. Arm the good ones and prepare the others to be armed. Trained them, and showed them what works. Not an end-all-be-all answer, but a way to cope. Actually fun, like 3D chess, and the only rule is to keep playing.

    • DWEEZIL THE WEASEL August 26, 2022 at 20:48

      You are right, sir! And, FWIW, I have while I was working as a substitute teacher here in Winterfell. One of my loyalists who is also a gifted artist, belongs to the family which manufactures G9 Ammo. Good people. The Redoubt will survive this.

  3. Warren August 26, 2022 at 14:14

    If anyone is interested. Panic in the Year Zero can be watched for.free on youtube.
    The opening music is something between Route66 and 77Sunset Strip

    https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=UtQlRyEBq1Y

    • viciousoptimist August 26, 2022 at 18:34

      Wow…
      The fact that there’s so many hits on this one and other related posts gives me faith that folks in this community keep the “voracious reader” torch burning bright…

      @Sean: yes… training others will be key (that’s what brings us here, after all), but vetting them properly for what they have done and are capable of doing when traction breaks and everything is truly sideways… well, that will be the one of the most important factors to consider….

      • NC Scout August 26, 2022 at 18:48

        Yeah brother!

  4. Warren August 26, 2022 at 14:15

    If anyone is interested. Panic in the Year Zero can be watched for.free on youtube.
    The opening music is something between Route66 and 77Sunset Strip

    https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=UtQlRyEBq1Y

  5. goatmoag August 26, 2022 at 20:22

    Love Panic in Year Zero. Think it was the first survival movie I seen when I was a kid, and got me into prepping. Always have been quick to recommend it or use a lesson from it over the years.

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