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April 13, 1998: Surviving Cataclysm - Ted Wright
Published 2 years, 1 month ago
Description
Art Bell opens with news updates, a preview of the week's upcoming guests, and open lines before welcoming Ted Wright, author of Wright's Complete Disaster Survival Manual, a book on FEMA's recommended reading list. A World War II survivor who endured the London Blitz as a child, Wright brings decades of practical experience to the subject of civilian preparedness in an age of tornadoes, earthquakes, and nuclear threats.
Wright argues that the American public is dangerously unprepared for major disasters, noting the absence of underground shelters in tornado-prone areas and the lack of any viable evacuation plan for major cities. He criticizes the government's approach to nuclear safety, revealing that FEMA concluded it was cheaper to pay for thyroid surgeries than to stockpile potassium iodide pills near the nation's 109 nuclear plants. He also discusses the ongoing crisis at Chernobyl, where fissionable material continues to sink toward the water table.
The conversation covers practical survival topics including water storage, food preservation methods drawn from pioneer-era practices, and the use of Geiger counters to monitor radiation. Wright warns that deteriorating farmland soil combined with extreme weather could trigger food shortages, and he stresses that self-reliance is the only reliable survival strategy.
Wright argues that the American public is dangerously unprepared for major disasters, noting the absence of underground shelters in tornado-prone areas and the lack of any viable evacuation plan for major cities. He criticizes the government's approach to nuclear safety, revealing that FEMA concluded it was cheaper to pay for thyroid surgeries than to stockpile potassium iodide pills near the nation's 109 nuclear plants. He also discusses the ongoing crisis at Chernobyl, where fissionable material continues to sink toward the water table.
The conversation covers practical survival topics including water storage, food preservation methods drawn from pioneer-era practices, and the use of Geiger counters to monitor radiation. Wright warns that deteriorating farmland soil combined with extreme weather could trigger food shortages, and he stresses that self-reliance is the only reliable survival strategy.