Dr. Chris Ellis

3.5K posts

Dr. Chris Ellis banner
Dr. Chris Ellis

Dr. Chris Ellis

@Prep4Disasters

Christian | Family Man | PhD, Cornell University | Author of Resilient Citizens | Localism | Homesteading | Army (views my own not DoD)

Colorado Inscrit le Şubat 2021
427 Abonnements2.5K Abonnés
Tweet épinglé
Dr. Chris Ellis
Dr. Chris Ellis@Prep4Disasters·
Feeling anxious, stressed, or out of control? It doesn't have to be that way. Resilience is a mindset. Learn how others have seized their agency and how you can not just live - but thrive. My new book is now available Resilient Citizens: The People, Perils, and Politics of Modern Preparedness. Find out more at resilientcitizens.com From war zones to wildfires, pandemics to power outages, the threats we face today seem bigger, scarier, and more unrelenting than ever before. Why, then, does society take a critical view of those who prepare for the worst while hoping for the best? Why do so many people write them off as crazy, conspiracy-minded “doomsday preppers”? In Resilient Citizens, Army officer and disaster expert Dr. Chris Ellis challenges the myths, dismisses the fearmongering, and takes a much-needed, long-overdue scholarly look not just at prepper culture in America, but our overall social, physical, intellectual, emotional, and spiritual health. This isn’t another doomsday prepper guide or government-endorsed emergency brochure. It’s a deep dive into the people, perils, and politics of preparedness—from ranchers in the Rockies to policymakers globally—and a call to action for those who refuse to outsource their safety to luck or bureaucracy. Unpacking thousands of hours of research, Dr. Ellis will help you— § Learn the traits and strategies of those best equipped to survive and thrive amid disaster. § Understand the psychological roadblocks that keep people stuck in denial or helplessness. § Discover how different belief systems, subcultures, and nations approach long-term resilience. § Debunk popular myths about “preppers” and discover the truth behind America’s growing culture of preparedness. § Examine the historical and political roots of America’s preparedness paradox. § Reveal the number one resilience item every household must own. Whether you’re a concerned parent, a curious skeptic, or a seasoned survivalist, Resilient Citizens will challenge your assumptions and inspire you to think bigger, prepare smarter, and ensure your own survival in a chaotic world and uncertain future.
English
3
11
62
23.7K
Dr. Chris Ellis
Dr. Chris Ellis@Prep4Disasters·
@pclarkallen We have done it before. In WWII 40% of vegetables in America were grown in Victory Gardens. You can start small. Warning: backyard gardens are a gateway drug.
English
0
0
5
62
Peter Allen
Peter Allen@pclarkallen·
This is, unfortunately, 100% true. But it doesn't have to be! My hope is this current crises will motivate large scale movement towards a food system based on sunshine, water, and living soil, instead of one based on gas-derived fertilizers, toxic pesticides, and dead soil.
Dr. Chris Ellis@Prep4Disasters

Are you prepared for a prolonged food shock? As I wrote in my book Resilient Citizens: "You may think it is primarily farmers and ranchers who are responsible for grocery stores full of corn or steak or whole wheat bread, but it is largely Exxon and Saudi Arabia. Our modern food system is based just as much on oil as it is on soil." Something to chew on . . .

English
3
8
22
871
Rasha K
Rasha K@RashaAl_Khatib·
@Prep4Disasters Important reminder that food, energy and logistics operate as one system. Building resilience means cleaner power for fertilizers and transport, stronger regional production, and shorter supply chains.
English
1
0
4
282
Dr. Chris Ellis
Dr. Chris Ellis@Prep4Disasters·
Are you prepared for a prolonged food shock? As I wrote in my book Resilient Citizens: "You may think it is primarily farmers and ranchers who are responsible for grocery stores full of corn or steak or whole wheat bread, but it is largely Exxon and Saudi Arabia. Our modern food system is based just as much on oil as it is on soil." Something to chew on . . .
English
3
5
56
11.4K
Dr. Chris Ellis
Dr. Chris Ellis@Prep4Disasters·
This is solvable at the local level. Many people may not like that answer because it puts agency on them to effect change.
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta

Let me explain exactly why every new subdivision in America looks like the top photo, because the math is wild. A mature tree increases a home's value by 7 to 19 percent. On a $400,000 house, that's $28,000 to $76,000. A single shade tree produces the cooling equivalent of ten room-size air conditioners running 20 hours a day. One tree on the west side of a house cuts energy bills by 12 percent within 15 years. The bottom photo is worth more, costs less to live in, and sells faster. This has been documented by the University of Washington, Clemson, Michigan State, and the USDA. The data is not in dispute. Removing those trees saves the builder roughly $5,000 per lot. Concrete trucks need twice the dripline radius of every standing tree. Utility trenches need flat ground. A bulldozer flattens 200 lots in an afternoon. Preserving trees adds weeks and thousands per home. So the developer pockets $5,000 in savings and the buyer eats $50,000 in lost value for the next two decades. The person making the decision and the person paying for it have never been in the same room. The Woodlands, Texas is the proof of what happens when they are. George Mitchell bought 28,000 acres of Houston timberland in 1974 and preserved 28% as permanent green space. He forced McDonald's to build behind the tree canopy. That McDonald's became one of the highest-volume locations in Texas. The first office building, designed to reflect the surrounding forest so you couldn't see it from the street, leased completely. The Woodlands median home price today: $615,000. Katy, a comparable Houston suburb that clear-cut: $375,000. Named #1 community to live in America two years running. Fifty years of data. The trees are worth more than removing them saves. Developers clear-cut anyway because they sell the house once and leave. You live in it for 30 years.

English
0
0
2
191
Dr. Chris Ellis
Dr. Chris Ellis@Prep4Disasters·
It’s a good time to revisit this. Quite a bit going on in the world. Be courageous, be prepared. For those in the media, I’m happy to discuss this.
Dr. Chris Ellis@Prep4Disasters

Feeling anxious, stressed, or out of control? It doesn't have to be that way. Resilience is a mindset. Learn how others have seized their agency and how you can not just live - but thrive. My new book is now available Resilient Citizens: The People, Perils, and Politics of Modern Preparedness. Find out more at resilientcitizens.com From war zones to wildfires, pandemics to power outages, the threats we face today seem bigger, scarier, and more unrelenting than ever before. Why, then, does society take a critical view of those who prepare for the worst while hoping for the best? Why do so many people write them off as crazy, conspiracy-minded “doomsday preppers”? In Resilient Citizens, Army officer and disaster expert Dr. Chris Ellis challenges the myths, dismisses the fearmongering, and takes a much-needed, long-overdue scholarly look not just at prepper culture in America, but our overall social, physical, intellectual, emotional, and spiritual health. This isn’t another doomsday prepper guide or government-endorsed emergency brochure. It’s a deep dive into the people, perils, and politics of preparedness—from ranchers in the Rockies to policymakers globally—and a call to action for those who refuse to outsource their safety to luck or bureaucracy. Unpacking thousands of hours of research, Dr. Ellis will help you— § Learn the traits and strategies of those best equipped to survive and thrive amid disaster. § Understand the psychological roadblocks that keep people stuck in denial or helplessness. § Discover how different belief systems, subcultures, and nations approach long-term resilience. § Debunk popular myths about “preppers” and discover the truth behind America’s growing culture of preparedness. § Examine the historical and political roots of America’s preparedness paradox. § Reveal the number one resilience item every household must own. Whether you’re a concerned parent, a curious skeptic, or a seasoned survivalist, Resilient Citizens will challenge your assumptions and inspire you to think bigger, prepare smarter, and ensure your own survival in a chaotic world and uncertain future.

English
0
0
0
149
Dr. Chris Ellis
Dr. Chris Ellis@Prep4Disasters·
Just a little something to think about: bunker buying by presidential cabinet members (and a host of others that can afford it). But go ahead, tell me extreme resilience is "fringe". zerohedge.com/geopolitical/t…
English
0
1
2
118
Dr. Chris Ellis retweeté
Peter Allen
Peter Allen@pclarkallen·
I can't legally sell state-inspected beef 20 miles west of here across the Mississippi River. But the big packers don't have to disclose whether grocery store beef is from America or from the other side of the planet.
Beef Initiative🇺🇸🇸🇻Beef.com@beefinitiative

🚨Under the Federal Meat Inspection Act, ranchers can’t sell their own beef across state lines without USDA inspection — full stop. It doesn’t matter how well you know the rancher or how locally it was processed. That label that reads “NOT FOR SALE” means exactly what it says. As @breeauna9 put it: ‘So not only can I not process it myself… I have to enter into an agreement with JBS, Cargill, or Tyson.’ Which raises a fair question: is this actually about food safety, or does it just funnel independent producers into the arms of a handful of meat-packing giants?​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​ @RMConservative

English
79
2.2K
6.9K
105.2K
Dr. Chris Ellis retweeté
Doomer Optimism
Doomer Optimism@DoomerOptimism·
Doomer Optimism as the Tocquevillian public square of the future ft. @Prep4Disasters
English
1
2
4
356
Dr. Chris Ellis
Dr. Chris Ellis@Prep4Disasters·
"Just a note to say that I just finished Chris's book, Resilient Citizens. First, just to acknowledge and admire the incredibly massive volume of research and thought that went into writing the book. And then, just a word of appreciation for Chris's thoughtful advice throughout the book, and his gracious conclusion. May God, Himself, guide the book's application. And may He bless you and your family as you walk faithfully with Him each day." We received this from a friend we lived near from 25 years ago.
English
1
0
0
89
Dr. Chris Ellis
Dr. Chris Ellis@Prep4Disasters·
We lost our fourth and final bee hive this winter to Varroa Mites. Queen Bee Elizabeth in this top bar hive lasted the longest. Silver lining, we’ve measured out over 200 pounds of honey so far.
Dr. Chris Ellis tweet media
English
1
0
19
6.5K
Dr. Chris Ellis
Dr. Chris Ellis@Prep4Disasters·
@wrathofgnon Nothing that does not involve chemical treatment. Last year we tried buying a couple of queens that were resistant, but it did not work.
English
2
0
1
535
Wrath Of Gnon
Wrath Of Gnon@wrathofgnon·
@Prep4Disasters In your experience you haven't come across anything that can stop Varroa so far?
English
4
0
18
6.1K
Dr. Chris Ellis
Dr. Chris Ellis@Prep4Disasters·
We are around $50 away from $5,000 gold and $1.50 away from $100 silver.
GIF
English
1
0
1
258