Alright GA community, I've heard it said in regards to Covid, jab mandates and general government overreach world wide, that things will get worse before they get better. To me, this comes across as a vague platitude that offers very little in the way of real help. It's already looking pretty grim in many parts of the world. Australia and New Zealand look to be experiencing the hardest treatment from their governments, but in other places many people are being forced by their jobs to get the jab or lose their job.
All that said, I want to challenge this community and ask: How specifically will things get worse? Who do you think will be most affected by things? How would one prepare? Do you have an opinion of what will be the turning point for things to get better? Open discussion, please share your thoughts and opinions. I don't want this to be a doomer thread. Just share what you think people could realistically expect to experience over the next few months or years. I'm genuinely interested to hear what you have to say. How bad will things get before they start getting better?
EDIT: Let's keep this based on Q posts as much as possible. I'm actually fairly new to Q and have watched a lot of the videos provided by the GA mods, but still researching a lot and learning from you all. I've been with the MAGA movement since 2016 back when The_Donald was on Reddit. I started coming over here to GA back in January after the 'Inauguration'. You all provided a lot of hope when it all seemed lost.
I keep powdered coconut milk because I find it more palatable. Almond milk, oat milk and rice milk are easy to make yourself if you're so inclined. Animal products in and of themselves are not the best for long term storage so for my family I tend to stock things like dried beans and grains, dried peppers for chile broth, nuts and seeds, oats, barley. If you don't know how to cook from scratch now is an excellent time to learn. I keep sourdough starter, ginger bug, kefir grains and a kombucha scoby in my fridge so I can make yogurt/kefir, homemade sodas, fermented tea and bread/pancakes at any point in the future on little notice for pennies. I keep a stash of flip top bottles and can brew my own beer as well. For me it's not just about not starving it's having the ability to keep my family healthy on cheap foods and knowing how to make old-fashioned bone broth and cultivated foods will do exactly that.