Agreed!! This resonated strongly, and I am taking it to heart! Going shopping…
"…And hear me on this: stop treating your debt as your priority. Your credit card payment is not your priority. Your mortgage payment is not your priority. Your priority is physical survival. Food. Water. Fuel. Shelter. Community. Every dollar you spend servicing debt to financial institutions is a dollar you do not have for the things that will keep your family alive.
In a systemic collapse, the institutions holding your debt will become insolvent. The currency you are using to pay them may become worthless. The enforcement mechanisms that collect on debts require a functioning legal system, and a functioning legal system requires a functioning society. When the diesel runs out and the shelves empty, the society you know stops functioning. Use every available resource to acquire what you need to survive the next months. Redirect what you have toward survival, not toward keeping a credit score alive in a system that is collapsing. You can settle debts in a depreciated currency later, if the creditor still exists to collect them.
This is not financial advice. This is triage. And triage means you save the living first. …"
Been following this from the astrologer Austin Coppock since the plandemic. He does monthly forecasts in collaboration with Chris Brennan but keeps some of the more controversial issues quiet. If you’re interested, the old stuff as well as the newer forecasts where he’s less guarded are on YouTube on Rune Soup.
When they tell you their evil plans, BELIEVE THEM.
Everything this Rabbi says is happening RIGHT NOW.
“You can’t really argue that the Goyim are going to be annihilated.
We broke down their nationalities.
(laughter).
As individuals, they’re done. Their personalities…. They don’t exist.
They’re gone.
In Modern terminology, they call it cultural Genocide”.
They are committing a GENOCIDE against our people & they are even bragging about it but we are told it’s a conspiracy & it’s ’antisemitic’ to talk about it.
My theory is TPTB can’t shut down the world economy bc of their dumb ass poorly thought out war in the Middle East. They would be blamed for everyone’s misery.
However, if we have to lockdown for Hantavirus for the greater good it serves the same purpose as global energy lockdowns and “no one is to blame”
Result will be the same we just have a different catastrophe to blame.
Thanks for posting the newest Substack by Shryock. I like that he lists every cycle in which this has happened and breaks them down into 4 distinct parts that occur in every cycle: War and Crisis, Economic and Monetary, Communication and Technology, and Cultural Death and Rebirth. I think if he had just stated that these cycles have happened before in history, but didn’t offer any specific examples, I would be way less impressed.
When he states, “these systems [referring to everything from the Chinese calendar to the Mayans to the Hopi and more] were built independently across continents and millennia”, I feel like it ties something together for me. I might also add the work of more modern seers such as Cayce and Steiner to the mix when it comes to an understanding of how these cycles might unfold. Maybe also throw in some Christian mystics, too. They were all capable of holding a bigger picture point of view that has helped many people see things in a way that keeps humanity at the forefront so it is not always just doom and gloom. There is something higher at work here now. We may as well lean into it.
I’ve never heard of Austin Coppock and have only listened to the start of this video, but so far, I’m enjoying what he has to say and how he is saying it. The fact that this was made in Dec 2025 is the most interesting.
I have just come across two essays that I think are important.
The first one is by an author named Sharon Astyk titled About That Mark Shryock Piece. The piece she is referring to is Shryock’s Eight Weeks to Empty Shelves. Sixty Days to Famine. which is apparently causing quite the stir in a lot of places.
I’ve never heard of Astrk. She writes about topics such as preparedness, climate change, and health issues. She is the author of A Nation of Farmers: Defeating the Food Crisis on American Soil and Depletion & Abundance: Life on the New Home Front.
In this essay about Shryock’s piece, she pushes back on some of this statements. I find what she has written to be important for anyone here who has read the Shryock piece and has some questions. It’s not too lengthy.
At the end of Astrk’s piece, I saw a line which stated that Shryock has written a response to her piece and it offered a link to that which I think was decent of her.
Here is where that links goes and what Shryock wrote in response. I found it quite intriguing and very much worth reading, especially if you’ve read his first piece.
He gets into the timelines more and what this means for the U.S. more specifically. He acknowledges Astyk’s work - and even recognizes where he may have overstepped (his suggestion to stop paying your mortgage) - yet remains unapologetic about the data he has offered. He also shared a little more about who he is and how he lives now. I also found this to be an important read. I’d be very curious what others may think if you read this.
It reminds me that we gather information from various places and that different people gather from different places.
The central real-world (“3 dimentional world”) matches Chris’ writing very well.
The SofH closure has had devastating effects on fertilizer availability. This will be felt in the most food insecure areas first.
The world runs on diesel.
When you remove twenty percent of the energy inputs from a system designed that way, you do not get a twenty percent reduction in output. You get cascading failures. Because the system has minimum operating thresholds. Below those thresholds, things do not slow down proportionally. They break.
Here is how it works. Diesel is the system bottleneck fuel. Not gasoline. Diesel. Because diesel is structurally embedded in freight transport, agriculture, shipping, construction, logistics, and industrial supply chains. Everything you eat was grown with diesel, harvested with diesel, processed with diesel, transported with diesel, and refrigerated with diesel. When diesel tightens, the question becomes: who gets the fuel? Prioritization begins. Some goods move. Some do not. Prices diverge sharply. Reliability becomes regional and uneven rather than uniform.
He points our that California has some resources that others areas do not: biodiesel.
But this will NOT sustain the national trucking delivery system delivering California grown foods to the rest of the world.
That was my thinking exactly. His mission seems somewhat similar, to be able to visualize and understand the realities and the data behind them, and then present things in a way that will also try to help others to see them. I appreciate anyone who can do this.
I was skeptical about him at first and his essays tend to be long (though hold my attention), but I am intrigued and learning a lot. He’s no Chris, yet he does - as you said - remind us that we gather information from various places and people. Right now, I’m seeing that as a good thing and something I can trust, as long as one’s integrity tracks.
EDIT: I’ll also add that I appreciate it when someone can allow themselves to be humbled and admit when they were wrong (or as he said, he overstepped). That’s big.
Just a feeling, but I think sustained $6.00 diesel will have a huge impact on the US. Not to mention the jet fuel issue.
If diesel goes to 7 or 8, who knows the impact.
I live in a rural area. We have once weekly trash pickup for about $50 a month. Last month, $12 fuel surcharge. This month $15. Start adding in all of these increases to the obvious ones and it gets very ugly, I think.