We're not talking about preparing for hurricanes or earthquakes. We're talking about preparing for the moment they lock you out of their system for refusing to comply.

Digital IDs. Social credit scores. Central bank currencies. They've already told us the plan. Comply or lose access to stores, banks, employment. They're building the infrastructure to starve you into submission.

Having supplies isn't about hiding out. It's about having time to coordinate your response.

When they freeze your account or deny you entry to stores, 90 days of essentials gives you a window. Not to panic. Not to immediately comply out of desperation. But to reach out to your network, coordinate with others facing the same situation, and figure out your next move from a position of stability instead of crisis.

This is the difference between making decisions from desperation versus making them from preparation. Desperate people accept whatever terms are offered just to survive another day. Prepared people have the luxury of saying "no" and building alternatives.

What you actually need: Food. Water. Medicine. Hygiene. Energy. Tools.

Not survival gear for running to the hills. Practical supplies for staying where you are and coordinating with others. Rice, beans, canned goods - calories that store long-term. Water or filtration capability. Medications you depend on. Basic hygiene supplies. Backup power or alternative heating. Tools for basic repairs. The things that let you function independently of their supply chains while you build alternatives.

This isn't about preparing to live in the woods. It's about preparing to live in your home while coordinating with a network that doesn't need their permission to operate.

But supplies alone aren't enough.

Stockpiling food in your basement doesn't change anything if you're still isolated and dependent on their systems for everything else. The supplies are just one piece. You also need the networks to move resources when official channels lock you out. You need the skills to produce or acquire more when your stockpile runs low. You need the physical capability to do the work that parallel systems require.

This is why the 90-day standard exists within a larger framework. It's not about being a lone wolf prepper. It's about being ready to participate in building something new.

Here's what matters: When enough people have supplies, networks, and capability, we can start coordinating resource distribution outside their control.

If a thousand people in your area have 90 days of food and are coordinating with each other, you've just created a parallel supply chain. When they lock one person out, the network keeps them fed. When they lock ten people out, the network adapts. When they try to lock everyone out, they discover their control mechanism doesn't work anymore because people have alternatives.

Now what do you think is possible if a thousand people had supplies for years?

This is how you build logistics and infrastructure that functions independently. Not by waiting for some perfect moment, but by getting enough people prepared that coordination becomes possible. The supplies are the foundation. The networks are the structure. Together they become systems that don't need their permission to operate.

The later phases of the UCF depend on people having this foundation built. You can't transition away from traditional employment if you'll starve in two weeks. You can't refuse compliance if your family has no food. You can't help others step out of the system if you're barely hanging on yourself.

Get your 90 days. Then help others get theirs. Network with people who are doing the same. Start coordinating small things - sharing resources, testing logistics, building trust. Because when the pressure increases, you'll need a system that already functions.

This isn't theoretical. When governments freeze accounts, when stores require digital IDs, when employers mandate compliance, the people who prepared will be the ones who can say "no" and mean it. Everyone else will comply because they have no choice.

Which one are you going to be?

— Citizen Soto

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