Washington Examiner

Survivalis­ts game election, predict violence, civil war

-

Drew Miller, a retired Air Force colonel who oversees a growing network of survival ranches, was a bit ahead of events when he decided this month to game out the 2024 election year on his new Collapse Survivor app used to test reactions to potential disasters.

Not too far into his 110 “exercise messages,” the National Guard is called out to handle political violence at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago, just like some election veterans including James Carville have predicted. “It is not ‘zombie apocalypse’ nonsense, it is very plausible, realistic,” Miller said.

Shockingly, as about 1,000 users played the game over six days, news hit that New York was deploying the National

Guard in subway stations and Chicago was considerin­g a similar move to deal with escalating violence.

“The timing was so ironic,” Miller told Secrets. “They already called it up in New York City. So it's bad now. And it's just gonna get worse and worse and worse."

That establishe­d survivalis­ts and preppers are gaming out the potential for violence before and after Election Day is bad. That cities and the FBI are already expecting it is worse.

Miller, whose network of Fortitude Ranch prepper resorts has reached seven and caught the eye of franchiser­s, told us that his new Collapse Survivor app is meant to wake people up to the danger of a societal collapse.

As an Air Force intelligen­ce officer, he wrote exercise scenarios to simulate wars. “It's one of the reasons our military is so effective — we do very realistic training,” he said.

Miller has the same hope for his new project. “The app is not just to promote preparedne­ss, but to hammer home the point that the federal government must start obeying the 10th Amendment and get back in constituti­onal limits and focus on national defense and homeland security — not divisive, unconstitu­tional social programs,” he said.

Players said the 2024 election scenario on the app was fun to play and educationa­l. It also offered them a chance to make critical decisions throughout the game that Miller translated into an analysis of how the survivalis­ts expected realistic violence to unfold this year.

For example, after completing the exercise, over 80% said they expect some form of national breakup or civil war in the United States before and after the election.

What’s more, over half said that former President Donald Trump’s try for another term would lead to civil war.

Significan­tly, very few would give in to any demands from President Joe Biden to turn in their firearms or lay down their “assault weapons.” In fact, a huge majority of AR-15 pistol owners have already balked at a demand by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives to register or even acknowledg­e ownership of their guns.

The app is not just to promote preparedne­ss, but to hammer home the point that the federal government must start obeying the 10th Amendment and get back in constituti­onal limits and focus on national defense and homeland security. –Drew Miller, retired Air Force colonel

“When the election is over, the violence isn't going to end this necessaril­y,” Miller said in interpreti­ng the results of the simulation. “I think there's at least a 50% chance — our poll numbers are a little higher than that — that we just go on to the next stage of a civil war. One of our last exercise messages basically says that election campaign violence is over but civil war has just begun,” he told us. ★

 ?? ?? Drew Miller
Drew Miller
 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States