Business Day

‘Bunker ’— a look at the world of preppers

• Page-turner shows how fears of disaster have created a multibilli­on-dollar industry

- Nathan Brooker London Times 2020 The Financial

When it became clear that the coronaviru­s was going to drasticall­y alter our way of life, thousands of preppers must have felt vindicated. Before the pandemic, anyone who confessed to being a prepper

— those who prepare for catastroph­e by building bunkers or safe rooms and stockpilin­g food and water — faced ridicule. Not now.

Mercifully, the pandemic has not caused the kind of societal breakdown that many of the preppers in Bradley Garrett’s new book Bunker: Building for the End Times are readying themselves for. But who is to know how close we came.

If the mortality rate of Covid19 were higher, or its effect on children a little worse, how many key workers — the delivery drivers, the supermarke­t staff, the nurses and doctors who kept society functionin­g — would still have turned up for work? There is a saying among preppers, Garrett writes: we are “72 hours from animal”.

Back in 2012, Garrett caused a stir when he illegally scaled the Shard skyscraper in London while it was still under constructi­on. The US academic and social geographer is interested in uncovering cities’ hidden spaces. He calls it “place-hacking”.

Garrett puts such skills to good use in Bunker: whether looking for a hidden complex in rural Tasmania or a former munitions depot in South Dakota, he doesn’t always wait for permission to have a nose around. But the book is about BUNKER: Building for the End Times, by Bradley Garrett, Allen Lane

much more than illicit glimpses into occluded spaces. It is a thoughtful study into the nature of paranoia and the people who try to profit from it — and it makes for a page-turning read.

For a start, there are jawdroppin­g statistics. National Geographic in 2012 found that 40% of Americans say stocking up on supplies or building a bomb shelter is a wiser investment than saving for retirement.

Garrett traces the history of prepping in the US to a speech given by president John F Kennedy in 1961, as the threat of a nuclear war with the Soviet Union escalated. “Our primary purpose is neither propaganda nor provocatio­n — but preparatio­n,” Kennedy said.

It started the first “doom boom”, as Americans started building fallout shelters in their backyards. Garrett quotes the lurid language used in a 1962 Life magazine cover story.

It described how, if a man was on Long Island facing a 10-megaton explosion in Manhattan, “the image of the fireball would burn holes right through the retinas of his eyes”.

These days, the threats that bunker builders are prepping for have multiplied. Alongside nuclear strike, there are fears of weapons that can knock out electronic equipment, terrorist attacks, climate change, financial collapse and, of course, the outbreak of a pandemic.

Some in the US also feel a threat posed by the Democratic party. A store owner in North Carolina tells Garrett he started prepping after the election of Barack Obama in 2008.

“Liberal elites were ruining the country,” he says. Another prepper, Heidi, says she avoids TV and gets her news from

YouTube. “You have got to get your own facts,” she says.

The book is at its sharpest when dealing with the “dread merchants”, those who attempt to profit from the multibilli­ondollar prepping industry.

Garrett follows the media interest in super-luxury bunkers in New Zealand and the Czech Republic and finds little more than PR spin and CGI mock-ups.

John Eckerd, the developer of an undergroun­d complex proposed in north Texas, received a prison sentence in 2019 for money laundering. The luxury developmen­t, called Trident Lakes, touted its own golf course, sandy beaches and a 15m statue of Poseidon.

Ultimately, I think Garrett sees something optimistic in the desire to prepare for the apocalypse. It is the hope — sometimes religious — of being reborn in what preppers call the “after-time”.

In the words of Robert Vicino, CEO of Vivos Group, which is transformi­ng a former US military facility in South Dakota into xPoint, a bunker network three-quarters the size of Manhattan: “No-one wants to go into the bunker; they want to come out of the bunker.”

What they are met with when they do, though, no-one can prepare for. /©

 ?? /123RF/Aaron Amat ?? Danger alert: Author Bradley Garrett explores the nature of paranoia and how it plays out among those prepping for an unknown imminent threat.
/123RF/Aaron Amat Danger alert: Author Bradley Garrett explores the nature of paranoia and how it plays out among those prepping for an unknown imminent threat.

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