Read them together if you have the time. They’re built to be read together.
ARTICLE 1: Community Lifelines
fortunefavorstheprepared.com/community-lifelines/
22-minute read
This is the framework piece. When the next disaster hits your area, the
people running the response will be tracking eight things: Safety &
Security, Food / Hydration / Shelter, Health & Medical, Energy,
Communications, Transportation, Hazardous Materials, and Water Systems.
These are the FEMA Community Lifelines. They are the load-bearing walls
of daily life. If one collapses for long enough, the rest start coming
down with it.
The article walks the framework end to end:
– What each of the eight lifelines actually covers, in plain language
– The four-color status code (GREEN / YELLOW / RED / GREY) the EOC uses
– What fails first in each lifeline, and on what timeline
– What your household can do, and what the EOC is doing in parallel
– How to run an eight-lifeline self-audit at 72 hours, 7 days, 30 days
– How to map your MAG by lifeline so the gaps become obvious
– How to run a structured lifeline sweep your EOC will actually act on
– Why “stabilized” does not mean “back to normal”
It includes a worked example of what a one-block sweep report sounds like
when delivered over the radio in lifeline format. That single example is
worth the read on its own. Reports that match the framework get logged
straight into the system that drives prioritization. Reports that do not
get parked while a planning staffer translates them, and that staffer
does not have time.
The framework is also the structure all four FFTP workbooks are built on:
PPAW, FEP, Household Recovery, and Next of Kin. If you’ve worked through
any of those, the framework is already living in your binder. The article
makes it explicit.
ARTICLE 2: Consequences
fortunefavorstheprepared.com/consequences/
18-minute read
This is the cascade effects piece. The thesis is short: one plant fire,
one cyber outage, one bridge down, one cargo ship in the wrong place —
and the ripple effects move outward through every system you depend on.
The news cycle moves on in 48 hours. The consequences do not.
Where Community Lifelines gives you the framework, Consequences shows you
what it looks like when one lifeline failure pulls the others down with it.
This is the case-study companion. Read it after the framework piece and
the eight buckets start clicking together.
WHY THESE MATTER NOW
Look at this week’s DTR cycle. PAN-OS RCE with ~225,000 devices exposed.
Linux Copy Fail FCEB deadline tomorrow. Lebanon ceasefire T-3 to expiry.
First US Andes hantavirus case at UNMC. Trump-Xi summit. SPC Slight Risk
in Kansas with a NWR transmitter OOS inside the microburst corridor.
~800 Russian drones over Ukraine overnight.
Every one of those is a lifeline event waiting to land somewhere. Cyber
is Communications and Energy. The CF deteriorating is Safety & Security.
The hantavirus case is Health & Medical. The Kansas slight risk with a
NWR gap is Communications and Safety & Security on the same map.
The framework is what lets you read the news as a practitioner instead
of as a spectator.
WHAT TO DO AFTER YOU READ
1. Sit down with your spouse or your MAG and do the eight-question self-
audit at 72 hours, 7 days, and 30 days. Write the answers down. Be
honest. Find the gaps.
2. Map your MAG by lifeline using the table in Article 1. Every household
does not need to be strong on every lifeline. The MAG as a whole does.
3. Practice a lifeline sweep. One block. Once. Take 30 minutes. The
first one will be sloppy. The second one will not.
If you’ve already done this work through the PPAW or FEP, treat these
articles as the reference document you point newer members of your MAG to.
Patron support is what funds the desk hours that produce this kind of
long-form work alongside the daily DTR cycle. Thank you for keeping the
shop open.
Read them here:
→ fortunefavorstheprepared.com/community-lifelines/
→ fortunefavorstheprepared.com/consequences/
Semper Paratus, Semper Gumby.
— Nick
Fortune Favors the Prepared │ Intelligence Operations Division