Nuclear War Won’t Kill You First—People Will

The beginning of a nuclear war will not look like the movies. There won’t be heroic music, clear villains, or a neat countdown clock. What you’ll get instead is confusion, panic, misinformation, and millions of scared, selfish people who suddenly realize the system they trusted is gone. The blast is terrifying, sure. The radiation is deadly. But people? People will be the real danger from minute one.

I’ve spent years preparing for disasters because I don’t trust society to hold itself together when things get ugly. And nuclear war is the ugliest scenario humanity has ever engineered. When it starts, the rules you think exist—laws, politeness, morality—will evaporate faster than common sense in a crowded city. If you want to survive the opening phase, you need to stop thinking like a citizen and start thinking like a survivor.

The First Hours: Panic Is Contagious

When the first alerts hit—whether it’s sirens, phone warnings, or social media exploding—you’ll see mass panic almost immediately. People will rush to gas stations, grocery stores, pharmacies, and highways. Not because it’s logical, but because panic spreads faster than radiation.

Your biggest mistake would be joining the herd. Crowds are dangerous in normal times. In a nuclear crisis, they’re lethal. People will fight over fuel, trample each other for food, and pull weapons they barely know how to use. All it takes is one loud noise or rumor to turn a crowd into a riot.

If you are not already in a safe location when the news breaks, your priority is simple: get away from people, not toward supplies. The supplies will still be there later—assuming anyone survives to use them. Crowds, on the other hand, will get violent fast.

Shelter Is About Distance From People, Not Comfort

Everyone talks about bunkers, basements, and fallout shelters. What they don’t talk about is who else wants to use them. Public shelters will be chaos. Shared shelters will become power struggles. The more people involved, the faster cooperation turns into conflict.

Your shelter doesn’t need to be perfect. It needs to be discreet. A quiet, low-profile location away from main roads and population centers is worth more than the most well-stocked shelter surrounded by desperate neighbors. The less visible you are, the less likely someone will decide you have something worth taking.

Noise discipline matters. Light discipline matters. Smoke, generators, and loud conversations will advertise your location to people who are already on edge. In the early days of nuclear war, attention is a liability.

Trust No One—Especially at the Beginning

This is the part that makes people uncomfortable, but comfort died the moment the missiles launched. At the beginning of a nuclear war, trust is a luxury you cannot afford.

People you’ve known for years may turn on you if they think you have food, water, or shelter. Strangers will lie without hesitation. Some will cry, beg, or tell convincing stories because desperation strips away shame.

That doesn’t mean you become a monster. It means you become cautious. Help can wait. Survival cannot. If you give away your supplies or expose your shelter in the first wave of chaos, you’re signing your own death warrant.

Later—much later—small, trusted groups may form. But in the opening phase, when fear is at its peak and information is nonexistent, isolation is often safer than cooperation.

Information Will Be Weaponized

During the early stages of nuclear conflict, information will be wrong, delayed, or deliberately misleading. Governments will downplay damage. Social media will amplify rumors. People will repeat anything that gives them hope or justifies their panic.

Following bad information can get you killed. Evacuation orders may send you straight into fallout zones. “Safe routes” may be clogged with abandoned vehicles and armed opportunists.

Your best strategy is to assume that official information is incomplete and public chatter is useless. Make decisions based on preparation and observation, not headlines. If you prepared in advance, now is the time to follow your plan—not improvise based on someone else’s fear.

Resources Turn People Into Predators

Food, water, medical supplies, and shelter will instantly become currency. And where currency exists, so do predators. Some people will organize quickly—not to help, but to take.

Looting will start almost immediately. At first it will target stores. Then it will move to homes. Anyone who looks prepared becomes a target. If you look calm, organized, or well-supplied, someone will notice.

This is why blending in matters early on. Do not advertise preparedness. Do not show off gear. Do not talk about what you have. Scarcity turns envy into violence.

Movement Is Risky—Staying Put Is Usually Safer

In the early phase of nuclear war, movement exposes you to people, fallout, and bad decisions. Every mile traveled increases the chance of confrontation. Roadblocks—official or otherwise—will appear. Some will be manned by authorities. Others will be manned by people with guns and no rules.

If you have shelter and supplies, staying put is often the best option. Let the initial wave of chaos burn itself out. People will exhaust themselves panicking, fighting, and fleeing. Those who survive will slow down eventually.

Moving later, when desperation has thinned the population and patterns have emerged, is safer than moving immediately into the storm.

Self-Defense Is About Deterrence, Not Heroics

If you think the beginning of nuclear war is the time to play hero, you won’t last long. Self-defense is not about winning fights—it’s about avoiding them.

A visible ability to defend yourself can deter some threats, but it can also attract others. The goal is to look uninteresting, not intimidating. You want to be the house people pass by, not the one they think is worth the risk.

If confrontation is unavoidable, end it quickly and decisively. Hesitation invites escalation. But understand this: every conflict increases your visibility and your risk. Violence is sometimes necessary, but it always has consequences.

Psychological Survival Matters

Anger will keep you alert, but despair will get you killed. The beginning of nuclear war will crush illusions—about safety, about society, about human goodness. That realization hits people hard.

You need to accept the reality quickly: the world you knew is gone, and no one is coming to save you. Once you accept that, you can focus on what actually matters—staying alive, staying hidden, and staying disciplined.

Routines help. Silence helps. Purpose helps. Panic is the enemy.

The Hard Truth No One Likes to Admit

Most people are not prepared. Most people are not mentally equipped for collapse. When nuclear war begins, those people will do irrational, dangerous things. Not because they’re evil, but because they’re scared.

Your job is not to fix society. Your job is to survive it.

The beginning of nuclear war is not about rebuilding or community or hope. That comes later, if it comes at all. The beginning is about enduring the worst behavior humanity has to offer while the fallout settles—both literal and psychological.

If you can stay out of sight, out of crowds, and out of other people’s plans, your odds improve dramatically. The bombs may fall without warning, but human behavior is predictable. Panic. Greed. Violence.

Prepare for that, and you stand a chance.

How To Stay Safe and Survive During a Riot in Colorado

If you live in Colorado, or anywhere that has seen rising tensions and civil unrest, you need to understand one thing: hope is not a plan. When a riot breaks out—whether it’s due to political turmoil, racial tensions, or widespread panic—you must already be ten steps ahead. As someone who’s trained in survival and self-defense for over 15 years, I’m going to give you hard-earned advice that could mean the difference between getting home safe or becoming a statistic.

Let’s break it down into what matters: how to stay safe during a riot, defend yourself if needed, and even improvise weapons if you’re caught with nothing but your wits and your environment.


8 Self-Defense Skills Every Prepper Must Master During a Riot

  1. Situational Awareness

Your first and best defense isn’t a weapon—it’s your mind. Situational awareness means reading a crowd, noticing exits, spotting threats early, and trusting your gut. During a riot, never put in headphones, never stare at your phone. You should always be scanning, assessing, and planning a route out.

  1. De-escalation and Verbal Judo

You don’t want to fight in a riot unless you absolutely have to. Learn to talk people down, mirror their body language subtly, and maintain non-threatening posture. If you can talk your way out of a fight, you’ve already won. Riot situations are chaotic—don’t add fuel to the fire.

  1. Escaping Grabs and Holds

Crowds can get physical fast. Learn how to break wrist grabs, choke holds, and bear hugs. Use your hips and leverage, not brute strength. Techniques like the “C clamp” on the wrist or “shrimping” away from a bear hug can give you just enough space to escape and reposition.

  1. Blunt Force Defense

Learn to wield everyday objects as blunt weapons. A flashlight, walking stick, umbrella, or even a full water bottle can be used defensively. Your goal isn’t to fight like it’s a movie—it’s to strike, stun, and flee. Aim for the nose, throat, or kneecaps.

  1. Knife Defense and Retention

If you carry a blade for self-defense, you better know how to use it and keep it. Practice drawing and deploying your knife quickly, and more importantly, know how to stop someone from taking it. Use tight body control and guard your dominant side when moving through crowds.

  1. Improvised Shielding

Trash can lids, backpacks, and even car doors can be used to shield against thrown bottles, rocks, or blunt weapons. Carry your pack in front when things get hairy—it’s extra padding for your vitals and can act as a push-shield through crowds.

  1. Mob Movement and Escape Routes

Move with the flow of a crowd, never against it. Fighting it will wear you out fast. Your aim is to drift to the edges and duck into an alley, store, or underground passage. Practice spotting side exits and fire doors. Know Colorado’s downtown layouts if you live in places like Denver, Boulder, or Colorado Springs.

  1. Striking with Purpose

If escape is not an option and force is necessary, don’t throw wild punches. Aim for disabling strikes. A palm heel to the chin, elbow to the temple, or knee to the thigh can drop someone fast. Remember: defend, disable, disengage, and disappear.


3 DIY Survival Skills to Build Improvised Weapons

In a crisis, your ability to improvise may be your only advantage. Here are three quick DIY weapon-building skills every serious prepper should know:

1. PVC Pipe Baton

Grab a 1″ thick PVC pipe from a hardware store (or scavenge one from an abandoned property). Fill it with sand or small rocks for weight, cap both ends with duct tape or rubber stoppers, and you’ve got a homemade baton. Tape the grip end for better handling. Blunt, durable, and totally legal to carry in most states if you call it a walking stick.

2. Sock Sap (Blackjack)

Find a sturdy sock and fill it with quarters, rocks, or small metal parts. Tie it off and you’ve got a sap—a flexible, concealable striking tool that’s effective at close range. It’s not meant to kill—it’s meant to discourage and disable.

3. Makeshift Spear or Pike

Duct tape a kitchen knife, broken bottle, or even sharpened metal object to a broomstick, curtain rod, or branch. You’ve now got a spear-like weapon that keeps attackers at a distance. This is ideal for home defense during extended unrest when your doors or windows may be compromised.


Mindset: The Prepper’s Edge

You can have all the tools, all the training, and still panic if your mindset isn’t right. Panic is the enemy. Your goal in a riot is not to play hero. Your goal is to get home alive.

Here’s the mental protocol I run through in every emergency:

  1. Assess – What’s happening? Where is the threat?
  2. Plan – What’s my nearest safe route or cover?
  3. Act – Move with intent. Don’t hesitate.
  4. Adapt – If the plan fails, switch immediately. No freezing.

Practice these scenarios in your mind often. Walk through local areas you visit frequently and note exit points, choke points, and places to hide. Knowing your environment is as critical as any tool on your belt.


Riot Survival Kit: Essentials to Carry in Colorado

Always keep a compact go-bag in your car or backpack. Here’s what should be inside if you live in a volatile area:

  • N95 mask (for smoke or pepper spray)
  • Goggles (to shield your eyes from debris or chemicals)
  • Flashlight (blunt and bright—can double as a baton)
  • Multitool
  • Water bottle
  • Compact first aid kit
  • Leather gloves (to grab hot or broken surfaces)
  • Map of your local area (GPS may go down)
  • Energy bar or compact food

Add a bandana, whistle, and cash—because ATMs and credit cards may not work when cities shut down.


Final Word: Train Now, Thank Yourself Later

Don’t wait until the sirens wail. Learn the skills. Drill them. Practice with friends or in self-defense classes. Colorado is beautiful, but even beauty can turn chaotic in the right storm. Whether you’re in Aurora, Pueblo, or Fort Collins, remember this:

No one is coming to save you. You are your own first responder.

Prepare now, move smart, and you’ll not only survive—you’ll lead.