Essay #3 First and foremost, Let me introduce myself I 'm Mr. Survivalist, I am an ex navy seal commander with many aptitudes and survival tactics. One of my aptitudes that I acquired form my services was the operations and complete servicing of modern day internal combustion engines as a Senior Tech Mechanic. As I moved up the ranks, my training started to become educational, after which I was educated in the field of Communications, Networks and Satellite Operations. Like I mentioned earlier I have many aptitudes, but most of which I am in no liberty to discuss. You may however now that I am 52 years of age, furthermore after my navy service, I took an interest and pursued and attained a Masters in Bio Agriculture which later …show more content…
This shelter is composed of many individuals with many traits, skills, and fundamental qualities that will aid in the survival and development of our society in the coming years after the Nuclear war. For the moment, our I cannot give too many details of my plan for our shelter as it may be hindered by unknown enemies, but I can share with you my philosophies. I believe that a society needs order, it needs discipline, commitment and most importantly good people with a good heart. I believe every resident of this shelter has those qualities within them. I have six main goals for us: survive, educate, clean-up, rebuild/restructure, repopulate and re-unite. Our shelter has all the proper defenses and shields to prevent any harm to us from the chaos and radiation that will transpiring outside of these walls. Our walls are 15 ft. thick of many layers of protection. We have our very own water supply, food supply both grown here and preserved. We generate our own electricity and have many energy efficient appliances. I have put into place many emergency plants of surviving incase for some reason our shelter becomes compromised. The next goal is educating our young ones. While we wait for the radiation levels to minimize, everyone will be educated for specific roles to better prepare our survival after leaving the shelter. Children however, will receive proper basic education. Those that wish to continue in education will have that option or they may
The Making of a Navy Seal is a true story told by Brandon Webb. Webb tells the story of surviving his toughest challenges and how he trains to be the best. He has a very unusual childhood and is eventually thrown out of the boat his family lives on. Even though Webb has a rough start in his adulthood, he overcomes difficult obstacles and works hard for his goals.
When the Navy sends their most elite squad, they send the SEAL’s. At the point when the SEAL’s send their elitist, they send SEAL Team Six. SEAL Team Six is a top secret group and the only way to get in, is to prove yourself as being strong physically and mentally. I Am a SEAL Team Six Warrior by Howard E. Wasdin is a emotional story of how Howard Wasdin defeated an extremely rough childhood and how he entered the extremely risky U.S. Naval force SEALS Team and Special Forces expert marksmen as a sniper. His transformation of becoming a young, poor boy into a lethal and extremely dangerous weapon will change him forever, and make him choose intense decisions. All through the book of I Am a SEAL Team Six Warrior it appears and clarifies missions that Howard had to experience. Missions no man should have to deal with. I would highly recommend this book to anyone looking for tons of action and for people with a thirst for adrenaline and a heart warming story.
Problem Statement: Pine Street Inn's President Lyndia Downie is looking to redefine the program’s 40-year organizational strategy of providing shelter to Boston’s most needy homeless, for the provision of more supportive housing. Faced with her proposition of increasing supportive housing units to 300 and decreasing shelter beds by 300, Board Members of the Pine Street Inn have to make a decision on what to do moving forward.
The government knew that such actions and the “Duck and Cover” methods recommended in schools would, in fact, provide absolutely no protection against exposure to fallout. The government also promoted building a fallout shelter, stocked with supplies of canned goods, as a way to survive atomic war. This was only a partial truth, since a shelter could protect from radiation, but not from fire storms.
The basis of our project was to raise funds and awareness for the HSOV. We wanted to reach out to as many people as we could so we can spread the issue of the shelters.
Start building this shelter and watch the percentages drop. The drug and alcohol rates will steadily decrease as well as crime rates. What will increase actually will look great for our city, as sanitation and city morale will boost. It’s quite clear that taking abandoned buildings and turning them to homeless shelters will help the people in need and the city of
Shelters may be the final safety net, but that net scrapes perilously close to the ground. To be in a shelter is to be homeless, and the more shelters we build, the more resources we divert from the only real solution to homelessness: permanent housing.
The shelters are for safety reasons for your children to go in when there are bombs and shrapnel falling.
Shelters objective would be to try and find more flats to buy. These would normally be tower block flats. They would also work with councils to try and see who requires priority housing.
Michael Patrick Murphy, a navy seals team 10, was involved in a dangerous operation that was supposed to be quick and easy but went horribly wrong. Murphy was born on the 7th of May 1976 and died on the 28th of June 2005 in battle. He fought in Afghanistan for the navy seals alongside four other people.
First, an applicant must begin with the drafting and processing of an extensive application. Furthermore, the application is to include a generic information form, health evaluation, psych evaluation, criminal and credit background history, and lastly a prefilled resume format form. Moreover, we should aim to help the homeless reinstate themselves back into society. We do not want to enable anyone to take advantage of this housing opportunity. But to utilize it to gain a path towards a better quality of living.
Anyone who knows me, knows in so few words that I could best be described as a complex or better yet, imaginative person. I am a person that is easily fascinated by all things thrilling and prove to be challenging. Growing up, I was raised with the mentality that anything you think, work hard for, and plan for, you become. So inevitably, when I got informed about this assignment, I went big with my top five career choices and pushed the desires of my heart outside of my comfort zone. In today’s society, the occupational field is getting more and more competitive because of the high demand for well-qualified and rounded individuals. Education doesn’t stop after high school because after graduation no one will babysit your choices and tell you
The future, along with time, is an extremely scary thought. Due to the fact that it is unpredictable. However we can work hard enough to the point where our future is what we want it to be. But obviously everyone's future plans are different, right? Usually yes, but it just depends on how you look at the topic, and how you would ask the topic. For example a fairly common question people ask today would be “Where do you see yourself in twenty years?”, for me, my answer is usually about architecture, or some where in the military, serving in the Navy. I have been told that I should go into training for this highly trained group, call the Navy Seals. These are highly trained operatives that do the missions that are too hard for normal soldiers
As the winter approaches we are forced to remember the severity of homelessness in the City. As of 2014, based on data provided by the Coalition for the Homeless, there are 59,246 people sleeping in shelters. It costs the City $3,500 a month to house a homeless person, adding up to $856 million a year. There are thousands more who sleep on the streets, but due to lack of data we are not sure of the exact number. Shelters only provide a temporary solution; on average a person is allowed to stay in a shelter for a maximum of 180 days. How can that individual/family regain their “self-sufficiency” in a city where the rent is amongst the highest in the country, and affordable housing is limited. Nearly half of all New York City residents pay more than 30 percent of their income on housing. Median rents have risen 75 percent since 2000, at the same time, that median incomes have declined, and between 1994 and 2012, the city lost 105,242 of rent regulated housing. To address this problem, and restore these people sense of citizenship, we need a citywide reform of the housing system.
Contemporary designers and architects are addressing the short and medium term needs of people who require emergency and refugee shelters, by evaluating the requirements of people once they have been displaced from their home due to a natural disaster, or any other adversity that they may face. This article will compare and contrast different types of emergency shelters, both short and long term, and appraise the key considerations that contemporary designers and architects must make while creating these refuges.