FEATURED AUTHOR
BRUCE D. CLAYTON
Survivor, scientist, writer, teacher.
Author of more than a dozen books on survival and self-defense.
Black belt in the fifth degree.
"You can't be prepared for the
unthinkable without thinking about it in the first place."
Twenty-five
years ago I started writing a book called Life After Doomsday,
which explained how to survive a nuclear war. It was my
weekend hobby while I finished my doctorate in ecology.
Years of research went into the book, and it was well received
by its intended audience. In certain circles the book became
known as "the bible of survivalism." It is still
in print (and endorsed on hundreds of survival Web sites)
two decades later.
My interest in emergency preparedness eventually led me
into firefighting and then to the position of assistant
director of the Office of Emergency Services for my rural
county. In that position I attended numerous training classes
about nuclear war, hazardous materials, and other threats
to the community, including terrorism.
My duties as an emergency response planner required me
to explore the world of terrorists and assess their potential
for hurting my community. This research made me sensitive
to subsequent news items as the terror situation developed
over the next few years.
America has been under steady attack by terrorists for
two decades, but for the most part we have ignored these
incidents. The same group that crashed the planes into the
World Trade Center, the Pentagon, and the Pennsylvania countryside
on September 11, 2001, declared a holy war on the United
States in 1996 and has launched regular attacks on Americans
ever since. In the meantime, we have had domestic terrorists
attacking from the rear, in our very heartland. I have monitored
these events with growing concern.
When I saw the Twin Towers collapse, I was dumbfounded
and furious, just like you. The secret war was suddenly
out in the open, and people needed to know how to deal with
it. The news wires and talk shows buzzed with useless advice
from the media's instant experts. Couldn't anybody do better
than that?
To defend your family from terrorist attack, you need to
draw on many different kinds of expertise. You need to understand
the history of terrorists and their methods. You need to
understand important aspects of chemistry, microbiology,
genetics, physiology, and anatomy. You need expert advice
about hazardous materials, radiological defense, and nuclear
weapons effects. In terms of practical experience, it helps
to have worn the self-contained breathing apparatus and
knelt on the bloody pavement as a first responder. You need
to know what emergency management and disaster response
look like from the inside. You might find it comforting
to know a thing or two about personal defense. To make your
plans, you need the perspective that 25 years of survival
preparations can give you.
I
realized that most people do not have this breadth of expertise,
but I do. So I decided it was time for me to write another
book.
Life After Terrorism isn't for me. My survival preparations
were made long ago. I hope you won't need the information
contained in it either. However, when your children's lives
are at stake, you can't afford to be ignorant, and you can't
afford to make naïve mistakes. When your family is
involved, survival stops being a game and takes on a grim
seriousness. You need some advice from a friend who has
been there.
Knowledge is power. Knowledge and experience trump gadgets
and theory every time. Life After Terrorism will teach you,
amuse you, and make you think. It will, also, probably make
you mad. I hope you won't be quite the same person when
you finish reading it.
Bruce D. Clayton, Scientist
Bruce
D. Clayton received his doctorate in ecology from the University
of Montana in 1978 , after getting his bachelor's degree
in zoology and botany from UCLA in 1972. His scientific
specialties were forest fire ecology and biological control.
A California state-certified instructor of radiological
defense techniques and fallout shelter management, Clayton
has been trained in disaster shelter management and damage
assessment by the American Red Cross. He was one of the
founding members of Doctors for Disaster Preparedness (DDP).
In October 1982, Clayton was invited to speak at the yearly
convention of the U.S. Civil Defense Council (USCDC). Subsequently,
the USCDC gave him the Eugene Wigner Award for his work
in educating the American public about civil preparedness.
In May 1984, Clayton received a citation from California
governor George Deukmajian for "Exceptional Achievement
in the Field of Emergency Preparedness." The citation
reads, in part, "Clayton has represented the emergency
management community with distinction in public forums,
where his calm, factual, scientific approach has been highly
effective in informing the public about the importance of
disaster preparedness."
He has been interviewed by several national television
programs, including The CBS Evening News, The Tomorrow Show,
Today, and 60 Minutes, and has appeared on many local radio
programs in the United States, Great Britain, Canada, and
Australia.
Bruce D. Clayton, Author
Bruce D. Clayton is perhaps best known as the author of
Life After Doomsday. Published in 1980, Life After Doomsday
is still widely regarded as the best book on surviving nuclear
war and other major disasters--from tornados to theocracies--ever
printed. Life After Doomsday changed the way this nation
viewed nuclear survival: the U.S. government used Clayton's
research from the book to revise some of its official policies
on civil defense. Clayton was among the first scientists
to teach that the effects of nuclear war were not only survivable
but were also highly predictable.
Clayton also wrote Fallout Survival and Thinking About
Survival, coauthored Survival Books and Urban Alert, and
published The Survivalist Directory. He is a former editor
of INFO-RAY, the newsletter of the California Radiological
Defense Officers' Association, and was a contributing editor
to Survive magazine, Survival Guide magazine, and the Survival
Tomorrow newsletter.
Life After Terrorism is Clayton's first book for Paladin
in more than 20 years. In it, he presents logical and viable
methods for realistically assessing the threat of terrorism
today and coming up with a plan for your family to avoid--or
survive--those threats.
Bruce D. Clayton, Martial Artist
As
a boy, Bruce D. Clayton was profoundly influenced by the
story of Kitty Genovese, murdered in New York in 1964. This
28-year-old woman was stabbed repeatedly in full view of
38 neighbors, but no one tried to help her. Nobody wanted
to become involved. Clayton made a decision to be the kind
of person who would get involved, and this eventually led
to a career in the martial arts.
Clayton spent two years studying with Briggs Hunt, the
famous Olympic wrestling coach, while an undergraduate at
UCLA. He took Hunt's down-and-dirty self-defense class a
total of six times, breaking his arm only once. Clayton
received personal instruction from Hunt while ghost-writing
a self-defense text for the course. During this period Clayton
was also introduced to Kodokan judo, breaking his nose only
once.
After college, Clayton spent a year studying traditional
Shotokan karate in Los Angeles and conceived a life-long
attachment to this style. These studies were interrupted
by graduate school in Missoula, Montana, where Clayton spent
three years with the Big Sky Taekwando organization, breaking
his hand only once. During this period, Clayton won first-place
trophies in both kata and kumite in the 7th Annual Big Sky
Championships.
After receiving his Ph.D. in ecology, Clayton left tae
kwon do and eventually returned to traditional karate. He
is currently a Godan (fifth-degree black belt) in Shotokan
karate under Vincent Cruz (8th degree), and has been awarded
the title of shihan, denoting special achievement as an
instructor. There have been no further broken bones as of
this writing.
Clayton has also continued to develop his self-defense
course. The course bypasses traditional self-defense instruction
and teaches students how to use 12 families of weapons.
For the record, Clayton has never been a member of any
political party, any religious organization, or any group
that is based on animosity or intolerance.
Q & A
Paladin: What are the two most important
"rules to live by" when facing terrorism?
Clayton: 1) Don't panic. 2) Don't panic.
The fact is that 99.9% of America will never see an Arab
terrorist face-to-face. They have a lot of ambition but
little ability to carry out their plans. Stop and take a
serious look at the risk you actually run, and then takes
steps to reduce it. If you are caught in an attack, move
quietly and calmly to the exits and walk away. If you are
caught and can't walk away, then quietly and calmly kill
as many of the bastards as you can. It's your duty to the
rest of us.
Paladin:
Of all of the things one can do to prepare for a terrorist
attack, what do you consider the biggest priorities?
Clayton: It would be good advice to avoid
camping trips on the West Bank. At home, it's not a good
idea to work in one of the world's tallest buildings. In
fact, we don't want to work or live near any building that
shows up on tourist postcards. Seriously, Arab terrorists
in the United States are all tourists. If you avoid tourist
attractions, you'll avoid most of the targets the terrorists
think are sexy. A well-coordinated terrorist attack, which
is almost an oxymoron even after September 11, could scare
us into shutting down interstate transport (trucking) and
municipal water for a few days. Better have some food and
water stored.
Paladin: If you were to take a guess on
what type of terrorist attack Americans are most likely
to face next, what would it be?
Clayton: The anthrax attack looks like
it was the work of a disaffected American, not an Arab terrorist.
Still, the Arabs watched it and saw how much trouble a tablespoon
of powder and a half dozen letters caused. Iraq and Iran
have tons of anthrax. Al Qaida has tons of money. They must
be thinking about a copycat anthrax attack. Of course, they'll
mail their letters the day after the U.S. Postal Service
raises first-class rates again, and all the letters will
be returned to sender.
Paladin: How have you personally prepared
for that eventuality?
Clayton: I really doubt that I'll get a
letter, but I do have one line of defense. My mail goes
to a post office box. If I get an envelope that dusts the
box with white powder, I'm not going to touch it. I'll just
close the little door and call for help.
Paladin: How do you respond to people
who still think it's "paranoid" to think about
trying to protect yourself from nuclear warfare or terrorism?
Clayton: I'm not worried about nuclear
war and terrorism because I'm trained and equipped to deal
with them. You're not worried about nuclear war and terrorism
because . . . what? Because you have your eyes shut, your
hands over your ears, and your head between your knees?
What are you doing, praying to Mecca?
Paladin: Has September 11 brought more
people over to your way of thinking -- that disaster is
more than possible and that preparations should be made?
What are the indications of this?
Clayton: The peak of the survival movement
occurred during the Carter years, when Americans were held
hostage in Iran and the Savings and Loan companies teetered
on the brink of collapse. We haven't returned to that level
of concern yet, but if Al Qaida keeps up the pressure we
may. All they have to do is make one more attack that hurts
like September 11 did.
Paladin: In general, do you think more
Americans are preparing to survive some sort of disaster
now than was the case during the Cold War?
Clayton: Americans are always preparing
for "some sort" of disaster, depending on where
they live and what's in the news. People aren't sure how
to respond to the terror threat. It's too complicated. There
are too many threatening scenarios. That's why I wrote Life
After Terrorism, to help people sort out which parts are
important and which are fantasy.
Any questions? If so, please feel free to e-mail
Dr. Clayton.
LIFE
AFTER TERRORISM
What You Need to Know to Survive in Today's World
LIFE
AFTER DOOMSDAY
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