Shows I’ve liked

(NPL means I got it from the Nashville Public Library)

Le grand voyage. – French, Muslim dad wants to go to Mecca, forces twenty year old son to take him

Local color.  Old painter, young painter, summer lessons.  

Last stop. Tel Aviv bus station and racism. 

The grocers son. French

Green Chariot.  Israel.  Russian convert

The other son.  Jewish and Arab boys switched at birth

Commune (library) Black bear ranch. Peter Coyote.  

Time of favor.  Israeli soldier and rabbi. 

Israel. The royal tour.  Benjamin Netinyahu. 

Straddling the Fence.   Thomas Friedman reports on the Wall in Israel

The Wind Journeys.   Mexico. Accordion of the devil.  

In the footsteps of saint Peter.  David Suchet.     two part.  

The chosen people.   Messianic Jews.  

The Human scale.  Making cities human sized and neighborly.  

The exorcist in the 21st century.  Real.  

Buying the spirit.  Voodoo in Haiti. 

Yoga is… A transformational journey        Documentary 

With one voice.    Mysticism.  

The philosopher kings.  Janitors

Rain in the mountains- Native American Eric Smallwood talks to a dead man and learns his destiny.  Tries to return to the old ways.  Comedy.  

Dimensions.  Time travel.  England. 

Time Stalkers.  Wild West plus time travel.  A huge cast of stars. 

—–all the Rwanda films—-  hotel Rwanda   Sometimes in April.  Imbabazi – the pardon

Griefwalker   How we die.  Very philosophical. 

The week that changed the world.  

Road to Emmaus.  

Chariots of the Gods

In search of ancient mysteries 

Life in a walk.  Camino de Santiago. Yogi and Will Roth

The Secrets.  Orthodox Jewish women, Safed.   

Adrift in Tokyo.  Japanese. Odd. A walk to turn a man in for killing his wife.  

Love collage.  Japanese photographer and dead? girlfriend 

Mr Smith Goes to Tokyo 

The land of hope.  Japanese.  Fukushima radiation village.  

Shortcut to Nirvana. Indian Kumbh Mela festival 

Humano.  Andes.  Shamanism.  

The Temple Mount dilemma

Ram Dass Fierce Grace.   Aging 

Mythic Journeys. Mark Hamill. Deepak Chopra.   Animation.  

Key of life.  Japanese.  Switched identity.  Executive who needs a husband. Comedy.  Gangster.  

A girl walks home alone at night.  Iranian vampire western.  Black and white (NPL)

When Marnie was there.  (NPL. Ghibli.  Ghost, grandmother. )

Breaking the chain.  Hindu, artist.  Karma

Alien agenda – planet earth

I capture the castle.  English. Bill Nighy.  Despondent writer. Poverty. Gold digger. 

A prison on earth.  Slick alien conspiracy.  

The Norse: an Arctic mystery. Documentary on Baffin Island, the Thule people. 

Molokai.   Leper colony, father Damien.   Hansen’s disease.  

Treasure island – with Jack Palance.  

Finding neverland.   J depp 

Little white lie.  Lacey Schwartz.  Jewish, black, culture, hidden history.  

— Dark days.   Nyc subway, homeless.   Hoopla.  

The Vikings: Journey to the new world.  

Japanese story.  Australian. 

The phantom coach.  Shadow puppets, 7 minute scary story 

The man in the high castle.   Series.  

Touring Israel. Bible prophecy revealed 

 

— last flight of Petr Ginz.    Hoopla.  Jewish ww2

Radioactive wolves.   NPL.  Chernobyl 

The Pruitt-Igoe myth. Npl.  Housing project in St Louis. 

Surviving Progress.   Npl.  Overconsumption, environmental collapse.  

 The Human Scale. Npl Jan Gehl.  Cities for people

Tomorrow we disappear.  Npl – India slums rehab

Urbanized.  City design

Black out.  1977 NYC power out (npl)

Watchers of the Sky.  (Npl) genocide as a crime.  

A convenient truth.   Urban solutions from Curitiba Brazil.  Hoopla

Connected.  An auto-blog-ography about love, death, and technology.  Tiffany Shlain

If you build it.   Studio H. Matt and Emily. High school shop class town revitalization.  

My Italian secret- heroes of the holocaust.  Npl 

Lost and found.  Uganda refugees, prisoners.  Npl.  

16 acres.  Ground zero rebuild.  Hoopla.    Twice 

Christiania.  Dutch squatter micronation.  Hoopla. 

American Commune.  The Farm.  Hoopla. 

Mother of Mine.   Finnish and Swedish.  Ww1.  Almost orphan.  

heart of a dog by Laurie Anderson.  702.81092

The woman in Gold.  Klimt and Nazis

The Shack

The hundred foot journey.  – Indians in France. Helen Mirren.  

The extraordinary adventures of Adele Blanc-Sec.   Luc Besson. Pterodactyl , mummy, Paris.  

A man called Ove.  Norwegian. 

How I live now.  American goes to England, nuclear war breaks out.  NPL.  

California Typewriter.   Excellent documentary NPL

The unlikely Pilgrims – Australians in rehab walk the Camino.  Npl 

Crazy Wisdom.  Buddhism in the west.   Hoopla

Auroville.  Hoopla.  India commune, ideal village.  Many Germans

(A) sexual.    Hoopla.  Community, aspergers.  

Your name.   Japanese.  Npl.   Switching bodies, time.  

Children of the Stones.   NPL. Leylines, Avebury. 

Cinque Terre villages virtual walk – VITA virtual walk series.  Hoopla.  

Ethel and Ernest.   About Raymond Brigg’s parents in ww2 England.  

Obsession 

Ramen Heads.  

Where to Invade Next.   Michael Moore.  Npl

Three identical strangers.   Twin study.  Npl. 

The Endless.   Npl.  Loop.  

The Moses Code.  Hoopla

Tales from the Loop.  Prime. Series based on art.  

Undone.   Prime. time travel because of accident

James May our man in Japan

Throw down your heart.  Bela Fleck.  YouTube 

Brooklyn.  Irish girl in America.  

Replicas.  Netflix.  Keanu. 

Squid game

Elves.  Danish Christmas vacation gone wrong.  

Maboroshi.  Netflix anime

—-mostly on Netflix —-

Sense 8

Altered Carbon

The OA

Shadow and Bone

The Umbrella Academy

Sweet Tooth

Locke & Key

Glitch

Travellers

Another Life

Messiah

Always a Witch (time travel, Latin America, teenager)

The Eternaut (Argentinia, post apocalypse)

Gift (Gobekle Teppe, mystical)

Dark (German, alternate timelines)

Timothy Snyder’s On Tyranny: Twenty Lessons from the Twentieth Century

Timothy Snyder’s On Tyranny: Twenty Lessons from the Twentieth Century

1. ⁠Do not obey in advance. Authoritarians thrive on passive complicity; don’t preemptively conform to expected behavior.

2. ⁠Defend institutions. Institutions don’t protect themselves—citizens must actively support and strengthen them.

3. ⁠Beware the one-party state. Democracy depends on pluralism; monopolizing power erodes freedom.

4. ⁠Take responsibility for the face of the world. Symbols and slogans shape culture—reject hate and extremism in public life.

5. ⁠Remember professional ethics. Professionals (lawyers, doctors, civil servants) must uphold ethical standards, even under pressure.

6. ⁠Be wary of paramilitaries. Private militias signal a breakdown of lawful order and a drift toward violence.

7. ⁠Be reflective if you must be armed. Members of the police and military must question the legality and morality of their actions.

8. ⁠Stand out. Courage is contagious—small acts of defiance inspire broader resistance.

9. ⁠Be kind to our language. Clear, truthful language guards against manipulation and propaganda.

10. ⁠Believe in truth. Without truth, facts and reality become meaningless, enabling tyranny.

11. ⁠Investigate. Don’t rely on official narratives—seek out independent, verifiable information.

12. ⁠Make eye contact and small talk. Human connection builds solidarity and mutual support against isolation.

13. ⁠Practice corporeal politics. Show up physically—protests and gatherings matter.

14. ⁠Establish a private life. Protect your privacy from surveillance and manipulation.

15. ⁠Contribute to good causes. Support organizations and causes that uphold democratic values.

16. ⁠Learn from peers in other countries. Look beyond borders for inspiration and warning signs.

17. ⁠Listen for dangerous words. Terms like “extremism,” “terrorism,” and “emergency” are often used to justify repressive measures.

18. ⁠Be calm when the unthinkable arrives. Authoritarians exploit chaos; stay grounded and deliberate in crisis.

19. ⁠Be a patriot. True patriotism means standing up for your country’s principles, not just its leaders.

20. ⁠Be as courageous as you can. Democracy requires bravery; be ready to defend freedom, even when it’s difficult

Self-sabotage

So much of my life right now feels like I’m weeding out people who act like a victim in situations they caused.

Maybe it is unique to American culture right now. Or maybe it is bigger than that. Maybe the disease of creating your own problems and then whining about it is worldwide.

One of the most common situations is obesity.

While we shouldn’t shame someone for being obese, neither are we doing them any favors by celebrating it. The recent trend of “body positivity” has resulted in social media “influencers” who are morbidly obese, complaining about how they can’t fit into an airplane seat or on amusement rides. Those limits are for safety reasons for themselves and for other passengers.

The actor and director Kevin Smith went that route, even though he wasn’t his plan to be a fat-fluencer. He was kicked off a flight in 2010 because he couldn’t fit into his seat. Reports indicate that he was over 330 pounds at that point.

But that incident made him rethink his choices and he decided to put in the work and lost 65 pounds. But it wasn’t enough to restore him to full health.

In 2018, at age 47, he had a heart attack. It was a “widowmaker” with 100% blockage in one of his arteries. He survived the surgery and decided to change his ways. He adopted a vegan diet and is now at a healthy weight.

But he’s the rare example of someone who decided to do something about their health rather than pretend everything is fine and blame everyone else for their problems.

It is hard to watch people I know get larger and larger, and be unable to walk for more than five minutes without needing to sit down. Or they complain that their clothes don’t fit. Or that their feet hurt, so they think they need special shoes.

No – your feet aren’t designed to hold that much weight. Your body isn’t designed to operate like this.

There are sumo wrestlers who are very large – but it is mostly muscle. They train every day for hours so they are exercising along with eating large amounts of food. But people don’t realize that they live on average 10 years less than the average Japanese citizen. Many also have weight -related problems such as diabetes and knee damage that decrease their quality of life.

Many people make up excuses – they don’t have the time, or the money, or the energy. But one thing is true – if you don’t make time for your body, your body will force you to take the time by causing disease.

I know someone who is deathly allergic to cats. Yet – knowing this – she adopted a cat. And – predictably – she had to go to the ER – twice – because she was having difficulty breathing. She eventually realized she’d have to give up the cat. It wasn’t a surprise. She knew it would happen. Yet she did it anyway.

“Stupidity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results” – quote attributed to Einstein.

I knew someone who was obese and sedentary who had to have a quadruple bypass – and friends acted like it was a shock that he was so ill. They were calling for prayers for him, while I said that this was not a situation to pray about. Prayer implies that there is nothing YOU can do about the situation, so you ask for divine intervention. But being obese and sedentary isn’t an accident. It is a choice – and it is disingenuous to act like the resulting health problems are a surprise.

Thankfully he chose to eat better and exercise, and has lost a lot of weight. But the friends who were asking for prayers haven’t followed suit (they too are obese), and act surprised when their body fails them.

I don’t understand this way of thinking.

And I don’t want to be around people who act like this.

But this means I spend a lot of time alone.

I simply can’t pretend and say “Oh, that’s so sad!” when people complain after causing their own problems.

Maybe my lack of sympathy comes from the fact that my mother died from lung cancer at 53, after smoking two packs of cigarettes daily for decades. It was sad that she was sick, but not a tragedy. She had dug her own grave every single time she chose to smoke a cigarette. 40 times a day she made that choice. And because of her choosing death, I didn’t have a mother to see me graduate, or get married, or publish my first book, or learn how to do all the many things that I’ve learned since she died.

And I’m a little angry about that. And I don’t want to watch it happen again and again to people I care about.

The Castle toy store

When I was growing up in Chattanooga, TN, there was a toy store called “The Castle”. This is because the owners had taken a normal brick building and added wooden shingles to it to make it look like a castle with turrets. It was where I was taken if I got a good report card or for my birthday – or just because I needed a toy.

I miss that experience of rooting around and discovering just that special thing that I needed. I never got anything really expensive because I was very aware of how much money my parent’s didn’t have. I appreciated them wanting to get me a gift, but I also knew not to take them for granted.

I did some digging and found a scan of a newspaper image of it.

Here is what it looked like before they added the shingles. I never saw it this way.

The owner was Frank May.

It was located at the intersection of South Germantown Road and Ringgold Road – so I saw it every day on the way to school. Smack dab right in front of me, coming down S. Germantown to go left on Ringgold Road was this castle, with a lit up sign that counted down the days to Christmas.

Relationship thoughts

Should you stay or should you go? Don’t fall for the “sunk cost fallacy”. I saw this list online that offered many different ways to think about your relationship and if it is worth staying for. I’m sharing it here because it might be helpful.

 Don’t set yourself on fire to keep someone else warm (and don’t let them set you on fire to warm themselves)    

We accept the love we think we deserve    

At the end of the day, what does this person add to your life vs what they take away    

There are people out there who will treat you how you allow them to, not how you treat them.      

You can’t date the past or the future, when everything was/will be great when ______ happens. The relationship you have NOW is the one you have to live with.    

 Don’t keep drinking after you’ve found out your well has been poisoned.    

 You will never find the right person if you don’t let go of the wrong one.    

 It’s better to have a relationship end now with pain than have a painful relationship without end.    

Never confuse what you’re offered with what you’re worth.

When they rob you of solitude but provide no companionship, it’s time to go.

The axe forgets but the tree remembers

Let go or be dragged

Smooth seas never made a skilled sailor

The portal to every next level is through the parts of yourself you avoid

“The chains of habit are too light to be felt, until they are too heavy to be broken.”

The well that gives too much becomes a hole.

“When the map and the terrain differ, trust the terrain”

Accept what IS, not what you’d like it to be.

You can’t pour from an empty cup

Don’t lose sleep over cutting ties with someone who handed you the scissors.

Do you want to play life on hard mode?

You can’t grow in earth that poisons you.

Our successes don’t have meaning without our struggles.

National Resilience Strategy

Trying to archive this. The original is at https://bidenwhitehouse.archives.gov/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/National-Resilience-Strategy.pdf

NATIONAL
RESILIENCE
STRATEGY
JANUARY 2025
2 NATIONAL RESILIENCE STRATEGY
NATIONAL RESILIENCE STRATEGY 3
National Resilience Strategy:
A Vision for a More Resilient Nation
“[W]e’re writing the next chapter in the great American story — a story of progress and
resilience. When world leaders ask me to define America…I define it in one
word…Possibilities.” —President Biden, 2023 State of the Union
“The future of America’s success in the world depends upon our strength and resilience at
home…Our success at home requires robust and strategic engagement in the world in line with
our interests and values to make life better, safer, and fairer for the American people. That is
why we must make far-reaching investments in the sources of our natural strength while building
our resilience.” —National Security Strategy, October 2022
The Need for Collective Action toward National Resilience
The United States faces an increasingly dynamic risk landscape for which we must build
resilience to anticipate and respond. The challenges facing our communities — including, but
not limited to climate change, emerging technologies, strategic competition, global pandemics,
and the disproportionate effects of wealth inequality — have never been greater, and this is
precisely why even stronger national resilience is needed.
Meeting these challenges will require communities to work together to find solutions that
protect, enhance, and invest in four pillars of resilience: Governance, Social and Community,
Economic, and Infrastructure. Achieving greater resilience demands a unified, whole-of-society
approach that includes all levels of government, diverse community leadership, international
institutions and partners, the private sector, and individuals.
We need to proactively build community capacity and capabilities to benefit, protect, and
provide means for recovery for all Americans, including those who are most vulnerable, while
also creating solutions that comprehensively address shocks and stressors today and for future
generations. Moreover, systems must be adaptable, and able to withstand whatever humancaused and natural shocks and stressors the nation may face and recover from the consequences
of disruptions that cannot be successfully managed. We must proactively prioritize activities and
investments that account for complex risks, like cascading impacts and concurrent events, as
well as approaches that account for differences in vulnerability and response capabilities within
and across communities. As we focus on the four pillars laid out in the Strategy, we must
intentionally invest in resilience initiatives that honor the social, ecological, cultural, and equitybased contexts of our communities. Through this approach, the population will be dynamic,
adaptive, informed, and able to effectively address the threats and hazards that pose the greatest
risks and recover from disruptions.
     
4 NATIONAL RESILIENCE STRATEGY
Defining Resilience
Resilience is defined as “the ability to prepare for threats and hazards, adapt to changing
conditions, and withstand and recover rapidly from adverse conditions and disruptions.”
The following principles reflect the values and priorities the U.S. Government will use to guide
the implementation of our vision for national resilience:
Adaptive: Maintain awareness of and a willingness to apply and implement innovative thinking,
tools, and methods to quickly realign or take advantage of evolving circumstances.
Protective: Identify, reduce risk of, prepare for, resist, and respond to threats, shocks and
stressors, prioritizing those that represent the greatest risks.
Collaborative: Seek input that engages and empowers the public, private, academic, and
nonprofit sectors, and all community members; reflects a commitment to collective deliberation;
and utilizes transparent processes, metrics, and goals for data-driven decision making.
Fair and Just: Pursue solutions that account for, and do not exacerbate, disparities between and
within communities. Ensure strategies respond to the needs of all Americans, including those in
underserved and marginalized communities that have historically borne the disproportionate
burden of impacts and costs incurred through decisions made by both public and private actors.
Human-Centered: Position the well-being of individuals, families, communities, and society at
the center of resilience goals, taking into consideration the needs of all community members.
Interdependent: Apply risk-informed approaches and integrated processes that account for the
complexity and interdependencies of systems, prioritizing solutions and investments for the
threats and hazards that pose the greatest risk and that can result in multiple benefits and enhance
resilience over the long-term.
Sustainable and Durable: Implement solutions that serve current and future needs by
considering the entire lifecycle of solutions. Seek to ensure that there is continuity of technical
expertise and leadership as needed.
Understanding the Resilience Landscape
The United States and the rest of the world have entered an era characterized by a complex and
increasing number of health, climate, economic, infrastructure, and national security challenges.
In addition to multi-dimensional physical threats, the United States and its allies are increasingly
challenged by the speed of change and vulnerabilities created by new technology and methods of
communication, where information is regularly weaponized to undermine trust in public
institutions.
As new and disruptive threats and hazards continue to emerge, it is more important than ever to
improve national resilience. Disruptions from a range of acute shocks are becoming more
frequent and intense, and the risk of physical and cyber attacks continues to rise. Chronic
stressors such as deteriorating infrastructure, environmental degradation, climate change, social
injustice, and persistent poverty negatively impact quality of life and intensify the effects of
acute shocks, undermining our nation’s prosperity and well-being. Climate-induced migration,
in particular, will impose further pressures on communities and exacerbate challenges.
     
NATIONAL RESILIENCE STRATEGY 5
The compounding effects of stressors that create community vulnerabilities and shocks that
occur simultaneously or in quick succession have the potential to undermine national resilience
and our ability to respond and recover.
Increasingly, shocks and stressors span across national boundaries, increasing the imperative for
all nations to cooperate and confront shared challenges and threats from myriad sources ranging
from natural hazards and pandemics to state and non-state actors aiming to destabilize
governments, economies, and institutions.
Strategic Approach to Build Attributes of a Resilient Nation
The United States is advancing a strategic vision of resilience through four interconnected
pillars: Governance, Social and Community, Economic, and Infrastructure. Individually, these
essential elements of resilience provide unique and critical capabilities, and their benefits are
maximized in combination with one another.
In the face of multi-dimensional threats and challenges, the United States and its international
partners must act in partnership and leverage policies and tools that protect our shared values and
economic and national security interests. The United States will cooperate with like-minded
partners, through international institutions such as the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, to
address systemic challenges and tackle the escalating and expanding risks resulting from a
changing threat environment.
For the first time, the United States is outlining its vision and related priorities for increasing the
nation’s resilience which will have global impact/reverberation. The following are the
foundational characteristics of a resilient nation, which span across all four pillars:

  • All people and communities understand that they are key contributors/actors in building
    resilience. They have a strong sense of trust in the public systems and institutions that enable
    cohesive approaches to developing solutions to community and national challenges.
  • Leadership, from local to national levels and across all pillars, intentionally participate in
    building capabilities that support resilience.
  • Policies, funding, and practices to advance resilience are integrated across all pillars, produce
    flexible solutions, reduce vulnerabilities, protect critical functions, and help communities
    benefit from natural defenses to natural hazards.
  • Research prioritizes advancements in technologies and adaptable solutions that are scalable,
    protecting infrastructure and communities from current and future hazards.
  • Federal, State, and regional investment in and support for community-led resilience efforts
    are pervasive, collaborative, and equitable.
  • Governments, businesses, organizations, communities, and individuals have access to timely,
    accurate, and authoritative information to inform their decisions.
  • Natural habitats and resources are a core priority across pillars, guiding collaborative work
    across systems, and emphasizing communal responsibility and stewardship to protect
    ecosystems and build resilience.
         
    6 NATIONAL RESILIENCE STRATEGY
  • Information is readily available, transparent, and effectively communicated and leveraged to
    support dialogue within communities regarding the challenges and opportunities for action
    and investment that provide benefit and support our values in times of normal operations and
    when facing hazards.
  • Infrastructure and technology are researched and applied with the future in mind, offering
    flexible scaffolding that can be used during regular operations and in times of disaster, are
    adaptable to future conditions, and support safe connection and advanced standards.
  • Community coalitions are well-established and have developed contingency plans for
    governance, business continuity, and service provision during times of disaster, particularly
    for the most vulnerable populations.
  • Recovery after a disaster is accelerated by sufficient, interoperable infrastructure that is
    upgraded and designed to support cross-system interdependencies.
  • Climate resilience and environmental justice considerations are integrated into the DNA of
    Federal departments and agencies to prioritize the voices, perspectives, and lived experiences
    of communities with environmental justice concerns.
  • Effective Tribal consultation, respect for sacred sites, and recognition of Tribal sovereignty
    are important components of resilience planning and hazard response.
    Throughlines of a Resilient Nation
    Achieving resilience also requires adopting throughlines, which are generally defined as common
    or consistent elements or themes shared by items in a series or by parts of a whole. In this
    Strategy, throughlines are shared dimensions and synergies across all the pillars that must be
    considered as we advance our vision for national resilience.
  • Cross-system and cross-sector use of resources. National resilience is achieved when it is
    understood that all people, communities, and systems are owners of and contribute to
    building resilience, and that some risks, impacts, and responses transcend system, sector, and
    even national borders.
  • Resilience manifests in adaptive capacity and communities. We understand and experience
    resilience through the interactions and engagement of diverse communities with unique
    assets and needs, and with the ability to quickly realign or take advantage of evolving
    circumstances.
  • Layered resilience. Capabilities of resilience are stronger when intentionally understood,
    implemented, and reinforced across pillars, maximizing the ability for flexible response that
    can absorb shocks and support uninterrupted functions.
  • Cascading reliance. Understanding that systems and communities are layered and
    interdependent, we achieve national resilience by building redundancies, safety nets,
    recovery capabilities, and adaptive solutions that reduce the drivers of vulnerability and have
    systemic effects through positive spillover across levels.
  • Environmental hazards, including climate change. Climate-related and environmental
    hazards are impacting communities now. Flooding, droughts, heat, and other hazards are
         
    NATIONAL RESILIENCE STRATEGY 7
    becoming more intense, more frequent, and often longer in duration. We must invest in and
    carefully manage resources to reduce the impacts of climate and environmental hazards on
    health, social, and economic systems.
  • Technology innovation and digital transformation. As we modernize, electrify, and digitize
    our society, we need to be increasingly vigilant across all pillars about both the benefits and
    opportunities.
  • Cyber infrastructure. Our society has deep interdependencies with computers and networks,
    information technology, operational technology, virtual reality, and the emerging capabilities
    of artificial intelligence. All pillars must build resilience leveraging these resources to
    accelerate capabilities while safeguarding against cyber threats and enhancing capabilities to
    facilitate essential functions.
  • Iterative continuous feedback loops. Resilience capacity is honed and advanced through
    research and educational institutions. Investments in active learning and through use of
    iterative cycles of improvement using gathered data as knowledge will allow us to refine
    processes and models, improve outcomes, and learn to adapt and transform.
  • Supply chains. Investment in healthy, well-resourced, cyber-secure, sustainable, and
    transparent supply chains and diversity of vendors ensures uninterrupted access to
    foundational and life supporting resources. Establishing resilient supply chains is critical to
    ensure sustained operations in times of stressors and shocks.
  • Robust safety nets. Systems, products, or resources are in place to reduce risk and strengthen
    resilience when other risk management strategies fail to address the needs of all people.
    Resilience Pillars
    The following text outlines how each of the four pillars — Governance, Social and Community,
    Economic, and Infrastructure —is essential for building national resilience, articulates the United
    States’ vision for each, and identifies opportunities for evolving beyond the current status quo.
    The pillars present a high-level, aspirational framework to guide all levels of government as we
    take actions to build resilience of our collective communities and systems.
    Pillar I: Governance Systems
    Vision Statement: Resilient governance systems unite our nation in a collaborative effort to
    ensure the continuous functioning of a government that provides leadership and services to its
    people. National resilience is built upon a foundation of prepared individuals and communities,
    including the private sector, nonprofit organizations, and critical infrastructure sectors that both
    support and are enabled by all levels of government.
    Contributions to National Resilience:
    It is the policy of the United States to maintain comprehensive and effective continuity of
    Federal government capabilities. However, governance at any level cannot be sustained without
    the support and integrated efforts of resilient social and community organizations as well as
         
    8 NATIONAL RESILIENCE STRATEGY
    economic and infrastructure systems. Inclusivity, integration, and effective leadership that
    ensures investments and actions are appropriate, addresses the needs of a diverse community,
    and collectively creates a resilient nation, from the municipal level to the national level, are
    hallmarks of good governance. Inclusive processes emphasize the need for broad consultation
    with a wide range of stakeholders to create a sense of shared ownership and a joint vision.
    Integrated processes bring together systems and institutions, and can also catalyze additional
    benefits as resources are shared and actors are enabled to work together to achieve better
    outcomes and benefits.
    Governments at all levels work to protect the health, safety, and welfare of all people in the
    communities and societies they represent, and their ability to do so is directly supported by
    collective efforts across the nation. However, government resources alone cannot meet all the
    needs of those impacted by disruptions, and coordination and collaboration between every level
    of government with non-governmental resources is essential to a resilience posture. The ability
    of governments to proactively engage with communities is essential for building and maintaining
    trust, addressing concerns, and ensuring that the needs of individuals and communities are met.
    This all-inclusive, whole-of-community approach enables a full range of stakeholders to
    participate in activities that foster and maintain a resilient nation. Engaging with community
    groups, while identifying and coordinating shared needs and capabilities, can serve as a force
    multiplier for governance systems. Resilient governance systems within communities are
    bolstered by multidisciplinary and whole-of-community coalitions that create unity of effort,
    increase efficiency, and expand the effective response capacity of all those involved. The
    Federal Government is also the conduit through which the United States engages with Tribes and
    other nations to promote an overall resilience effort.
    Governance plays a crucial role in shaping and influencing economic systems. Effective
    governance provides the institutional framework, rules, and mechanisms necessary for an
    economy and for government operations to function, adapt, and respond to economic shocks and
    stressors. Governments are responsible for formulating and implementing economic policies as
    well as establishing regulatory methods to ensure fair, equitable, and ethical economic practices.
    Clear and enforceable laws contribute to stable economies that encourage investment and
    entrepreneurship. Transparent and accountable institutions help build trust among economic
    actors, including businesses and investors. Political stability and rule of law are essential for
    attracting investments and fostering economic growth, with resilience acting as a foundational
    element that enables an economy to adapt, withstand, and recover from adverse conditions.
    Both governance and economic systems influence the procurement and allocation of resources
    that ensure the security and resilience of infrastructure. Government investments in
    transportation, energy, water supply, communication, public services, and other critical
    infrastructure sectors contribute to overall national resilience. Effective and resilient governance
    ensures that infrastructure projects continue to contribute to sustainable economic development,
    improve quality of life, and meet the needs of communities in a responsible and inclusive
    manner. Governance mechanisms can facilitate collaboration between the public sector and
    privately owned and operated infrastructure. These partnerships can enhance efficiency, bring in
    private sector expertise, and leverage resources for infrastructure improvement. The
    development and maintenance of infrastructure ensures that services can continue functioning
    during and after disruptions.
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    NATIONAL RESILIENCE STRATEGY 9
    Governments are ultimately responsible for serving the public through the provision of essential
    functions and services. If governments are not prepared, their critical executive, legislative, and
    judicial functions could be severely degraded, directly impacting the viability of the nation.
    During disruptions to normal operations, continuation of National Essential Functions is the
    responsibility of the Federal Government. But this is not practical or possible without the
    support of resilient social, community, economic, and infrastructure systems. Accordingly,
    national resilience depends on the stability of, collaboration with, and continuity of State, Local,
    Tribal, and Territorial (SLTT) government institutions which, with Federal institutions, preserve
    lives and property and uphold our enduring form of constitutional government at all levels.
    Good governance is an integral part of national resilience, as it safeguards communities by
    proactively addressing risks, supporting decision making, providing visible leadership, executing
    essential functions, and enabling effective preparedness and response capabilities. Good
    governance requires resilience modeling that should strive to be threat agnostic and benchmark
    recovery pathways if and when a system is disrupted. Assuring those processes while protecting
    the authorities and the mechanisms for accountability contributes to effective and efficient
    government, as well as the health, safety, and welfare of the people it serves.
    Opportunities for Action:
    Resilient governments must be adaptable and flexible so that they can respond effectively to
    changing circumstances. Government systems at all levels need to work together with the people
    they serve to preserve and enhance our way of life. To be effective in doing so, the United States
    must strive to:
  • Build and strengthen the capability to continue performing, maintaining, and reconstituting
    government functions and services to the population, including underserved and
    disadvantaged communities, during a disruption to normal operations. Federal Government
    preparedness is not enough. There needs to be a working partnership between government at
    all levels and nongovernmental organizations to achieve national resilience.
  • Incorporate risk management strategies into day-to-day decision-making and resourcing so
    government actors at the State, Local, and Federal level can identify potential risks and
    vulnerabilities to their staff and organization, equipment and systems, information and data,
    and the sites where these resources exist before disruptions. This enables proactive measures
    to be taken to reduce risk and prevent or minimize potential impacts to the performance of
    essential functions.
  • Foster equitable collaboration and coordination among various government entities,
    stakeholders, and communities to catalyze additional benefits, as resources are shared and
    actors are enabled to work together to achieve greater ends, maximize the effectiveness and
    equitable distribution of resources, minimize disruptions to communities from both shocks
    and stressors, and ensure a unified response to incidents that reduces duplication of efforts
    and interruptions to essential functions and critical services.
  • Ensure decision-making processes include diverse stakeholders and are participatory and
    transparent in order to build trust and deliver policies and strategies that are comprehensive
    and reflective of the needs of the communities they serve.
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    10 NATIONAL RESILIENCE STRATEGY
  • Invest in developing civic knowledge of government processes, constitutional rights, and
    good governance practices. Promote the importance of civil discourse with those who have
    different perspectives. Encourage civic participation in activities like voting, volunteering,
    public meetings, and community engagement.
  • Ensure continued, coordinated, and visible governmental leadership and the assurance and
    performance of essential functions, thereby maintaining a viable system of government
    supported by law. This requires appropriate emergency authorities legally vested in
    government leaders so that they have prescribed powers to act through delegations of
    authorities or orders of succession.
  • Establish provisions ensuring that the mechanisms and systems for direction and control are
    resilient so that actions directed by leaders can be communicated and coordinated.
    Communications infrastructure must be resilient and interoperable so that all levels of
    government can relay essential information within the organization as well as externally,
    including keeping the public informed.
  • Establish a transparent, scientific, and quantifiable approach that benchmarks the recovery
    and adaptation process. Effective governance requires explicit values and quantitative
    metrics that drive performance and goals and identify normatively desired thresholds for
    resilience in engineered and environmental systems.
    Ultimately, a resilient government must have the capability to sustain essential functions,
    emergency services, and resources so that critical response and recovery actions can achieve the
    widest possible implementation, thereby ensuring support to the public.
    Pillar II: Social and Community Systems
    Vision Statement: As a resilient nation, we have strong social systems that sustain a
    community’s ability to navigate adversity while maintaining its core identity. At the individual
    level, people have meaningful opportunities for community participation and access to resources
    that support well-being and optimal health. At a societal level, communities are equitable and
    have a sense of belonging, strong bonds, and a high degree of trust that contributes to greater
    social capital and common civic values that support collective action across the nation.
    Contributions to National Resilience
    Social and community systems are foundational to societal resilience and help improve quality of
    life and prosperity. Well-functioning social and community systems build the trust, social
    connectedness, and well-being that create a strong social fabric and strengthen our ability to
    manage adversity. While social and community systems have long been central to addressing
    hazards and building resilience, they have traditionally been viewed as a supportive rather than a
    core pillar.
    Social and community systems are complex and composed of individuals with roles that are part
    of the larger community and fulfill the needs of society. On the micro level, social and
    community systems include families, friends, and neighborhoods; at the community, national,
    and global levels, social and community systems include religious groups, political
    organizations, and businesses. Successful social and community systems are interdependent
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    NATIONAL RESILIENCE STRATEGY 11
    with strong communal interaction, contribute to community development and improved policies
    and services, and can react quickly to emergent community needs and issues.
    These systems are built on the unique strengths and assets of each community and therefore look
    different based on their values. They exist across scales from global and virtual social networks
    to the hyperlocal or community level, and address the cultural, linguistic, economic mobility,
    behavioral, health, and social safety needs of individuals and communities. Understanding,
    addressing, and satisfying these needs through accessible, welcoming, and effective social and
    community systems enables people to thrive, prosper, adapt, and recover from adversity, trauma,
    loss, and change across their lifespans.
    These systems also promote and support lifelong learning and address cultural and historic
    resources, which are fundamental to building a sense of belonging and social capital, creating
    greater civic engagement. Both the built and natural environment provide critical space for
    social and community systems to thrive. Gathering places within community settings and in the
    natural environment play critical roles in providing places of grounding and supporting
    connection. Our ability to sustain ourselves and our relationships demands that we invest
    equitably, and develop sustainably in a way that protects, invests in, and nurtures the natural
    environment.
    Social capital and civic engagement are richest at the hyperlocal level. Decades of research
    demonstrate the importance for individuals, as local community members, to have agency in
    decisions that affect long-term resilience. Community-informed planning that builds and
    maintains the capabilities of social systems and civic leadership over time is essential to a
    resilient nation. Successful planning means recognizing and investing in the fundamental role of
    social and community systems in contributing to a strong nation before disruptions. Establishing
    and actively employing bi-directional feedback loops between communities and systems support
    strengthening effective services, creating civic engagement, and building trust. In times of
    disruption, greater connectedness and trust means that critical decisions support the needs of the
    community, and communities can more effectively respond, quickly recover, and adapt for a
    better future.
    Social and community systems are most effective in advancing resilience when they are
    understood and treated as the dynamic interactions that form the connective tissue between
    individuals, groups, and institutions. When reinforced and valued, these dynamic relationships
    advance beyond relational networks and become expressed through services that offer
    foundational support and essential resources to individuals, which in turn, reinforce relationships
    and cohesion. These relationships, networks, and resources extend across and benefit all systems
    and should be valued and supported by all sectors to advance resilience.
    Networks of individuals, family members, friends, neighbors, and community members are
    typically first to respond to shocks within a community and are the networks of partners who
    remain long after external resources subside. At the local level, these networks are attuned to
    persistent stressors and best positioned to understand the most effective action to take to support
    the community. There is much to be done to ensure social and community systems are as
    understood as, and resourced at the level equal to, the other pillars outlined in this Strategy.
    Further, collective action across all pillars is needed to recognize and address how chronic
    stressors present within social and community systems affect lives, livelihoods, and quality of
    life.
         
    12 NATIONAL RESILIENCE STRATEGY
    Ongoing efforts across all sectors and levels of government provide a strong foundation for
    building more resilient social and community systems. Communities across the United States
    have been working to build their resilience for years by leveraging community-based
    organizations and networks that provide supportive resources. These organizations and networks
    often serve as an important conduit for information, fostering social capital and connectedness,
    and empowering community members to contribute directly to resilience efforts. Government
    agencies, businesses, and non-profit organizations have engaged in data analysis, planning, and
    projects to mitigate chronic stressors, address vulnerabilities, and reduce risk to acute shocks.
    Social and community systems are deeply interconnected with the other pillars of national
    resilience. For example, infrastructure systems provide services essential to health and wellbeing such as clean water and electricity. They facilitate the ability to connect to places of
    employment and other community services through communication (e.g., broadband) or
    transportation systems, and provide the public facilities for services such as schools, libraries,
    and hospitals. Resilient and diversified economies connect individuals to good paying jobs,
    increasing quality of life and supporting physical and emotional well-being. Strong, transparent,
    and responsive governance systems set the overall policy direction, provide investment in
    community and social systems (i.e., education, medical care, food, housing), and create
    meaningful opportunities for individuals to engage in civic life and decision making. At the
    same time, actions taken through social and community systems, including addressing chronic
    stressors, improve the resilience of infrastructure, economic, and governance systems in different
    ways. Coordination, collaboration, and integration across the pillars is therefore essential for
    building resilient social and community systems.
    Opportunities for Action
    Transformative change in the resilience of social and community systems requires an
    acknowledgement of our shared stewardship of the resources within this pillar and an
    understanding that we are responsible not only for our individual resilience, but for ensuring that
    others have the resources they need. Our interconnectedness and mutual dependence underscore
    the importance of enabling social connectedness and building social capital that can be drawn
    upon to fuel the work of building community resilience. All voices must be heard as decisions
    affecting a community’s resilience are made. New ways of authentically engaging with people
    and understanding the needs and desires of all community members are needed.
    Building strong social and community systems requires collective action across the nation.
    Agencies and organizations at all levels of government, non-profits, the private sector, academia,
    social service providers, and individuals should play a role and see these assets as central to
    resilience. Across Federal agencies and with the help of state, Tribal, and local governments and
    non-Federal cross-sector partners, there are opportunities to strengthen social and community
    systems to achieve national resilience, including the following:
  • Support greater community understanding and access to combine funding and expand
    partnerships that are designed to concurrently address complex community needs.
  • Align financial investments and the regulations that support them to create incentive
    structures that enable sustainable investments that address the root causes of chronic social
    and community stressors (including persistent poverty, chronic unemployment, and
    inequitable access to healthcare, transportation, and affordable housing).
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    NATIONAL RESILIENCE STRATEGY 13
  • Expand flexibility, compensation, and leadership at the community level to enable
    co-leadership and community participation in determining how resources and investments are
    targeted, especially engaging underserved populations.
  • Reduce barriers to and ensure equity in both access to and benefit from resources, especially
    in under-resourced and vulnerable communities, supporting transparency and capacity
    building in communities.
  • Expand understanding and build cross-pillar investment that enables leadership to protect
    natural infrastructure and the environment while deepening interpersonal cohesion,
    protection, creativity, and social capital.
  • Incentivize partners working in all pillars to consider dimensions of environmental health,
    human well-being, and other non-monetary benefits as a part of cost-benefit analyses when
    making investments in resilience.
  • Invest in intentional partnerships with arts, culture, education, and other trusted organizations
    that support the knowledge and active participation of individuals and communities as core to
    building social connectedness and developing resilience.
  • Integrate and prioritize measurement of the strength of social and community systems across
    all Federal agencies and their networks.
    Pillar III: Economic Systems
    Vision Statement: A resilient economic system has the capacity to address underlying
    economic stressors, enable innovation, improve the quality of life and prosperity of communities
    and the nation to anticipate, prepare for, withstand, and recover from acute shocks and
    disruptions it may experience. Furthermore, resilient economic systems have the capacity to
    leverage opportunities for transformational recovery from occasional economic disruptions. A
    resilient U.S. economy is foundational to ensuring that our nation has the capacity to anticipate,
    prevent, and mitigate negative impacts resulting from national and global economic shocks.
    Contributions to National Resilience:
    Economic resilience contributes to the Nation’s overall resilience by ensuring equitable and
    uninterrupted access to the critical necessities of everyday life. A resilient economic system
    helps to ensure all Americans are afforded an equitable opportunity for economic participation
    and self-determination, and that American businesses are strongly positioned to compete in
    global markets. At the individual and community level, this includes increased financial literacy,
    access to financial products and services, reliable supply chains, and the robust availability of
    good paying jobs across a variety of diverse sectors and professions. It also means that
    individuals and families have consistent access to basic goods and services such as healthy
    foods, clothing, shelter, education, and healthcare. Resilient, fair, and transparent government
    institutions that safeguard workers’ rights and advocate on behalf of individual consumers are
    critical. Resilient, reliable, and accessible infrastructure facilitates the movement of people,
    goods, and information, all of which contributes to individual and community resilience by
    ensuring that some baseline level of economic activity can continue even in the wake of chronic
    stressors and acute shocks.
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    14 NATIONAL RESILIENCE STRATEGY
    Broader economic resilience can be achieved through strategic investments that: (1) are aligned
    with steady-state economic development and job creation strategies and initiatives; (2) are
    forward-looking, scientifically based, risk informed, and capitalize on opportunities for
    transformational economic growth, health, and diversification; and (3) address cyclical
    underinvestment in communities and sectors that result in lack of stability and perpetuate a cycle
    of ongoing uncertainty, leading to further disinvestment. Economic diversification positions the
    U.S. economy to remain resilient and nimble in response to known and novel threats and
    disruptions. Steady-state economic development and job creation are supported through
    comprehensive planning efforts that are the product of extensive involvement by neighborhood
    and community-based organizations and stakeholders who collaboratively define and implement
    a collective vision for economic growth, health, diversification, and participation.
    Opportunities for Action
    Establishing, maintaining, and enhancing resilient economic systems requires an understanding
    of which strategies and investments will generate the greatest benefit, including the following:
  • Develop economic development plans, strategies, and investments that drive actions to
    broaden and diversify the local or regional industrial base and provide equitable access to
    capital to support job growth, worker retention, innovation, and diversification.
  • Establish strong partnerships between economic development agencies, business
    associations, workforce development organizations, financial institutions, and small
    business development centers that support and provide opportunities for meaningful,
    well-paying work, resilient community development, and overall prosperity of
    communities.
  • Ensure backups and operational plans for energy, transportation, telecommunications and
    broadband networks, including cyber systems (operational technology and information
    technology), to protect commerce and public safety in the event of economic disruptions
    resulting from natural or humanmade threats and hazards to reduce disruptions to the
    private sector.
  • Promote continuity and preparedness planning through risk assessments — including
    workforce, cyber, and supply chain risks — to enable the private sector to rapidly recover
    and resume operations after a disruptive event. Continuity of operations is contingent on
    the resilience of the systems and infrastructure on which a business relies and operates.
    Effective continuity of the private sector is achieved through collaboration and
    coordination with community organizations, critical infrastructure owners and operators,
    and across the multiple levels of governments, and with the support of households that
    offer both the supply of labor and demand for goods.
  • Employ safe development practices in business districts and surrounding
    communities. Strategies may include incentivizing locating structures outside of
    floodplains, preserving natural lands that act as buffers from storms, utilizing naturebased solutions, and protecting downtowns and other existing development from the
    impacts of extreme weather. Collectively, these efforts can reduce the severity of
    impacts and contribute to a rapid return to baseline operating levels, particularly among
    historically underserved communities, who are often exposed to disproportionate levels
    of place-based risk.
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    NATIONAL RESILIENCE STRATEGY 15
  • Conduct pre-disaster recovery planning to define key stakeholders, roles, responsibilities,
    and actions to direct resources towards building adaptive capacity and facilitating
    coordination to contribute to resilience in this area.
  • Establish a process for regular, interoperable, and resilient communication, monitoring,
    and updating of private sector community needs and issues that can then be used after an
    incident.
  • Streamline the application and approval process for disaster recovery programs to reduce
    the administrative and resource burden on communities in a post-disaster setting.
  • Establish/utilize an interoperable and resilient capability to rapidly contact key local,
    regional, state, territorial, Tribal, and Federal officials to communicate private sector
    needs and coordinate impact assessment efforts in the wake of a disaster. Developing
    this capability should be done in coordination with other emergency response and
    recovery communications tools and take into consideration community infrastructure that
    supports business functions.
    Pillar IV: Infrastructure Systems
    Vision Statement: As a resilient nation, the physical and cyber infrastructure that we rely on
    for the safety and security of our citizens and residents, a thriving economy, and provision of
    effective government and social services, is designed, built, operated, maintained, and protected
    such that services and resources provided by infrastructure can withstand and rapidly recover
    from the threats or hazards that pose the greatest risk, and disruptions can be managed without
    long-term impact. Further, as infrastructure (inclusive of buildings) is newly constructed,
    repaired, or replaced, and environmental systems are preserved, current and future threats and
    hazards are taken into account, fostering a culture of continuous adaptation and improvement to
    the resilience of local communities, regions, and the nation.
    Contributions to National Resilience
    Achieving resilience requires effective collaboration and coordination between the private sector
    and Federal and SLTT governments. Infrastructure collectively includes the physical, natural,
    and cyber assets and systems that underpin the services that society depends on daily. This allencompassing framework therefore comprises a variety of assets and systems such as
    government facilities, healthcare and public health providers, the private sector, manufacturing,
    financial services, research and educational facilities, energy systems, residential buildings, and
    other services important to communities. No sector is truly independent; there are dependencies
    and interdependencies across all sectors. Ownership and operation of infrastructure varies
    depending on the sector. Communications and energy are dominated by private sector
    ownership, with limited ownership by Federal, state, local, Tribal, and territorial governments.
    Conversely, some important transportation and water/wastewater systems are owned and
    operated by state and local governments. Achieving resilience will require collective action
    among all stakeholders.
    Infrastructure projects are sizeable investments that are made with the expectation that the
    project’s expected service life is long, typically 50 years or more. Some projects, such as major
    bridges, roads, and dams, may be in service for over 100 years. Traditionally, these assets are
         
    16 NATIONAL RESILIENCE STRATEGY
    designed based on an understanding of the use cases and the likely threats and hazards that are
    known or anticipated at the time of construction. Often, knowledge and the understanding of
    risk evolves as new technologies are employed to enhance operational efficiencies, reduce costs,
    or prolong the operational lifespan of an asset, but these technologies may create vulnerabilities
    not evident at the time of construction. This evolution of our understanding of risk can result
    from changes to the natural and the built environment. Consensus-based codes and standards, as
    well as sector-specific industry best practices, can be cost-effective and serve as essential tools to
    reduce risks, including vulnerabilities and consequences in long-lifespan infrastructure projects.
    In addition to considering the impact that the environment may have on infrastructure, it is
    critical to consider the impact that physical infrastructure has on the environment. Infrastructure
    projects can consider how to achieve an environmental net gain that leaves the environment in a
    better state, avoiding negative impacts and minimizing unavoidable ones.
    We are also increasingly becoming more dependent on information systems and operational
    technology. Some of those systems are used to control and operate infrastructure, and have
    become essential to the efficient operation of many infrastructure systems. Information system
    capabilities can allow operators to work remotely, which can promote the safety of workers
    during emergencies and ensure continued operation or allow for controlled management of
    infrastructure assets to protect them from damage and protect occupants from physical risk.
    While there are significant benefits to applying such technology capabilities, they introduce
    cyber risks that need to be understood and addressed when planning for security and resilience.
    Furthermore, in many cases information systems have become the infrastructure on which we
    depend – from financial systems to algorithms that control space-based navigation systems.
    Even billing systems and other business-related applications can provide a cyber attack vector to
    exploit and disrupt critical infrastructure. Understanding these interconnected architectures and
    systems, mitigation measures (including redundancies, response plans, and robustness measures),
    key dependencies, and the potential consequences that can result from their disruption or
    degradation is a key component of ensuring the resilience of infrastructure systems.
    The health of the natural world and human thriving are highly interconnected, and a healthy
    environment offers many benefits for both ecosystems and human well-being. For example,
    clean air and water are essential for human health and reduce the risk of disease. Economies are
    reliant on natural resources for industries that provide jobs and economic opportunities.
    Nature-based solutions are critical for disaster risk reduction. For example, coral reefs,
    mangroves, and wetlands reduce flood risk and attenuate the severity of storms. Biodiversity is
    fundamental for healthy ecosystems that can help to regulate the Earth’s climate, which is critical
    to agriculture and food security, among other things. Access to nature also provides important
    benefits for mental and physical health and cultural heritage and enrichment.
    The resilience of all types of infrastructure – physical, cyber, social, and natural – is tightly
    intertwined with the other resilience pillars of governance, society and communities, and
    economy. Publicly-owned infrastructure is reliant on revenue from taxes and ratepayers to cover
    the cost of operations and maintenance of facilities. Decisions on publicly-owned infrastructure
    projects are frequently the responsibility of elected officials at the SLTT level, often with Federal
    support. Decisions on private or investor-owned infrastructure systems are often made based on
    business considerations, such as responding to consumer demand or developing new business
    opportunities, where there is profit motive. Privately-owned infrastructure is dependent on
    customers or consumers for operating and maintenance costs. Investments in new or upgraded
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    NATIONAL RESILIENCE STRATEGY 17
    assets and systems depends on whether the investment costs can be recovered over time. Underinvestment, dis-investment, or operating systems that cannot be maintained with available
    resources can lead to conditions where infrastructure does not perform as intended when exposed
    to shocks or stresses, leading to adverse outcomes. Further, the adoption and enforcement of
    land use regulations, consensus-based codes and standards, and nature-based solutions can
    influence the resilience of buildings and infrastructure systems. Hybrid projects that combine
    both public and private sources of funding (e.g., public-private partnerships) are becoming more
    prevalent and shift some of the risk of infrastructure projects from the taxpayer to a private entity
    that seeks to earn substantial profits and shifts costs directly to the users of the infrastructure
    project.
    Similarly, infrastructure of all types can have a significant influence on social and community
    resilience. Social infrastructure is vital to strengthening community resilience and helps build
    social networks and trust. These networks can serve as a resource during a crisis that can
    mitigate the impacts of disasters. These shared community spaces are where informal but crucial
    connections are made that help establish common ground among diverse groups. Intentional
    planning is needed to create places where people spend time. Examples include libraries,
    recreation centers, local small businesses, farmers markets, and parks. Infrastructure can serve to
    connect citizens and communities to each other, to employment opportunities, to ecosystems, to
    essential goods and services, and to community practices and cultural decisions. When
    infrastructure serves to connect, it can contribute to resilient outcomes by ensuring needs are met
    during stresses and shocks. When infrastructure separates people and communities from
    services, employment, and ecosystems, it can hinder resilient outcomes and result in the impact
    of disruptions being disproportionately felt by those marginalized by underinvestment.
    Economic resilience is similarly connected to resilient infrastructure and buildings, including
    housing. Supply chains depend on a highly reliable network of transportation systems, including
    roads, rail, maritime, and air transportation systems, coupled with a robust communications
    capability, the electrical grid, and fuel supply. Many supply chains lack redundancies.
    Disruptions in any one of these systems, whether due to natural hazards, accidents, deliberate
    physical or cyber attacks, or the introduction of untrusted equipment into critical infrastructure
    systems, can have cascading consequences that affect the lives of millions of people. Financial
    services rely on power and communications systems to affect domestic and international trade
    and investment, ensure payment of salaries, and transact payments for goods and services.
    Disruption of critical infrastructure and housing services can deny citizens access to earned
    income and prevent their ability to purchase goods that they rely on daily. Food and agricultural
    production and water and wastewater treatment are only possible with robust, reliable, and
    resilient energy, transportation, and communications systems. The resilience of these individual
    sectors and the services that depend on them are fundamental to the nation’s ability to provide
    for its citizens’ health, safety, and security, while contributing to societies internationally,
    competing in a global marketplace, and meeting international security and defense obligations.
    Opportunities for Action
    The Federal government has long recognized the significance of the nation’s infrastructure to the
    life of the nation. That includes acknowledging a role for helping to identify, assess, prioritize,
    and manage the risk to the nation’s critical infrastructure – that is, the physical and virtual assets
         
    18 NATIONAL RESILIENCE STRATEGY
    and systems so vital that their incapacity or destruction would have a debilitating impact on
    national security, national economic security, or national public health or safety.
  • Develop technology that considers public safety, equity, security, and resilience
    through the life-cycle of the system. With computer and information technologies
    being both critical infrastructure themselves and integral to other critical infrastructure,
    security and resilience are requirements and responsibilities that must be considered at all
    phases of a system, from design through decommissioning. It is imperative that these
    requirements and responsibilities not fall disproportionately on customers and small and
    medium enterprises, including infrastructure owners and operators, and that the
    requirements and responsibilities are shared by the producers of the systems and
    technologies. Critical cyber systems need to be designed and built with security and
    resilience in mind, with secure configurations enabled by default and security features
    such as multi-factor authentication, logging, and single sign on available. Resources
    should be available to customers and infrastructure owners and operators to encourage
    and ease adoption of best practices that continuously protect systems and data.
  • Implement modern, consensus-based, resilient, and energy efficient codes and
    standards for all new construction and major renovations to existing assets.
    Consensus-based codes and standards are regularly updated, reflecting changes in the
    understanding of the environment and hazards and the consensus of the engineering
    community on how to design and construct buildings and infrastructure to reduce risk of
    damage or failure by future hazard and threat events. Buildings and infrastructure often
    have a design life of 50 years or more, during which time environmental conditions and
    other threats can change significantly, placing infrastructure at risk of failure or
    disruption. Future conditions may also include technology innovation and digital
    transformation and the risks and opportunities that accompany those changes. While the
    replacement rate for buildings and infrastructure is small, approximately 1-2 percent per
    year, the quality of these assets increases as the building and infrastructure stock is
    replaced.
  • Make infrastructure projects sustainable and compatible with available resources.
    This means that operations, maintenance, repair, and replacement are performed on a
    regular basis to ensure infrastructure operates as intended throughout its design lifespan
    when exposed to anticipated threats and hazards, using existing revenues from ratepayer
    fees or other localized sources. Infrastructure decisions should include assessment of
    alternatives, both built and natural, weighing the advantages and disadvantages of
    investing in new infrastructure versus updating or improving existing infrastructure to
    ensure that current and future needs of the community can be met. Although there has
    been some advancement to build resilience into planning and implementation, many
    infrastructure assets were built before new and emerging risks were considered. It is now
    essential to consider these new risks as part of improving resilience. For example, as
    cyber systems are increasingly integrated into physical infrastructure systems, the
    possibility of cyberattacks disrupting services that the nation relies on daily must be
    considered as part of an overall resilience strategy. Collaboration among all levels of
    government and the private sector to improve information sharing and understanding of
    risks and vulnerabilities will be essential to improving resilience.
         
    NATIONAL RESILIENCE STRATEGY 19
  • Apply a systemic and cross-sector approach to infrastructure design, operation, and
    maintenance. This includes considering dependencies and interdependencies with other
    infrastructure services, as well as cyber systems (operational technology and information
    technology) and governance, economy, natural, social, and community systems.
    Understanding the complex interactions that exist among these dimensions is essential to
    identifying effective resilience-enhancing actions for buildings and infrastructure.
    Furthermore, ensure that infrastructure systems are designed considering cyber risks, so
    the impact of any compromise is minimized, and operations can be quickly restored.
    Such cyber-informed engineering integrates cyber expertise with traditional engineering
    practices. This strategy acknowledges the need to strengthen operational collaboration
    between the government and industry to more quickly identify, mitigate, and respond to
    threats before they result in impacts to critical infrastructure.
  • Prioritize equity in designing, constructing, operating, maintaining, and restoring
    infrastructure systems. Lack of certain types of infrastructure and infrastructure
    services can have disproportionate impacts on vulnerable and underserved communities
    that can lead to consequences in other parts of the community or the local or regional
    economy. Making decisions about development, operations, maintenance, upgrades, and
    service restoration following disruption with an equity perspective in mind can lead to
    better resilience outcomes for the entire community. Prioritize infrastructure design that
    incorporates sustainable practices and nature-based solutions to enhance the health of
    environmental systems and preserve them for future generations.
  • Keep recovery in mind and understand the minimum security and resilience
    requirements for restoring infrastructure services to achieve resilient outcomes.
    Resilient outcomes can be achieved through risk management, inclusive of response
    operations, restoration of damaged infrastructure and disrupted or degraded infrastructure
    services, and recovery. Careful planning pre-event, including understanding dependency
    relationships, vulnerabilities, threats, and potential consequences, will inform minimum
    security and resilience requirements and other actions that can be taken to manage risks,
    enable response and restoration to quickly restore services, or inform recovery actions
    that achieve resilient outcomes.
  • Ensure government funding for infrastructure projects includes cybersecurity
    principles, best practices, and controls. Cybersecurity goals and a project cyber risk
    assessment and security plan should be mandatory for every project that has a technology
    nexus. This includes technology assets and systems essential to the reliable operation of
    facilities, systems, and equipment that, if destroyed, degraded, or otherwise rendered
    unavailable, would affect the reliability or operability of critical infrastructure. These
    assets may include elements, components, and full systems of information technology,
    operational technology, industrial control systems, and supervisory control and data
    acquisition systems, among others.
  • Maintain a highly trained workforce. A resilient infrastructure requires a highly
    trained workforce. In order to reduce risk and enhance resilience across their sectors in a
    modern, digitized society, critical infrastructure owners and operators would benefit from
    equipping the workforce with the right tools, skills, and training, to include cybersecurity
    training.
         
    20 NATIONAL RESILIENCE STRATEGY
    Conclusion
    This document sets forth a vision on how the United States can develop and maintain national
    resilience. It defines and enumerates a national approach for achieving this, focusing on building
    the necessary capacity and capabilities to address the hazards, acute shocks, and chronic
    stressors of today and tomorrow. The United States intends to continue building in resilience up
    front and by design to our national DNA to help us adapt, withstand, and recover rapidly from
    any adverse condition or disruption. The United States will also continue responding to
    transnational challenges and seek to engage other nations and international institutions in
    building both domestic and global resilience to the threats and hazards that pose the greatest risk,
    based upon the core principles defined in this document, and in line with other relevant national
    strategies. The road ahead will undoubtably be filled with fresh challenges and obstacles, but the
    commitments and investments we make today will ensure we will have the means and tools to
    meet them head on and emerge a more resilient nation.

America isn’t a “Christian Nation”

A country that says it is a “Christian Nation” should follow the teachings of Jesus.

This would include feeding the hungry, clothing the naked, housing the homeless, and healing the sick – for starters.

It would be concerned with mercy. Justice wouldn’t be about revenge, but redemption. Prisons would be places of reform, not punishment.

It wouldn’t wage war, either.

The way we see the world

“The way we see the world shapes the way we treat it.

If a mountain is a deity, not a pile of ore;

if a river is one of the veins of the land,

not potential irrigation water;

if a forest is a sacred grove,

not timber;

if other species are our biological kin,

not resources;

or if the planet is our mother,

not an opportunity –

then we will treat each one with greater respect.

That is the challenge,

to look at the world from a different perspective.”

-David Suzuki

Artist- John Kenn Mortensen

Mythical Cornwall

Susan Cooper’s series “The Dark is Rising” has two books set in Cornwall, England. One is “Over Sea, Over Stone” and the other is “Greenwitch”. They are in the fictional town of Trewissick, which is modeled after the real town of Mevagissey. This photo is from Susan Cooper’s Facebook page, giving a sense of the vibe of the place.

According to Wikipedia,

Mevagissey (/ˌmɛvəˈɡɪzi/CornishLannvorek) is a village, fishing port and civil parish in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. The village is approximately five miles (8 km) south of St. Austell. The parish population at the 2011 census was 2,015, whereas the ward population at the same census was 4,354.

A possible version of Trewissick, according to Calmgrove on WordPress, in their post “Treasure at Trewissick” https://calmgrove.wordpress.com/2016/01/13/oversea/

Calmgrove also adds this detail –

“Trewissick seems to be a conflation of two locations: one is Mevagissey, southeast of St Austell, which Cooper knew well from holidays there; the other is Trevissick Manor, between Mevagissey and St Austell, currently offering farmhouse accommodation. Much of the action of Over Sea, Under Stone can be located at Mevagissey — Chapel Point could be Kenmare Head with its standing stones, Penmare headland is where local legend sites gravestones, St Peter’s church is St John’s in the book and so on. Mevagissey also has a Feast Week with a carnival, as does Trewissick in the book, though this takes place at the end of June as opposed to August, as in Over Sea, Under Stone.”