He said,
"'I was inspired with a very powerful message around 1980 that I
needed to build a shelter for 1,000 people deep underground to survive something that was coming that was going to be an extinction event,' he explained in an extensive phone interview.
'That's it, that's all I had. But it was powerful. So powerful that I
had a successful business with 100 employees and I took time off to go
up into the mountains and search on weekends looking for an underground
mine or cave that could be cartoned and converted.' Today, Vicino is the
owner and founder of Vivos, a company that sells space in luxury
survival complexes around the country. It's what he likes to call 'life
assurance'--mini underground cities, in effect, for people ride out the
end of civilization in a community setting with good food, television,
even a potential dating pool. He says demand has increased 1,000 percent
this year compared to last—itself a 1,000 percent increase over the
year before."
Radiation and Moon Visitation Anomaly
Why Windows 8 Should Keep You Using Windows 7
Taking Sense Away is a blog, allegedly written by a former TSA screener, offering insider perspectives on TSA topics. For example, there's the Insider's TSA Dictionary,
whose entries are frequently about the code screeners use to discuss
attractive female passengers (like 'Code Red,' 'Fanny Pack,' and 'Hotel
Bravo'). Another posting explains what goes on in private screening
rooms, which the author claims is nothing compared to screener conduct in backscatter image operator rooms. Apparently what happens in the IO room stays in the IO room. Today's posting covers how TSA employees feel about working for 'a despised agency'.
For many the answer is that they hate working for 'the laughing stock
of America's security apparatus,' try to hide that they work for TSA,
and want to transfer almost anywhere else ASAP."
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