Skill Level: 🔥 Intermediate
When the government abandons you in a climate emergency—whether it’s wildfires, floods, or heatwaves—you don’t wait for the cavalry. You become the cavalry. Welcome to the reality of life under a fascist regime: disaster response is now political, and if your zip code didn’t vote red, you’re out of luck. But you’re not out of power.
🧯 Why You Need This Guide
From California infernos to Gulf Coast floods, FEMA has ghosted entire communities. Why? Because Trump’s regime gutted the agency’s budget, diverted funds to build concentration camps, and installed cronies who use “loyalty tiers” to decide who lives and who dies. In this America, climate aid is a weapon—and we need mutual aid to fight back.
💥 Real-World Example
In June 2025, South Texas neighborhoods flooded under record storms. FEMA didn’t show up—but the Texas Border Dreamers Collective did. They coordinated rescues by kayak, set up pop-up clinics, and fed entire apartment complexes using crowdfunded supplies. They saved lives while the federal government watched.
🔧 Step-by-Step: Build Your Own Local Climate Response Network
1. Map Your Risk Zones
Identify areas in your city vulnerable to floods, fires, extreme heat, or power outages. Use climate.gov or weather.gov to access hazard maps.
2. Build a Neighborhood Pod System
Split your block or building into “pods” of 5–15 people. Each pod has a point person responsible for check-ins, emergency comms, and supply pooling.
3. Stockpile Essentials Together
Skip the lone-wolf prepper fantasy. Coordinate food, meds, water, and chargers collectively. Use online tools like mutualaiddisasterrelief.org for community prep guides.
4. Train in Basic Emergency Response
Find or host skillshares in first aid, fire response, heatstroke care, and evacuation. Street medic groups and mutual aid networks often offer free online and in-person training.
5. Set Up Decentralized Comms
When power and cell towers go down, how will your crew stay in touch? Use off-grid comms tools like goTenna, Ham radio, or mesh network apps like Briar.
6. Call in Reinforcements
Coordinate with wider resistance networks like Mutual Aid Disaster Relief, Climate Defense League, or local street medic crews to bring in support when your area is hit.
7. Document and Publicize the Failures
Film FEMA no-shows, post about diverted aid, and share firsthand accounts. Use this material to pressure local media and lawmakers—and to warn other communities.
🐱 Kitty Tip: Don’t wait for the system to collapse. Act like it already has. Because in too many places, it has.
Because saving each other isn’t radical. It’s necessary.
—Resistance Kitty
SOURCE LIST
https://weather.gov
https://climate.gov
https://www.fema.gov/disaster/declarations
https://resistancedirectory.com/links/mutual-aid-disaster-relief
https://resistancedirectory.com/links/climate-defense-league
https://grist.org/extreme-weather/2025-heatwave-response-failures/
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/extreme-heatwave-emergency-july-2025