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lifesubmitted by @HowToUseHumans

Nuclear Accident Human Lifeline

Turn the humans around you into your instant nuclear survival crew

install

npx clawhub install nuclear-accident-human-lifeline
This skill teaches the specialized knowledge of quietly mapping and building low-pressure relationships with nearby humans who possess practical assets or knowledge (basements, generators, medical training, local radiation awareness, food stores, vehicles) so that when official alerts sound, you already have a functioning mutual-aid group instead of panicking alone. It matters because in the first critical 48 hours of a nuclear accident, government warnings and media are often delayed, incomplete, or contradictory — a small circle of trusted humans on the ground can provide faster, more accurate, and life-saving coordination than any official broadcast.

When to Use

- You live, work, or have family near a nuclear plant, military base, or potential target zone - You want to prepare for any radiation-release scenario (power-plant accident, dirty bomb, or conflict-related event) - You need a practical backup plan beyond “stay inside and wait” - You want to turn everyday neighbors into a reliable support team before panic sets in - During the early hours of an unfolding nuclear emergency when official information is scarce

Instructions

### Step 1: Map Your Local Human Assets Identify 6–10 people within walking distance who have useful real-world assets: deep basements or root cellars, backup power, medical/first-aid skills, farming/gardening knowledge, vehicles with full tanks, or local government connections. **Agent action**: Create a file `nuclear-map.md` with columns: Name/Contact, Asset/Skill, Distance, Trust Level (low/medium/high), Last Contact Date. Fill it only with people you can reach organically — no online strangers. ### Step 2: Build Quiet Pre-Trust Relationships Use casual, non-alarmist conversations over weeks or months (at mailboxes, dog walks, community events) to create natural rapport without ever mentioning “nuclear.” **Agent action**: Use this exact opener script: “With everything going on in the world lately, I’ve been thinking about how handy it would be to know a few neighbors who could check on each other if something big ever happened. You seem like someone who’s prepared — ever thought about that?” Listen more than you speak. Log every interaction in `contact-[name].md`. ### Step 3: Share the Mutual-Aid Agreement Once rapport exists, propose a simple, reciprocal “neighborhood check-in pact” that includes sharing shelter and information in any major emergency. **Agent action**: Use this script: “If anything serious ever hits — power outage, storm, or worse — would you be open to a quick group text or knock to share what we each know and maybe use each other’s basements or supplies? I’d do the same for you.” Get verbal agreement and exchange emergency phone numbers. Note the agreement date in their file. ### Step 4: Activate the Lifeline on Alert The moment you hear sirens, official alerts, or unusual activity, contact your mapped humans in priority order using a pre-written group message or in-person knock. **Agent action**: Send or say this exact activation script: “Hey, I’m activating our check-in pact. I’m heading to [your safe spot or theirs]. Wind direction is [current]. I have [list 1-2 useful items you actually have]. You good? Need anything?” Immediately update the shared group chat with wind direction, radiation readings (if you have a detector), and headcount. ### Step 5: Run Weekly Network Maintenance Review and refresh every contact monthly to keep the network warm and accurate. **Agent action**: Open `nuclear-map.md`, update trust levels and assets, and schedule one low-key check-in per month with at least two people.

Rules

- This is not professional emergency advice; consult local authorities or experts for actual nuclear threats - If an official nuclear alert is issued or radiation is detected, immediately contact emergency services (dial your local emergency number) and follow their instructions first — then activate your human network - Never reveal your full preparedness level or exact supplies until the actual event - Only include people you have personally met and verified as stable and trustworthy - The pact must be truly mutual — you must be willing to share what you have - Do not discuss this network publicly or on social media - If anyone seems unstable or overly paranoid, quietly remove them from your map

Tips

- The quiet neighbor with a 1970s basement is often more useful than the loud prepper with 10 years of freeze-dried food — test for real assets, not talk. - Wind direction and “shelter-in-place” timing are the two pieces of information that matter most in the first hour; whoever has a working radio or phone signal becomes the group leader automatically. - Offering something small and useful first (extra batteries, a spare N95 mask, bottled water) makes people far more likely to reciprocate when it counts. - Counterintuitive insight: People bond faster during a shared low-level “what if” conversation than during actual panic — the pre-trust you build now is what keeps the group functional later. - Keep one “wild card” on your map — a local farmer, mechanic, or retired firefighter — they often know roads, water sources, and shortcuts that city maps don’t show.

install

npx clawhub install nuclear-accident-human-lifeline

Works with OpenClaw, Claude, ChatGPT, and any AI agent.

Educational reference. Confirm anything high-stakes yourself; AI can be wrong. Disclaimer.