These are valid concerns - while I always want to have a vehicle handy to get the heck out of dodge due to civil unrest, wanderlust or Mt Rainer blows (I was in Seattle when Mt Saint Helens blew and for a year, we were buried in inches of dust per day, etc.). yet having no access to gas is a valid cocern. What about hybrids, where do hybrid owners hook up to, to charge their batteries at night. Are there still open outlets at campgrounds? I have often stopped at campgrounds simply to use the 75 cent showers or do laundry, and not buying a camping lot. Still if one is traveling around are there charge stations for hybrids?<br><br>Regarding what makes more sense, renting, owning or cardwelling. With gas, the car - it moves and takes you out of danger if that happens, to your destiny. Also, it can get you to food. Yet, it requires power. I currently rent, always month to month so I can leave instantly, and am not happy about the apocolyptic rise in drug crime in Seattle. Biggy business now and there is no stopping it. Anything you have can and will disappear My last car was burgled 9 times, parked under lights in front of the house. So I see things falling apart. And a previous OP was right, if you deprive people of food, and shelter, law flies out the window and the strongest and most innovative survive another day. I do agree it is adviseable to get out of the city (unless you are working there) because the eruption of chaos generally doesn't travel as much, to rural, mountainous or coastal areas. If I could do anything, my next dwelling would be a boat, because you are on water, have a food supply beneath you, and can leave to places that are remote. <br><br>I would hate to invest in a nice travel vehicle when gas hits 11 bucks an hour. Re homeless, the homeless population here that is observable by eye has quadrupled in the last year. As have people living in their not so great cars that they probably don't have gas in, to move. I have dreams where I am visiting friends in their nice apartments and they are asking if I know of any stores that have food. This and no gas I think will be a very real concern soon. No trucks can afford to deliver the food, prices go up, people can't buy it, etc. The local foodbanks are bancrupt, meaning they have nothing. Literally, bare shelves. Only a crystal ball....<br>