Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Building a stockpile doesn't require a spare room, a chest freezer, or a few hundred dollars dropped in one trip to a prepper supply store. Most of the food that actually keeps you fed longest is already sitting on the cheapest shelf at the grocery store it's just rarely the food people reach for first.

The trick to stockpiling on a tight budget isn't finding rare survival food. It's picking ordinary staples that are dirt cheap per calorie, don't need refrigeration, and hold up for years if you store them right. Here are 18 that do exactly that, starting with the ones that stretch a dollar the least and working up to the staples that should anchor your whole pantry.

18. Instant ramen (the plain blocks, not the cup versions)

A brick of plain instant noodles costs pennies and packs in enough carbs and sodium to get someone through a rough day. Skip the styrofoam cup versions — you're paying extra for packaging you don't need, and the blocks stack far more efficiently in a bin.

They're not nutritionally complete on their own, so pair them with a source of protein and something green if you can. Still, calorie-for-dollar, almost nothing beats them for pure emergency filler.

17. Powdered milk

A box of powdered milk turns into gallons of usable milk for a fraction of what jugs cost at the store, and unlike fresh milk it can sit in a cabinet for a year or more without spoiling.

It's not going to taste like the carton in your fridge, but it works fine in coffee, oatmeal, and baking, which covers most of what people actually use milk for day to day.

👉 A vacuum-sealed storage container keeps powdered milk from clumping once opened — worth grabbing if you're buying the big box size, since the built-in scoop and pour spout save a lot of mess.

16. Peanut butter

Peanut butter is one of the few budget staples that's both shelf-stable and genuinely calorie-dense, which matters a lot when you're trying to feed people on limited supplies. The natural, no-stir kind separates and needs more attention, so for long storage the regular shelf-stable version is the more practical choice.

A jar left unopened in a cool cupboard will comfortably outlast its printed date by a year or more.

15. Dried lentils

Lentils are one of the cheapest sources of protein per pound you can buy, and they cook faster than almost any other dried legume, which matters if fuel or time is limited. Store them in a sealed container away from light and they'll stay good for well over a decade.

14. Store-brand canned vegetables

Name-brand canned corn and green beans cost more for the same can, same shelf life, same nutrition. Buying the store brand instead of the name brand is one of the easiest ways to stretch a stockpiling budget without giving up anything.

Rotate older cans to the front of the shelf and buy a few extra every grocery trip instead of one large haul — it spreads the cost out and keeps your stock fresh.

13. White rice

Rice is the backbone of a lot of budget stockpiles for good reason: it's cheap in bulk, keeps for decades when sealed properly, and works as a base for almost any meal you build around it.

👉 Food-grade buckets with gasket lids are the standard way preppers store bulk rice and beans, since they keep out moisture and pests far better than the bag it came in.

12. Pinto and black beans

Dried beans bought in bulk cost a fraction of the canned version per serving, and while they take longer to cook, that trade-off saves real money over time. Beans and rice together form a surprisingly complete protein source, which is part of why the combination shows up in so many low-budget diets around the world.

11. Rolled oats

A large bag of plain rolled oats is one of the cheapest breakfasts available, and it stores well for a couple of years in a sealed container. Buying the plain bulk bag instead of individual flavored packets cuts the cost per serving dramatically — you can always add your own sweetener or dried fruit.

10. Table salt

Salt costs almost nothing and never really goes bad, but its value goes well past seasoning food. It's useful for preserving meat, making brine, and basic first aid, so a few extra bags are worth keeping even though they take up almost no space.

9. Granulated sugar

Sugar is inexpensive, stores indefinitely if kept dry, and works for cooking, baking, and even simple preservation methods like jam-making. It's one of the few pantry items where buying in bulk is almost pure savings, since it doesn't spoil while you use it down.

8. Bouillon cubes or powder

A small box of bouillon turns plain water and rice into something that actually resembles a meal, which matters more than people expect when the food on hand is limited and repetitive. It's cheap, it's light, and a little goes a long way.

7. Canned tuna or chicken

Canned meat costs more per pound than dried staples, but it's the easiest way to add real protein to a meal without any prep. Buying it on sale and rotating stock keeps the cost manageable, and a case tucked in the back of a closet barely takes up any room.

6. Pasta

Plain dried pasta is inexpensive, cooks quickly, and lasts for years in a sealed container. Buying the generic store brand instead of name brands can cut the price nearly in half with no real difference in how it holds up in storage.

5. Cooking oil

A bottle of vegetable or canola oil is cheap and essential for actually making shelf-stable staples like rice and beans taste like food. It has a shorter shelf life than most of this list, so buy a reasonable amount and rotate it rather than stockpiling years' worth at once.

4. Multivitamins

They're not food, but a bottle of basic multivitamins is a cheap insurance policy against the nutritional gaps that come from eating a lot of rice, beans, and pasta for an extended stretch. A single bottle costs less than a few restaurant meals and lasts a long time in a cool, dry spot.

Vitamins only go so far, though. A while back I went through a stretch where an actual pharmacy run just wasn't in the budget, and a bottle of vitamins wasn't going to do much for the stomach bug and the sleepless nights that came with it. I ended up piecing together some old remedies using stuff that was already sitting in my kitchen.

I found the whole thing laid out here, and it's the reason I haven't had to make an emergency pharmacy trip since.

👉 A simple over-the-door or stackable pantry organizer makes it much easier to actually track what you have and what's about to expire, which matters more on a budget stockpile than a large one — you can't afford to let anything go to waste.

3. Honey

Honey costs more upfront than sugar, but it never truly spoils, works as a natural preservative in some recipes, and has minor first-aid uses on top of being food. A single jar tucked away is a small splurge that pays off over a very long time.

2. Bulk flour

Flour is inexpensive per pound and the foundation for bread, tortillas, and thickeners for soups and gravies. It has more natural oil than something like white rice, so it doesn't last quite as long, but a well-sealed bag stored in a cool spot will comfortably last a year or more.

👉 A kitchen scale is worth the small cost here — portioning flour, rice, and beans by weight instead of guessing keeps a tight budget from quietly turning into wasted food.

1. Water storage containers

None of the food above matters much without water to cook and rehydrate it. Stackable, food-grade water containers are one of the few things on this list worth buying new rather than improvising with old bottles, since food-grade plastic won't leach chemicals into stored water over time.

👉 Stackable food-grade water storage containers are inexpensive relative to almost everything else on this list, and they're the one item that has no substitute if the tap stops working.


Small Budget, Real Stockpile

None of these 18 items require a big-box membership or a specialty prepper retailer. They're sitting in the regular aisles of any grocery store, and most of them cost less per serving than the convenience foods people already buy without thinking twice.

The real strategy behind stockpiling on a tight budget isn't a single big shopping trip — it's buying a little extra of these staples every time you're already at the store, rotating what you have, and letting the pantry build itself over a few months instead of a few hundred dollars all at once.


 


 
A rare, antibiotic-resistant bacterium known as Cupriavidus gilardii was recently discovered in Cheyenne, Wyoming's reclaimed water system, leading to months-long disruptions at two municipal water reclamation plants.
After an extensive investigation, the problem traced back to wastewater associated with construction activities at Meta's $800 million AI data center project. While the contamination did not affect the city's drinking water supply, the incident raised concerns because the bacterium is uncommon, resistant to many antibiotics, and required significant cleanup efforts before normal operations could resume.
As artificial intelligence expands, it increasingly depends on massive physical infrastructure that consumes large amounts of electricity, water, land, and municipal resources. From a systems' perspective, powerful innovations are deployed rapidly because of their economic potential, while governance, oversight, and public understanding struggle to keep pace.
The result is that communities often discover unintended consequences only after infrastructure is already in place. How society manages the growing environmental and infrastructure impacts of AI development, who bears the risks when problems arise, and whether local communities have meaningful input before these projects reshape the systems they depend on are huge conversations we need to be having.
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Monday, July 13, 2026


 
When I awoke early Sunday morning the last thing on my mind was that 71-year-old Lindsey Graham would beat 84-year-old Mitch McConnell to the grave.
When I learned the news, I thought it was a misprint, that they meant to write “Mitch McConnell is dead.” Nope, it was Lindsey. The Grim Reaper has a sense of humour. Or is it the Graham Reaper?
The next shocker was to find out that Mitch McConnell is allegedly alive and kicking. Expect all kinds of conspiracy theories to grow up around that.
Even though both men were members of the same fraternity of human scum that made Donald Trump possible, it boils down to timing, reputationally speaking. Had McConnell died he would have done so hating Trump. Lindsey died in the full throes of abject Trump sycophancy.
Thanks to all the death in the air, there’s a famous quote attributed to Bette Davis that’s making the rounds again. It goes something like, “My mother taught me never to speak ill of the dead. Only good. Joan Crawford is dead. Good.” I think that line is particularly relevant today, but not for reasons you might think.
First, Bette Davis never uttered those words. The line is a complete phoney, invented from whole cloth and slapped on the Bette Davis legacy without her permission. Second, Bette Davis was a member of that baffling constellation of women who became gay icons, such as Judy Garland, Barbra Streisand, Cher and so on.
Lindsey Graham died a phoney, and he was almost certainly gay. I hasten to add that being gay is a perfectly normal thing for any human to be. I don’t condemn Lindsey Graham in the least for being gay, of course.
But I do condemn Lindsey Graham for denying he was gay and being a member of a deplorable cult of disgusting bigots who condemn homosexuality and want to make gay marriage illegal.
You might say that one of the skeletons in Lindsey Graham’s closet was the closet itself.
That is only the beginning of my condemnations of Lindsey Graham.
I condemn Lindsey Graham for being a member of another deplorable cult of disgusting bigots. The cult that threw away their lives of once-honourable public service, relatively speaking, in order to worship at the filthy feet of Donald Trump.
I can think of no other person who more completely erased his life by falling more abjectly on the disreputable Altar of Trump than Lindsey Graham.
Shakespeare had men like Graham in mind when he wrote, “The evil that men do lives after them. The good is oft interred with their bones.”
When Trump first ran for the presidency back in 2015, Graham characterised him as a “jackass,” a “kook,” and a “race-baiting, xenophobic, religious bigot.” His most famous quote at that time was, “If we nominate Trump [as Republican candidate for president], we will get destroyed ... and we will deserve it.” Lindsey certainly got that part right.
I further condemn Lindsey Graham for the fact that by 2018 Graham discovered the advantage, the power, the dominion and the downright glory of completely selling out to that fascist conman, the human scum Trump. Graham was happy to humiliate himself in order to touch the hem of Trump’s garment and be a part of his loathsome inner circle. Graham helped Trump by delivering the rapist Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court.
Then came January 6th, and Lindsey Graham saw the light that he always knew was there. Graham denounced Trump in the strongest terms for provoking the insurrection. He enunciated the ultimate heresy to the MAGA cult when he declared long and loud that Joe Biden and Kamala Harris lawfully won the 2020 election.
Lindsey Graham then averred that he and Trump were finished once and for all.
Not so fast. A later quick trip to Mar-a-Lago and a game of golf, in which he probably let Trump cheat, was the price of bringing Lindsey back into the fascistic Trump fold. From that day to his dying breath, Lindsey Graham remained a fanatical Trump cultist. All it took to bring him back one last and final time was just another payout of 30 pieces of silver, so to speak.
I condemn in the strongest terms Lindsey Graham for being a warmonger. He unreservedly supported Trump’s stupid war of choice against Iran, up to and including advocating the use of nuclear weapons against innocent human beings doing nothing to anybody beyond living their lives.
I express the same condolences to Lindsey Graham’s remaining family that Lindsey himself expressed to the 150 Iranian schoolchildren whose lives Trump destroyed. That is to say, nothing.
The same goes for the 13 members of America’s military who died in Trump’s stupid war. The same goes for the tens of thousands of Iranian civilians who needlessly died. The same goes for the lives of Nicole Good, Alex Pretti and Lorenzo Salgado Araujo. And so on.
Nothing.
Michael Fanone, the Metropolitan Police Officer who was present on January 6 heroically defending the members of Congress at the US Capitol against the Trump mob during the attack, had this to say about the death of Lindsey Graham:
“Lindsey Graham is dead. I will always remember my first and only encounter with him when he looked the grieving mother of a dead police officer in the face and barked that he wasn’t going to listen to her blame Trump for January 6th. When I showed him my body cam footage from that day he turned away and looked at his phone. Rest in Piss you fucking worthless scumbag. If there is a hell I hope you’re in it.”
I would like to echo Mr Fanone’s sentiments by paraphrasing that quote falsely attributed to Bette Davis. My mother taught me never to speak ill of the dead. Only good. Lindsey Graham is dead. Good.
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Sisters and brothers, would you do me a favour? These articles are posted to my Substack, and it would mean a lot to me if you would go there and subscribe. The link is pinned to the first comment. It’s free, or if you can help with support, that would help me to keep up with the fight full time. Either way I appreciate it!
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🚨 Lindsey Graham Was Worse Than You Think — Let's Count The Ways 🚨
Some say “don’t speak ill of the dead,” but I say “when better?” In fact, it’s of the utmost importance that we speak ill of war criminals when they’re dead, alive, or in between.
Senator Lindsey Graham was one of the most vile, repulsive people to ever live. His defining characteristic was that he wanted the whole world to be as unhappy as he was. He wanted as many people to die or be impoverished or imprisoned as possible. He showed all the signs of a sociopath, as I delineated here.
He would easily be on a list of the most deadly and destructive human beings in recent history if it weren’t for the fact that he had relatively little power. And his campaign for president did not go well because, unlike many other sociopaths in the US government, he was unable to trick the American people into believing that he gave a shit about them.
Before we get to his long list of pro-war pro-death and destruction stances, we should not forget his other disgusting political beliefs. He was strongly anti-woman and anti-women’s health. He wanted the US healthcare system to destroy far more Americans than it already does. He was opposed to worker rights and basic welfare designed to help poor Americans get by. He was pro-big oil. He was anti-immigrant and pro-police state. (Apparently the US being the largest prison state in the world was not enough for him.)
He was also steadfastly anti-LGBTQ rights, despite widespread rumors that he was gay. As the Advocate noted:
"In June 2020, 'Lady G' trended on social media after adult film performer Sean Harding alleged that Graham hired male sex workers."
I, of course, wouldn’t care whether he was gay, nor would I mention it here, if it weren’t for his breathtaking hypocrisy.
Okay, let’s move on to all the death and destruction he supported.
1. He was one of the biggest supporters of the US-backed proxy-war in Ukraine, which has killed hundreds of thousands. In 2016, well before Russia’s 2022 military incursion into Ukraine, Graham joined John McCain and Amy Klobuchar in Ukraine to tell them the US would give them all the support they needed to murder Russians.
This was during a time when Ukrainian nazis would killing thousands of culturally Russian Ukrainians in the Donbas region. (Keep in mind even the New York Times has admitted the Ukrainian troops are Nazi supporters with many wearing swastikas on their uniforms.)
2. Graham breathlessly supported the massacre (genocide) of Gaza. He argued Israel should be able to use whatever kind of weaponry they want to destroy Gaza and murder millions of innocent people. He compared it to the US dropping nuclear bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki — which did indeed kill hundreds of thousands of innocent people and served little purpose.
3. Lindsey Graham has advocated for striking (going to war with) Iran for years. He enthusiastically called for bombing their civilian infrastructure, which is a war crime. Much like with Ukraine, Gaza, and others, Graham showed zero concern for civilian casualties. He just wanted war — all the time, with everyone.
4. He supported the 2002 war against Iraq based on obviously false intel about weapons of mass destruction. He was opposed to US forces leaving Iraq. And he never apologized or showed any remorse once the WMD lie was revealed.
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5. Graham endlessly called for ratcheting up the dirty war with Syria. He demanded a larger US military role, arming rebels (who were often jihadists). He pushed the chemical weapons false flag propaganda and supported no-fly zones that could’ve easily sparked a full-scale war between the US and Russia.
6. In 2011 he called for military action against Libya and Muammar Gaddafi based on false propaganda. It, of course, did not bother him that it resulted in the loss of thousands of lives and the destruction of Libya into a failed state with open-air slave markets.
7. Lindsey Graham supported the War on Afghanistan and opposed withdrawing from Afghanistan after a mere 20 years of death and killing. In his mind, the US was entitled to own everything and should “give back” nothing to anyone.
I can’t list every time Lindsey Graham supported killing others or else I would use up all of the internet. He was clearly a sociopath like so many of his colleagues in the federal government. Even Democrats like Kamala Harris have spoken out about how wonderful Graham was. She said:
"I am saddened to learn of the passing of my former colleague, Senator Lindsey Graham. He was full of wit, energy, and charm, and he cared deeply about the Senate and the people of South Carolina."
You see, it’s a big club of war criminal sociopaths with no concern for human life — And you and I aren’t in it.
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BREAKING: WANTED – DEAD OR ALIVE! Kentucky voters are DONE with the games over Mitch McConnell.
Kentuckians are tired of the circus over their ailing senator and just want him to go away. Weeks after the 84-year disappeared from public view following some kind of medical calamity, voters across the state are demanding something that should not be controversial: a straight answer.
“People that deserve to have power usually don’t want it, and people that have power are tough to give it up,” one angry Kentucky voter told MS NOW yesterday.
"We got old people trying to stay in their place, in their power, and designing who gets their seat after them," another said, as frustration boiled over the continuing circus.
“Give up this fight. Give up. You’re not representing us well so don’t represent us at all,” another woman said.
Another man said he’d like to see someone “in the middle” between old and young, but he didn’t expect that to happen.
The reporter revealed that he’s spoken to dozens of voters in the past two days, and every single one wanted to see term limits or age limits imposed on Congress.
The exchanges captured a growing mood in Kentucky, where voters are watching a parade of Republican senators, former aides and political insiders emerge with reassuring stories about conversations they supposedly had with McConnell while offering little actual information about the senator's condition.
Meanwhile, Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear has publicly called for transparency and urged McConnell's office to "end the crazy speculation."
"I publicly and privately urged the last administration to address the public’s concerns with the former president’s health," Beshear wrote on X yesterday. "I’m calling on Sen. McConnell to do the same and provide voters an update on his own health."
Beshear ended the post by urging McConnell to "end the crazy speculation" and "just tell us what's going on."
For weeks, Kentuckians have been asked to accept carefully worded statements while basic questions go unanswered. McConnell remains invisible. His office has provided no meaningful update. Republican allies continue to insist everything is fine.
At some point, people no longer give official pronouncements from people they don't trust the benefit of the doubt. And anger showing up in Kentucky is less about one senator than a political culture that increasingly treats voters as an inconvenience, brushing their questions aside and feed them bullsh*t on the regular.
McConnell spent decades mastering the rules of Washington. Now, his final political drama is unfolding far from the Senate floor, where the people he represented are asking a simple question and getting everything except an answer.
This has gone on too long, and we know why.
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SIGN THE PETITION to pass the People Over Poison Act, which would reverse the Supreme Court's flawed ruling: tinyurl.com/ReverseSupremeCourt
On June 25, the Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS) threw Americans under the bus, siding with Bayer-Monsanto in Monsanto v. Durnell, further shielding pesticide manufacturers from liability when their products cause harm.
In the majority were Justices Amy Coney Barrett, Brett Kavanaugh (author of the opinion), Clarence Thomas, Elena Kagan, John Roberts, Samuel Alito, and Sonia Sotomayor. The dissenting justices were Ketanji Brown Jackson and Neil Gorsuch.
The Supreme Court's ruling was based on the argument that the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA), the law governing EPA’s oversight of pesticides, does not require pesticide labels to warn of cancer risks beyond the weak labeling requirements approved by the EPA. State-law claims seeking damages for the absence of such warnings are thus preempted by federal law.
This ruling is a travesty of justice and a slap in the face of all of Bayer-Monsanto’s Roundup cancer victims. Our U.S. Representatives and Senators can and must reverse the ruling.
READ MORE and take action: tinyurl.com/ReverseSupremeCourt