Preparedness for International Travel – Survivopedia

Disclaimer: Please don’t misconstrue anything in this article to as legal advice or medical advice. This article is intended only to express the opinions of the author.
Tips for Being Prepared While Traveling by Commercial Air
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Clothing
I once saw a guy dash from his vehicle into a store in shorts, a t-shirt, and flip flops. He ran because it was -14 degrees Fahrenheit out, -40 after windchill. If his vehicle broke down on the way home, he would have had frostbite before he could walk to an occupied structure, or help could reach him if his phone worked. His obituary would say he died from exposure, but he really would have died because he mistook the world for a children’s playground with Nerfed corners.
When I was about 12 years old, I flew to England on a direct flight over the pole. I remember looking down and seeing the icebergs and then the polar sea ice. Even as a boy, I thought, “Man, we’re really screwed if this plane goes down.”
Even if your plane goes down at a warmer latitude, what you wear could impact how you fare in a plane crash or any other emergency where exposure is a factor. Dress in layers and wear comfortable closed-toed shoes with wool socks.
Fire is another danger, not to mention that survival often involves using fire for heat, cooking and as a tool. Avoid wearing polyester and other synthetics that burst into flame and drip burning goo on your skin at the slightest spark. Go with merino wool or flame and flash-resistant fabrics like modacrylic.
The TSA also hasn’t banned hats or eye protection yet.
Big Brother & Identity Theft
In Reagan’s day, the nine scariest words in the English language were, “I’m from the government and I’m here to help!” Now they may well be, “You’ve been selected for random screening. This way, please.”
When I was a kid. “Your papers, please.” was a standard comedic trope that invoked images of Nazis conducting searches. Today, cameras, facial recognition software, and automated license plate recognition systems, RFID skimmers and cell-site simulators/IMSI catchers all search you without your permission or even your knowledge.
Your Fourth Amendment rights are suspended at ports of entry. Everything you bring with you is subject to search, including your phone. If you get stopped at a border and the CBP agent doesn’t believe your story, they’ll ask you to open your phone, call people you are meeting or staying with, and check your messaging history them to see if you are entering as a tourist but have a job lined up or some other violation.
Use RF shielded wallets, wallets, passport covers, pocket liners, forensic IT bags, or Faraday bags to prevent RFID skimming of your bank cards, credit cards, passport, and enhanced ID and to protect your cellphone from cell site simulators/IMSI catchers. Watch the next time you pass through customs, and you’ll noticed that everyone is funneled through a narrow checkpoint optimized to capture data.
I don’t like to create a larger digital footprint than necessary. I figure I might as well make them work for it.
Preparedness Tips Once You Are In-Country
Street Crime
Research the types of crimes that occur in the country you are visiting. Crime varies greatly from country to country, and it helps to understand the local patterns of crime to avoid them or survive them.
I travel to South America and common crimes there are lighting kidnappings at bank ATMs and in taxis, kidnapping for ransom, home invasion, carjacking, mugging, and armed robbery of buses.
Muggings and armed robbery are usually carried out by minors because the gangs know they’ll get light sentences. When they rob buses, two guys will board the bus. One puts a gun to the driver’s head and they other walks down the aisle with a bag and tells everybody to drop their phone and wallet in the bag. Anybody who doesn’t comply gets a bullet to the head.
Carry a drop wallet and drop phone in case you get mugged. Your drop wallet should be believable and have enough money in it that the criminal will take it and leave. The phone should work. It is fairly normal for people to carry their new phone in their underwear and their old phone in their hand and hide most of their money. Even though many people take these precautions, the criminals are often young, scared, stoned, and in a hurry.
Carry a trauma dressing or small pocket trauma kit and know how to use it.My brother-in-law was with some missionaries when they got mugged. Most of them understood what he was saying but he was speaking slang and one of the missionaries was an American and had trouble understanding. Because of this, the American was slow to comply, so the criminal shot him in the head.
Like most people shot with a handgun during a criminal assault, he survived, but having a trauma kit on hand and knowing how to use it improves your chances.
His story also illustrates how important it is to maintain situational awareness and to learn to speak thelanguage. Either one could have spared the young man a traumatic brain injury. If you don’t speak the language, carry a civilianpointee-talkee so you can communicate with locals in an emergency.
In-Country Preparation
Budget to purchase certain things in-country after you land, especially if you don’t check a bag.
In-Country EDC Gear