Hoping for best and preparing for worst: Inside the American Redoubt movement - Action News
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Hoping for best and preparing for worst: Inside the American Redoubt movement

Conservative, Christian and concerned Americans fed up with government are holing up in the Pacific Northwest. The American Redoubt is both a movement and an unofficial geographic zone that spans several states.

Conservative, Christian and concerned Americans fed up with government hole up in Pacific Northwest

Warren Campbell inside his army surplus store Redoubt Surplus and Tactical near Coeur d'Alene, Idaho (Erin Collins/CBC)

A large map with the slogan "Pray for the Redoubt" hangs behind the till at Warren Campbell's army surplus store located just outside Coeur d'Alene, Idaho.

Campbellmoved his family from California about a year and a half ago, in part, because he believes theU.S. economy is on the verge of collapse, but alsoto getmore God and less government in his life and to live around like-minded people.

"The American Redoubt is a stronghold, it's the last bastion for God, country, liberty, constitution, Second Amendment and home schooling," he said.

The term American Redoubt was coined in 2011 and is made up of the states of Montana, Idaho, Wyoming and parts of Washington and Oregon. (CBC)

A redoubt is a little-used military term that refers to a temporary fortification. The American Redoubtis both a movement and an unofficial geographic zonethat includesIdaho, Wyoming, Montana and the eastern parts of Washington and Oregon.

The termwas coined in 2011 by survivalist JamesWesley Rawles, who identified the region as the best placeto wait out a disaster in the U.S., be it natural, economic or political.

Rawlessees the Redoubt as aplace where mostly conservative, ChristianAmericanswho are worried about the futureshould move and prepare for the worst. The goal isto create a safe havenwhere like-minded Americans, many of whom refer to themselves as "preppers,"can live off the land, be more self-sufficient and wait out the calamities to come.

'The holy cause of liberty'

Past the tactical gearand through a hallway at the back ofRedoubt Surplus and Tactical, you'll find PastorWarren Campbell's other venture,The LordshipChurch.

Adorned in military garb and sporting an Abe Lincoln-style beard,Campbell sets out folding metal chairs to get readyfor his weekend service, where about three dozen people usuallycome to hear him preach.

"We love to preach on liberty, the holy cause of liberty George Washington called liberty a sacred fire and our liberties are very, very dear to us, especially the liberties we have in Jesus Christ."

Pastor Warren Campbell inside his makeshift church connected to his army surplus store in northern Idaho. (Erin Collins/CBC)

Campbell says he'smet dozens of people who have recently moved to the area, mostly from California and Colorado, because they're frustrated with what they feel is government overreach, including rising taxes, stiffer gun regulations and theAffordable Care Act, or Obamacare.

He says he'lllikely vote for Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump on Nov.8,primarily because he believes a Hillary Clinton administration woulderode religious freedoms and the right to bear arms.

And despite the polls,Campbell believes Trump will win.If he doesn't, he expects the Redoubtwill get a lot more crowded.

"I think we will see a great influx of people, more than we are seeing right now, multiplying by thousands, coming here for safety and refuge."

With allthemudslinging and scandal that hasdefined thisU.S. presidential campaign, perhaps it shouldn't be surprising there's talk of political migration.

Once again this election cycle, some Democrats, including several celebrities,have threatened to move to Canada should their candidate lose.

Folks in the Redoubt suspect plenty of Trump supporters willconsider a move of their own if their candidate loses, although not quite as far north.

'People want to feel safe'

A short drive away, customers peruse the display cases at Ed Santos's busy Post Fallsgun shop and shooting range. They'reserved by staff wearing side arms who show off everything from handguns to automatic weapons.

The American Redoubt is a stronghold, it's the last bastion for God, country, liberty, constitution, Second Amendment and home schooling.- Warren Campbell, owner of Redoubt Surplus and Tactical

Santos saysmany of the people coming through his shop these days are new arrivals looking for a fresh start and a quieter, more peaceful life.

"Many of the things that attracted my wife and I to this area are the same things that are attracting people today people want to live in a place that feels like a community, people want to feel safe when they go out at night."

Santos, a former army officer, cop and minor pro hockey referee, says the facility is signing up new members every day, and "many of them, the vast majority of them in fact, are from out of this area."

Ed Santos fires a pistol inside the gun range attached to his Port Falls Idaho gun shop.

More than 300 kilometres east,that search for safety and community drewChuckLeveque and his wife to a wooded property in theisolated foothills of Flathead County,Mont.

The former Las Vegas vice copsays his biggest worry is that terrorists could knock outAmerica's electrical grid.

Leveque opens the creaky doors ofa large shipping container in his yard to show how he's prepared for the threat.

"This is our fuel storage container and we have a tank with 275 gallons of diesel and a tank with 275 gallons of non-ethanol regular gasoline."

Thefuel willrun Leveque's generator in the event of a prolonged power outage. He says he's storedenoughfood and waterfor himand his wife to survivefor up to four years.

ButLevequebelieveshe will alsoneed to protect what he's stored from those who are less prepared, so, like many peoplehere in the Redoubt, he has stockpiled weapons and ammunition, too.

Chuck Leveque opens up the sea lift container that holds two tanks of fuel to run his generator in case the power grid goes down. (Erin Collins/CBC)

"The U.S., and Montana in particular, is a gun culture, and in the event of a large catastrophe, we would need the guns to defend ourselves against people who would want to take our property and our preparedness stores."

In the meantime, he worries the country's political and economic power is waning, saddled with too much debt and a political system that has ground to a halt.

It's a problem he expects will get worse afterthe presidential campaign.

"No matter which way the election turns out, there is going to be a lot of angst by either side."

Canning bullion and bullets

Inside a nondescript industrial mallnear Kalispell, Mont.,DJ Lebaron puts the finishing touches on a can of dehydrated eggs inside his store,Big Sky Preppers.

Lebaron,who is originally from southern Alberta,provides survival products and training, including how to can everything from gold bullion to bullets.

"You want to pack them tight so that they don't sound like bullets if somebody shakes it," he said.

For Lebaron,life in the Redoubt isabout hoping for the best and preparing for the worst. It'samantra he adopted while working with FEMA,America's disaster management agency,during the earthquake that rockedthe San Francisco Bay Area in 1989.

"When bad things happen, people that you have called your friends for years are no longer your friends," he said."When people are cold, tired and hungry, they forget all about friendships."

DJLebaronshowshow tocan bullets, bullion and eggs in the video below:

Canning bullets, bullion and eggs

8 years ago
Duration 4:57
DJ Lebaron of big Sky Preppers in Montana demonstrates how anything can be canned and preserved for use during an emergency.

His biggest worry is that a natural disaster like an earthquake or flood will disrupt normal life in America. But he says the growing uncertainty about America's political and economic future is a close second.

He saysTrump presents conservatives in the Redoubt with a difficult choice this election.

"People, if they are voting, are going tobe voting for Trump, but peopledon't want Trump because nobody can control him and they are worried about what he will do, so I guess I will call that a man-made disaster."

He expects the divisions thispresidential campaign has reinforcedacross the country will remain long after the election and will feed some Americans' desire to retreat to the Redoubt.

"There is very much a division or a schism in the United States today, where people are literally, 'Which side of the fence are you on?'"