John Titor said that people needed to know where food was grown. Think of japan. Radiation only affects certain parts of the country, not all regions.
Think of Japan? Think of Japan in the sense of the reactor meltdown or at the end of WWII when it was hit with two
tactical nuclear devices (15kt and 20kt)?
Titor said that every major city on planet Earth was destroyed to the extent that half of
homo sapiens became extinct (3,000,000,000 people dead). How does that equate with two tactical nukes or one reactor complex melting down? It doesn't. As I said previously, a reactor meltdown does not involve all of the decay products of a nuclear bomb; nor does it involve the EMP pulse, prompt neutron emissions, gamma ray emissions, the 30 million degree temperatures of a nuke or a mushroom cloud. The meltdown of a reactor is the equivalent of a nuclear bomb "fizzler" - a failure to attain prompt criticality. For a 1 megaton device you'll have less than a 50% chance of survival up to 200 miles from ground zero. You're within three such ground zeros. That means about a 12.5% chance of survival. Because you're in the middle of the three cities it also means that only if the prevailing winds are blowing north you will not have at least one of the fallout clouds going over your farm.
It's time for you to start thinking for yourself rather than parroting on the Internet what your dad has told you. He's a banker. Not a bad gig but not enough, on its face, to give you sufficient information to fathom the implications of the above scenario. Think this one through, Kid.