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Jan. 21, 2024 - Blood Money
41:54
Building Off Grid Self Sustaining Communities with Rosalie Bingham
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The lions.
Today we have a very special guest, Rosalie Bingham.
How are you doing, Rosalie? I'm doing okay.
I'd like to get to at least abundance for all, but I'm doing okay for right now.
Awesome. So, look, the topic of conversation for this episode is, you know, anybody that's been watching the Blood Money podcast knows that there's a lot of people that think that there's a lot of doom and gloom coming down the pipeline.
You know, we've been hearing about the potential fall of the entire economy, the devaluation of the U.S. dollar.
I think there's a lot of us that feel as though the way we've been living thus far has not been the most conducive for the environment nor for human beings.
And that's what we're really here to talk about is, These ideas of regenerative communities, self-sustained communities.
Rosalie, let's just dive right into it.
Tell us a little bit about yourself and how you got interested in this particular field.
Well, I grew up in Vegas, so I've been here for four generations and I decided at An early age that there was some things happening in the planet that just didn't make sense to me, and so I just kept my eyes wide open.
I grew up around developers, real estate developers, from the 1970s and 80s, and so I learned behind the scenes what it looks like to develop fast in Vegas.
I knew my family watched this stuff happen, but I was behind the scenes.
I put myself through college.
I paid my own way. I bought my first car.
I saw two sides of the fence always.
Also, I was raised by a father that ran money for the mob.
Okay. And also, it was a Mormon at the same time.
So my duality is really stretched from one thing to the other.
So I got more involved in this solution.
And I tell that story really quick.
It's a long story, but I could say it quickly, just because the fence is in when we start solving problems.
So I got involved in regenerative sustainability when I was working with the casinos.
To put in anaerobic digestion to take 800 tons of their waste and power their light bulbs.
It makes perfect sense.
But they couldn't do it because economically it didn't make sense.
But that got me started in how do we develop real estate but we do it responsibly so that we can create at least abundance for those that are involved.
And I figured out a way that we could have a heart for community Ahead for business to make sure that we didn't create any debilitating dependencies.
Totally. You know, one of the things recently, I was walking with a friend of mine, just taking a walk through Los Angeles, and we started thinking, why isn't there apple trees, orange trees?
We have all these stupid trees, and I don't want to demean regular trees, but like random trees that are just there to look nice and you water them, which is they take, take, take.
What about putting vegetables and fruits out there?
So as you're walking down the street, you have that.
It grows. It's free.
And nobody needs to starve.
Little things like that. And then that conversation became, the world is going to fall apart.
We're scared of the world falling apart.
How do we build communities to potentially Ward off whatever disasters coming on the pipeline.
So tell me a little bit more about these regenerative communities.
I mean, how are they getting power?
How is it structured?
How do you see these things coming together?
Well, I'll talk about a couple layers.
So the top, let's just go right to the middle part.
Okay, how are they being generated?
Well, right now we have a piece of land, it's on four acres, which actually already we would say it's power generating, meaning it takes more power or pushes more power out To the grid, then it actually gets in.
And so it's pushing power.
It's regenerative. It's regenerating that grid.
So it's not a mini microgrid, but anyway.
But that's what we want to do, is power these mini microgrids.
But make it so that we generate enough power, food, and water in the area that all the people live in that's in that community.
So if it's six people, or it's 20 people, or it's 150 people, It matter not.
And so we want to have a space that people can have excess resources so that we can share it with the other people, but not be gluttonous or You know,
or doomsday-ish, you know, but somewhere in the middle where we're community resiliency, it makes economic sense, it makes environmental sense, it has a positive impact in our economy and our environment and most importantly our emotions as well because that's what makes us a unique species in the galaxy is that we are A very high,
we don't even use all of our brain right now, but we have emotional intelligence that I think is lacking and people have used fear to control and this is a way that we can just make sense of a story that's not making sense right now and we do it in such a way that it's profitable.
So we share the profit and then after the after we We develop this one three-acre parcel, or it's almost four acres.
We develop another 20 acres right next to it.
And right next to that, we develop another 20 acres.
And we just do these little alpha tests on this property that has its own food, water, and power source already on it.
So it's not just talking about it, Vin.
You know me a little bit.
I talk about things, but then I also take action as I'm talking about it.
And then when it makes sense, like the alpha test is almost done.
Mm-hmm. I enlist my friends because as an investor myself, I didn't like it when people would come to me with a project that they hadn't done most of the heavy lifting.
Got it, got it. You know, some of the things we've been talking about is essentially, you know, how are these communities put together, right?
One of the things that we've been talking about internally, and tell me if this is things that you're implementing as well, is first of all, there's, you know, water collection, right?
There's these machines now that literally collect atmospheric water to the tune of, you know, like Gallons and gallons every single day.
I mean, I think just by collecting atmospheric water, they could actually take care of up to 20 homes per day, right?
And then you have wells that are another option in places like Nevada, which has water underneath the ground.
How does it work in terms of these communities?
Let's talk about the basics.
Yeah, this really quick is a great scenario because you have four different sources of water.
So you've got, not only do you have a geothermal hot spot, so you have, you know, steam, hot magma, whatever steam and steam formation coming up out of the ground.
So that's very, very rare.
That doesn't happen very often.
You got that on this piece of property.
Second of all, there's a cold, beautiful little creek that runs down through it.
You know, it's not a river creek, so the creek runs through it.
It's really nice. I like it.
It's got, and then it has its own well as well.
So it's got its own aquifers that they use so that they are tapped into the, I think, I don't know exactly if it's coming from Lake Tahoe or from what source.
I don't for sure, but we can find out.
And then thirdly, the water generators do work.
We've been working with those for about two years.
The thing is, is economically, I don't need to think they would be needed on this property, but somewhere else, like in urban Nevada or somewhere in Texas or something like that, They're gonna make different types.
We water gins for critical times, because even in Nevada, there's water in our air.
I mean, you wouldn't know it by the skin, because our skin and our hair gets so dry here.
But in Texas, it makes sense because there's so much water.
You need to humidify that water.
And why not use it?
So it doesn't always one size fits all.
So all these properties then are going to have whatever is appropriate method.
And appropriate use.
We want to know economically, does this make sense?
And how does it affect the downstream of the environment if we were to pull the water out of the air in such a dry climate, not in the case of emergency?
Now, in case of emergency, we do do something because as a species on the planet, I believe we're here to help elevate and progress here on this planet, is what I believe.
So I put our email address there.
The reason I'm putting our email address, amerikahappens.protonmail.com, is because we are here to be a conduit for these communities, right?
Rosalie is working on a bunch of them, as you can hear.
As America happens, we are actually inquiring about land as well.
We might do something together.
We don't know, but the idea would be here that if you are interested in this, if you're interested in talking with Rosalie, if you're interested in learning more about these communities, just email us, we'll pass on the information to Rosalie, because the idea here is really to use Our audience as well to help build some of these communities because people that watch Blood Money Podcast, people that watch America Happens know that our system isn't necessarily operating in a way that's conducive to human beings, right?
There's a lot of things we could do.
Like if we're growing our own Fruits, vegetables, our own access to meat because of these communities that are self-sustained, right?
All of a sudden, all the nasty things they put in our meat, our vegetables go away.
So on a basic level, it's a much healthier lifestyle, right?
But then you have, you know, what if the world falls apart?
How are you going to be safe? And it seems as though these communities are part of that solution.
We talked a lot about water, Rosalie.
Let's talk about power now.
How does power work?
It would seem as though, again, you'd want...
Three, four different options to make sure that, you know, whatever happens, you guys got power.
Yeah, so we have the geothermal, like I said, that's really unique.
Second is you've got wind, Zephyr, a Zephyr wind that blows through there every day because the valley of Lake Tahoe.
So you have a wind, so you can use some wind generation, though we're not big fans of the wind generators in an emergency, they could be used, right?
We won't need them because they don't need them on that area in the first place because they Generate enough with the geothermal and the solar.
So they also have solar panels that we're using, and we're not big fans of the batteries, and we actually have some solutions with the batteries that we're working on right now.
I'm a person that says, let's look at a problem, but let's focus on the solution.
And so, like I said yesterday, as I was doing a polar plunge in a bathing suit, in a bathrobe at the palms yesterday, for Shihiro, it was a great anti-trafficking, human trafficking.
event and we were doing a polar plunge I said if we shine light on the truth of things uh and we just keep shining the light the cockroaches won't come there right because light on it it doesn't mean we're calling anybody a cockroach or anything it's just that we just want to shine light on what does make sense so we start off first of all with the geothermal it's there the solar is there we add wind if we need to and then we have these batteries and there's some things that have been done at mit that they can actually put These microfibers,
I don't know if you know this about me again, but I also was award-winning industrial hemp farmer, even though I, you know, probably didn't deserve it.
I got that award.
Okay, so, you know, one of the things as we dove into this concept, and I'm talking about my colleagues at America Happens with You know, building essentially a commune.
One of the topics that came up is the different forms of getting power, right?
So quickly, I just want to explain why I put this website here, qintel.pro.
It is actually controversial.
I mean, if you're a mainstream media follower, it might seem controversial, but what exists there Is these technologies, and you'd have to kind of go around the website.
I don't have the direct link, but within there, there's all these quote-unquote lost technologies, right?
For example, in the 1930s, there was a cylinder that essentially rotates on its own inertia that creates unlimited energy, costs like 500 bucks to put together.
And one of the things that, you know, just like Tesla's inventions disappeared These are one of the things that disappeared in history.
The people that invented it, I don't know what happened to them, but there is actual YouTube videos of this technology.
So that's one of the things that this gentleman, Austin Steinbart on qintel.pro, he actually has posted a lot of these different sources of infinite energy that have either been lost to history or they've covered it up because they don't want us to know about this stuff.
Dude, last night I saw this video.
It was so cool. This guy took a, just really quick, he took these two prongs into a scar that already this tree, a moringa, it was a moringa tree.
He specified that that's what it is.
As he put it inside where they were, where it had like this scar tissue and it was growing over, right?
He put this probe in it and then another probe where another scar was and there was, and he tested it and there was enough energy there and he showed it.
He showed powering a light bulb with it.
And he showed using like a sander.
Just the energy from the tree.
And I was like, as long as it doesn't hurt the tree, but in an emergency, you have these type of things.
This is not far-fetched.
It's amazing. It's almost like what we're talking about here is almost a world, like that movie Avatar, the first Avatar, where they got all the energy they wanted existing here.
And then these nasty humans come and they want to just bomb everything and take everything and they're greedy and all that stuff.
You know, in terms of this kind of technology that we talked about, you know, the one that exists on the QIntel Pro website, could you tell us a little bit about some of the different kinds of technology?
You're talking about composting process.
Could you tell us some of the options that exist to power this kind of a community?
Well, you can power it with organic, like I said, waste, which is your compost from your food, your rinds, and other things like that.
You could do it with, it's more expensive, but you could also do it with your plastics, your cardboard, and it's a pyrolysis machine, which is a It doesn't expel any gas, but it's a combustion, but it's expensive.
So this would be like if you had to.
The other way that you could use, which it's really the coolest way, is human waste.
You can actually power, you know, You know, the flames in your gas stove with human waste and it's not that expensive and it doesn't stink.
And in an emergency, why wouldn't we use our waste to survive?
I think it's a commodity that we're not using and why not use it?
So yeah, we've thought of a lot of different ways of fixing a lot of problems.
I mean, it's just amazing what's out there, you know, that we're not utilizing.
And again, it all goes back down to the greed.
You know, again, watch some Blood Money episodes.
The reason why we have a pharmaceutical industry based upon petroleum-based products is purely because of wealthy individuals that said, this is the direction it's going to go.
And that's why a lot of the holistics have been kept away from us.
And, you know, we could tell you from doing 200-something episodes of Blood Money and interviewing a lot of health professionals that they There are so many amazing holistic products that are the go-to options before you jump into pharmaceutical options.
Very similar to powering our communities, very similar how we're getting the water, things that have been kept away from us.
One of the topics that came up when we were talking about these communities is safety, right?
Because the picture I like to paint for everybody out there is, yes, there's a version of it.
These communities where it's just a great place to live because it's healthier, right?
Then there's the version of, you know, the economy falls apart, people are desperate, people aren't prepared, like what Rosalie's talking about, what a lot of the guests on our Blood Money podcast in terms of, you know, saving water, food, rations, even weaponry in case something like that happens.
Like, so people that aren't prepared are going to freak out, right?
And safety then becomes an issue.
Have you thought at all, Rosalie, about Yeah, you know, all that is by design.
So if you can do the people to do your dirty work, then that's a lot easier for you to take control of interest again.
I think the thing is, personally, I think there's something, it just seems like a perpetual April Fool's Day lately.
Something just doesn't make sense, right?
So if you look at something from people that have made not the best decisions, I think, in certain situations, and that's where our economy is at, whether or not Do something different.
And so instead, we're starting with what they call a kins domain.
It's kind of like friends and family, if you will.
And it's the outer perimeter are veterans.
So veterans who have a mindset of, you know, they already put skin in the game, literally, and figuratively, and monetarily.
And so they've already got, and they know what to be a team player.
So they're a team player. And you come together and make, you know, Outer perimeter where the veterans are at.
And then right in front and right inside of that is an area which is kind of a field area that has, like it's your pools and your, you know, your pizza oven kitchens and your pickleball courts and your things that, you know, people really like.
You don't want to have to live like you're Not enjoying your life, right?
So you have this in there.
And then from inside of there, you can have more of your condensed areas, if you will.
But still, all condensed areas really need to have our own private space.
So things that you have witnessed me having to deal with would not happen.
Because I think there's times when you just don't, you can't have another person in your area.
And it's important for us to be okay with being alone.
In a smaller area.
So we really, even in those condensed areas, it has to be a place where you don't feel like you're confound in this one space, but that you do have a space that is just yours, where you can go to.
And then, you know, one of the other things we were talking about is, you know, maybe building like a 15-foot-tall concrete Uh, fence around this community.
Also, uh, as somebody, you know, unfortunately when I was a kid, I actually saw a little bit of civil war, uh, and sandbags and that sort of thing.
I mean, even barricading the community with sandbags and that sort of thing, because you don't know.
I mean, we've seen the walking dead.
It could turn out that bad.
And the thing is, is I don't, I'm not opposed to that.
If that makes economic and environmental sense, I think that's a good, and emotional sense.
I mean, emotionally, probably that would make feel good to have A barricaded from us against the world.
Plus, you know, it makes good sense.
However, how do we do that?
Do we do that with maybe we do shipping containers?
So the shipping containers are on the outside.
So it's not so much that we build a barrier because we have to take resources to do that.
But we use shipping containers and we stack them and they're really viable shipping containers.
So they're not, you know, like you're, you know, you know, Nasty things.
They're really nice. And inside, they're really nice.
And they're highly desirable.
And they make sense.
So we could do that.
But just to start printing a 15-foot wall with a 3D printer and using the resources that, because we also, I don't know if you know this, but we printed a 3D printed house.
They use 70% less water.
It wasn't me, but I helped facilitate the housing where we built.
I and some disabled veterans came together.
We built this little house. And then they lived in that house where they developed this 3D printed home that they did.
And I'm aligned with the person that taught that person.
We're looking at doing some certifications through CSN and UNLV. And some trade classes to teach how do we actually learn to use the dirt in our ground to make earth homes.
I mean, they're not like your craft.
You know, I mean, earth ships are very expensive, but we're not just talking about just the Just put some stuff together and hope that it, you know, fills in from the cracks, you know, the cracks.
This is something that's very durable.
In fact, this guy's built on 17 countries.
People have used his ability where they paid off their homes In eight years opposed to 30 years because of the energy savings and cost.
So yes, we want to do a wall, but how we do that wall will make sure that it's appropriate and the material and the costs are appropriate.
So until then, we do these vertical walls with some of them will be vertical greenhouses and some of them confections will live in.
What is the buy-in for something like this?
We've thought of two different things.
There's four different things that we've been thinking about.
I'll just tell you the two really quick.
We do two things, or several, but just in this next little bit.
We have friends and family that would like to invest in this sort of thing, and it does make economic and environmental sense, so it is a good idea.
But the other thing is I want to also invite people who don't have maybe You know, fifty, sixty, a hundred thousand dollars to invest in something like this.
But they have a thousand, you know, and they want to have a place that they want to collaborate and that they want to own, equity own or profit share, you know, in a pool of funding source or something.
So that's what We're planning to do is something that is crowdsourced and funded and also friends and family.
So the first week was $2 million to do the full package that we need to get 6,000 more square feet and generating revenue in this one space that we're talking about that has this really viable land and beautiful land.
But after that, we'll then move to this other 20 acres that will be just, you know, just contiguous with it so that it's right next door.
And we would have abilities there to expand with education for people that want to learn how to, so it's not just putting money in.
It's also collaborating and increasing your skill sets so that you could help build the next place that we build.
And we're going to build it right next to our show.
Because we'd like to see people coming together to build these.
And wouldn't it be a great idea if we just got after us so quick?
That we could just render this dysfunction in any broken systems that we're having just obsolete.
Wouldn't that be a great thing?
That would be amazing. That would be amazing.
At least abundance for all who are participating.
This whole podcast is based upon, you know, Rosalie and I ran into each other at a party and just had the coolest conversation for like an hour and a half because I didn't realize, you know, we think, you know, For people that are watching this podcast, I mean, our approaches are definitely different.
We think the exact same thing.
I'm a little bit more like, you know, the world's falling apart, like, ah, you know, and Rosalie's much more like zen about that whole topic.
But I think we definitely- You know what?
I'm plan B. I believe that you should always have plan A and plan B. You know, some people, well, if you have plan B, then you're planning to fail.
Nope. You just can pivot.
You can pivot with a plan B. And then, you know, I probably should have planned C&D, and I think I do actually have C&D as well.
However, you know, I can pivot real fast.
And I mean, Ben, I don't know what you know.
I just know that things don't seem like they're, like, it seems to me like I would say, Lucy, you got some explaining to do, you know, or we have a problem.
Something just doesn't seem right.
And I just want to circumvent that chaos and that fear and that Uh, that's the word I want to use.
Just, uh. You know, I'll go a step further.
I hate to make dire predictions, but, uh, you know, I don't like, I don't see, I don't see us making it to June without some kind of like catastrophic economic collapse.
I could be wrong. This is likely.
No, no, no, I don't think you're wrong.
I think it could be likely, but you know me as well.
I think that it's important that we always just focus on the solution.
We can't focus on the problem.
And I know you're saying that in June, that maybe there's something, and it's highly likely.
I mean, we could list them.
I found out the other day that if a president was to die right before the election, who would elect them is the caucus.
Wow. Interesting. Interesting.
I know there's going to be a lot of...
It's going to be a thrilling year in terms of the drama that's coming down the pipeline, I think.
But we don't have to buy into that.
I don't consent to that.
That's the thing. I just threw that out not to go off onto all the problems because I could list.
I mean, we could do days, months, years on just the problems.
There's so many. But if we just focus on transparent collaboration that works, You know, let's just take one step in front of the other.
So if you and I had just got off of, you know, another meeting with a scowl a little bit ago and I said, look, who am I looking for?
Friends and family that are funders and founders.
I know that's a lot of F words, but that's really what I'm looking for is people that are funders and they're also founders.
So they know what they're looking for.
They're not looking for, you know, a superficial Just fluffy thing, but they're actually got some skin in the game, and they also know that this is a good thing, a good social impact, and I'm looking for friends and family.
So whatever degree that is, if you can't afford more than $10 or $20, because we're having this reach out, we're on February 8th, we're doing kind of a pilot.
We've been speaking with Well, Elon Musk, I got some texts from him and so I believe that this is who he is and he says that, you know, Vegas has been very supportive and that he would like to get more involved in regenerative discussion panels and that if the time permits and we're using his platform on space or on space on the X, you know, his platform, that he will jump in and have some discussions.
I think that's got some good merit.
And if we can showcase, you know, the funders and the founders and people that are not just, you know, oh, la la la, let's put our head in the cloud and not make, you know, do anything about preparing, because I think we need to be prepared.
This isn't, you know, and then we prepare for the worst.
And that's why we build this community up there, because if it gets really bad, that's a great place to be.
I mean, you're cool enough and warm enough.
You've got water. You've got power.
It's a great place to be. It's not that far from Vegas.
You can get there quick.
We can strategically get places and put things in place.
So June, if it happens, that's where I'm going to be.
I'm going to be there. If anybody else wants to be there, reach out to me and they can.
What else did you want to talk about?
Or I'll give them the way to get a hold of me.
Yeah, yeah, definitely. So, time.
That was the one thing that I was going to kind of ask about was time.
So, with this feeling of impeding doom coming, is this going to be ready by that May-June Well, it's already got, so we could already house, I mean, if it was an emergency, if it was an emergency and people didn't mind having a cot where a massage table is,
right? If they didn't mind maybe co-sharing a space, you know, with one or two people, then we could probably house 20 people right there right now.
Wow. If it needed to be, right?
The thing is we need to get a greenhouse in there pretty quick so that we can start generating food there.
So that could be happening starting in March because I don't know that you would start.
I guess we could start in February.
You could start because in a greenhouse you can start doing seedlings and things like that.
And we could do it with two things in mind.
What's the most nutrient-packed, which I think is microgreens?
It's also the highest thing that makes most sense for, you know, Economics, like if you had to grow a tree, what would be the most expensive tree that someone would buy?
So you could actually, just in case this didn't happen, you'd have food that was nutritionally packed, right?
But you'd also have a revenue stream.
So you're thinking of plan B, which is if this doesn't happen, okay, so if we do nothing then, we just are, it is what it is and you just don't throw a fit because whatever happens is going to happen.
If you're not prepared, then you just, you know, Hopefully, you just don't panic.
That's the first thing. Figure it out, but don't panic.
Don't treat people unkindly.
It's not going to be a finish line to the end.
This is where the rubber meets the road.
We're going to figure out how do we treat each other.
the second thing is if you can prepare if you have the opportunity to get involved in investment stuff like this then you do you get involved in this type of stuff you invest your time your talents your funds for right now in crypto and fiat it matter not then you also move forward with helping others we help others to get this message out so that more of us are more prepared and we do this as a united front and we just you know tides raise all ships right Yeah,
yeah, totally. Now, let's say we'll talk a little bit about, we were talking about this process.
For the viewers out there, if you watch Blood Money, you've heard about privatizing land, getting land patents, essentially making your own country with its own constitution and that sort of thing.
Is that how you guys are going to prepare these lands where essentially it's kind of like a country of its own with its own laws?
You have to agree with those laws.
Yeah, we'll call it self-governing because we think it's important for self-governing.
But since the beginning is something that I have been involved in for quite some time, I personally, the basis is going to be for right now, unless something comes better, is based off the Constitution.
The first one, the one that is the one that's the one that was before they put any amendments in it or anything else, like the very, very basic.
Where the federal government had very limited power.
So it's going to be more self-governing so that we have people that want to show how we can live more abundantly, but they're also willing to be transparent about it so we can showcase how does that look in a constitution.
Then we set a charter, which would either be a license pool of some sort that we have like creative content that we share, or is it going to be a charter?
With like the terms and agreement, a letter of agreement that if we live in this area, we all agree to this.
And so my agreement, so this is what I, if you're living in this community, these are the things that I'm asking people to consider.
One is how do we keep, how do we resolve peace or resolve conflict?
How do we have peace? It's called peace principles.
That's the first thing. So let's talk about how are we going to resolve conflict because chances are we're going to have conflict just like, you know, it happens on a regular basis.
So how are we going to do that?
The second thing is if we're going to be confidential and share each other's information, that we don't circumvent one another.
That if you help me, I help you.
Remember, I helped you and you helped me.
And let's just collaboratively show who's helping who.
And let's profit share when the profits need to come back, right?
Let's stop with this madness of we have to do this ourselves and be just...
You know, we have to be in control, right?
And then the third thing is open for discussion.
I would like to have it be fun.
I think fun makes the best sense to me.
That it's got to...
Oh, actually, one more thing.
Sorry. Fun and it has to have purpose and profit.
So it's got to be economically and environmentally friendly.
So there are four things. So if you're interested in getting involved, we're...
Taking applications now.
They're not applications.
What's a better word for that? We're taking, I don't know, wait lists.
We're vetting each other.
Are we a good fit? We're doing a discovery call.
That's what we're doing, is a discovery call.
And if you're a collaborator and you've got funding and you're a funder and you have a viable idea, We'll help you.
We'll help you get your idea to the next level.
We're going to just build it up here so we have a place to go if we're in a pinch.
We get out of Vegas.
We get up to Reno.
We spend some time up there.
And then in the meantime, we have a place to hang out with cool people That are all around there.
And we create this edifying space and showcase what it's like to have a community that are founders and funders that are, you know, kind of cool people.
I think we're kind of cool.
Yeah, yeah. And the background checks.
Background checks are part of this, by the way.
Are we doing, you know, just for people that apply, are we making sure that they don't have something crazy in their background that makes them a danger to the community?
Well, one bad apple does spoil the whole bunch.
We do not vet each other.
There's a discovery call.
For the first 20 people that are going to be involved in this smaller thing that we're talking about, because I'm putting my neck on the line and I'm putting my money on the line and I'm putting My time on the line,
and I think the owner of the water rights as well, and some of the, and the person that, this is a great also, I've got to say that a church owns this piece of property, so it's tax exempt, so it's really cool.
There's so many great things about this.
But anyway, so there's a few of us that already have some skin in the game.
So now, you know, in order for us to bring other people, there has to be something like we all just have to agree that this is a good fit.
So there's maybe, there's probably, I mean, I'm not going to say, but there's a few spots left, but there's a lot of us that already have been qualified for this area.
But there's a few spots left.
And then if it's not this area, we have another 20 acres that we'll be scaling on.
And then we have thousands of water rights and thousands of acres of water rights, let's say.
And we have thousands of acres that I'm told that we have throughout different states and different countries.
So if it's not just in Reno, it'll be other places.
And it doesn't mean that whatever we do in Reno is going to work in Africa or in Colorado.
It may. And a lot of the data, if we share all the information that we're, how we're doing things with each other, it'll make the lifting a lot easier because we can learn from each other's mistakes.
Wow. Wow. That's awesome.
Rosalie, this has been an amazing episode.
Again, for the viewers out there, we're going to give Rosalie's contact info.
We also have our email address.
Anything you sent us, we're going to forward to Rosalie.
Rosalie, is there a way that people can get in contact with you?
I'll write that down on the screen right now.
yeah so it's uh you go to rosalie um actually do this go to regen um regen rosalie on instagram so go to regen rosalie there's not very many followers on that right now for a reason because i wanted a really easy space for people to come on to and i haven't invited this is the first time i've actually told anybody my uh So
if people are on there, it might be by accident.
But let's start this.
If you're interested, and if you put your name in a time that you want to reach out, and I'm going to put on there, on my page, a link.
So you can just get a link and start scheduling a call with me.
And that's one way to do it.
The other way is if you go to Regen, R-E-G-E-N 24.
And it's on Eventbrite.
So go to... Did I put this one right?
Regen Rosalie, the one that's on screen right now, is that correct?
Yeah, at Instagram.
That's Instagram. And then what was the other one?
Oh, Regen.
It's Regen24 on Eventbrite.
So you can either go to Eventbrite and just, you know...
I can't see the screen.
I can't see your screen, but you know, it's Regen 24.
Yeah, do you want me to give you my website?
Actually, the website probably is the best way.
I should have given that to you first.
Okay, what is that? Regenerative.com.
And there's a form there.
Just contact me and I'll reach out to you.
My phone number, everything is all right there.
Awesome. So, yep, I think we got that right.
Awesome, awesome. Rosalie, this has been a great episode.
Again, make sure you get in touch with Rosalie.
You could also email us at americahappens.protonmail.com.
This is something that we're going to be following throughout the year.
It's a big topic.
We're very much incentivized to make sure that people invest into these communities.
Because this is going to be absolutely, like, this changes the paradigm.
Once we have self-sustaining communities where people don't have to rely on the grid, they don't have to rely on a system that a lot of us think has been really corrupted beyond repair, everything changes.
The quality of life changes.
People's mental health changes.
So, you know, kudos to you, Rosalie, for doing this.
And we look forward to hearing updates from you.
Thank you. Awesome.
And for the viewers out there, make sure you go to americahappens.com, insert your email address so you stay in contact with us and subscribe to our network.
I will see you all on the next episode of Blood Money.
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