All Episodes
March 14, 2018 - Health Ranger - Mike Adams
13:37
How the human mob will DESTROY itself
| Copy link to current segment

Time Text
Most animals and even bacteria, if given the chance, will destroy themselves because they will destroy the ecosystem in which they exist.
They will destroy their environment.
Basically, they'll eat everything in their environment.
They'll reproduce and expand to destroy the environment.
Let me just give an example.
Suppose you have a grain silo out somewhere.
I'll use that example because I live in rural Texas, so I see grain silos.
And suppose you have...
A small population of mice, not 10 or so, and they're living on the grain.
They discover this grain silo.
They live on it.
Well, they will reproduce, and one mouse, and mice are mammals, of course, and they can reproduce quite quickly, and they can have, let's say, five babies at a time.
I don't know what their cycle is, reproduction cycle.
Let's call it six weeks, just as a wild guess.
So every six weeks, they can produce five more babies, and then maybe it's only 90 days or 120 days until those become mature enough to reproduce, and then they can keep going.
If you do the math on this, then what you find is that the mouse population explodes Rather rapidly eating into the grain until you get to a day where there's no more grain, but the mice population is huge.
Depending on how much grain you started with, maybe tens of thousands of mice.
It's happened before, trust me.
Farmers who've had grain silos, they know what I'm talking about.
Some days you open it up and there's 10,000 mice in there.
It's happened.
Or rats or whatever, field mice.
The point is, now I know we're not mice.
Humans aren't mice.
Of course we're not.
But every animal does this.
Every animal reproduces and destroys or consumes the resources in its environment until it reaches a point of non-sustainability and crashes.
And this isn't just a talk about population.
This is about the philosophy of self-destruction under which humanity suffers, just like many other species.
So humanity is on so many paths right now that are completely unsustainable, it might shock you, frankly, to really think about them all.
I mean, fossil fuels consumption, for example.
The erosion of tillable soils, you know, food production.
How are you going to produce more food when the soils are being eroded and blown away by winds and so on?
And nutritionally depleted at the same time, by the way.
Yeah.
What about population growth?
What about ecological destruction?
We're seeing a collapse in honeybee pollinators.
We're seeing a collapse in fish populations in the oceans.
Fisheries are collapsing in many parts of the world.
Commercial fishing is literally in a state of collapse.
We're seeing the chemical contamination of our world through agricultural pesticides and herbicides, as well as industrial heavy metals.
And it's just on and on and on.
Genetic pollution, hormone-induced cancers, loss of fertility even.
But mostly it's this worship of material consumption and material production.
Very little is valued in society today except material consumption and material production.
And because of that, because we live on a finite planet with a finite allocation of materials, Those material resources are obviously going to run out.
This is just as true with rare earth metals that are used in manufacturing solar and wind turbines as it is with tillable soils that are being blown away year after year.
In some areas, losing an inch of topsoil a year.
Yeah, that's not a very sustainable situation.
Or what about just the water aquifers?
In northern Texas and Oklahoma and parts of Colorado, there's the Ogallala water aquifer that's running out.
It's dropping, I don't know, a foot a year or a couple of feet a year, and it's going to be gone in, I think, less than 25 years.
Or mostly gone.
So you've got all these unsustainable vectors at work.
You've got a population that as a whole...
The crowd, the mob of humanity, is no different in its final results, no different from that grain silo full of mice.
Now, the mice, each individual mouse doesn't want to die, but as a whole, the mouse population behaves in a suicidal way because it's non-sustainable and it must end in catastrophic collapse.
That's what's similar with humanity.
Each individual human is not suicidal on their own, but as a group, humanity is effectively a suicide cult because it is engaged in actions that will destroy humanity.
Actions that lead to complete ecological destruction, which, of course, leads to collapse, leads to depopulation, and leads to, sadly, a lot of suffering and death, and so on.
So, I guess my point is the distinction between the individual in a population versus the effect of the entire group.
So, an individual can be rather intelligent.
Even while the group as a whole is incredibly stupid.
In other words, the intelligence of the group's actions are not the average of the IQs of the individual members of that group.
Rather, the group dynamic itself is far more stupid than the individuals within the group.
That's a key realization because it tells you that You can have a society where lots of people are very, very smart.
You can have a society where people, many individuals, are engaged in long-term planning.
They want to have a sustainable ecosystem or a sustainable population.
They plan ahead financially and in terms of preparedness and survival or even family planning or what have you.
Lots of people can be intelligent and they can plan ahead and yet they can still be part of an incredibly stupid net result population group that is suicidal as a whole.
And I believe that that's what we're living under right now.
Or as part of.
That human civilization as it exists today is a suicide cult.
I mean, look, we're living on a planet that's dying and it's dying because of us.
It's dying because of things that we have done to it in terms of chemical poisoning, you know, synthesizing toxic chemicals and heavy metals pollution.
And of course, progressives would argue climate change as well, although I happen to know that the NOAA data on that has been fraudulently altered and it's a hoax.
But that's beside the point.
Our planet is dying in other ways.
There is pollution.
Even if the NOAA faked the data, there are other forms of pollution, other ways that we're destroying the planet.
Because we're destroying the planet, we are also destroying ourselves in the process.
So we're on a sick planet, but we're also a sick people.
The population is diseased.
Cancer rates are through the roof.
I mean, in terms of human history, there's never been a time in human history where there are higher rates of cancer than there are right now.
And the cancers are happening younger and younger.
They say in the 1700s or even most of the 1800s, they say, well, infant death rates were really high.
50% of the babies died before they were three.
Well, now 50% of people get cancer almost before the age of 50.
We've gone from an era in which people died from communicable diseases due to a lack of basic running water and soap and basic sewer systems, So now we're dying from our own suicidal chemical contamination.
Pesticides, herbicides, glyphosate, hormone disruptors, food packaging chemicals, a toxic dentistry, the mercury in your teeth, all the crap in your shampoo and your hand lotion and your dryer sheets, your fabric softener is full of cancer-causing chemicals.
You know, all the stuff people spray on their lawns and use to wash their cars and The chemicals in the home building materials, the formaldehyde that's off-gassing in the glues in your carpet.
All of these things, it's a form of chemical suicide, even though individually there might be people who say, I want to live in a green home, a more environmentally friendly home, but society as a whole is so invested in the toxic products and the cheaply produced but chemically enhanced products that It's even hard to source green products that are sustainable, truly sustainable.
Very hard to even get your hands on it, even if you want to.
You know, you go out to eat.
How many restaurants serve organic?
Very few.
So restaurants are serving people poison, by definition.
Because non-organic food is sprayed with poison to kill the pests, by definition.
And it's all laced with that poison.
I mean, I can go out to...
Any restaurant and take a food sample, take it back to my laboratory, and I can run it through the mass spec time-of-flight system that I use there, and I can show you traces of, you know, probably a hundred different pesticides, herbicides, and other toxic chemicals.
They're in everything.
Almost everything.
In fact, we typically find a couple hundred different chemicals in well water, even in rural Texas.
You're like, how did it get in the well water?
Well, gee...
Human activity.
Pollution.
That's how it got there.
So, my point is, we are individually compassionate and concerned and intelligent.
And yet, as a whole, as a group, our species is a suicide cult.
And sadly, we are wrapped up in it.
It's going to be hard for us to avoid being victimized By that system because it is so destructive, self-destructive, and so has such poor planning and very poor ability to engage in true sustainable lifestyles.
And just the consumerism of everything is unsustainable.
We're building massive landfills full of thrown away plastic and metal and junk and e-waste, your old iPhone, your old monitor, all that stuff.
It just piles up somewhere.
We're building mountains of junk and trash while we're mining rare earth minerals out of these dirty, dirty mines that are releasing copper and releasing nickel.
Other toxic metals, lead, cadmium, into the environment.
And, of course, mercury.
So it's not sustainable.
This lifestyle we're living right now, all of us, is not sustainable.
I mean, most of us.
So that's something to think about.
Even if you're intelligent, informed, and doing the right thing, you are part of a suicide cult.
We all are.
And the hard part is going to be, how do we make sure we don't get taken down with it when that catastrophic collapse day Actually comes.
Because it is coming.
So, and as I've said in other podcasts too, your greatest threat is going to be other people who are unprepared.
Your greatest threat is not lack of water or food.
You can deal with that, but they can't.
Because they've never thought about it, so they're shocked and they're desperate and they're freaking out.
And they thought they were smart.
They didn't realize they were part of a suicide cult.
So I hope that gives you something to think about.
Maybe you agree, maybe you disagree.
In any case, if you're thinking about this issue, that's my goal with these podcasts.
So thank you for listening.
Again, this is Mike Adams, The Health Ranger.
And you can find more of my podcasts at healthrangerreport.com.
Click subscribe to stay plugged in to the Health Ranger Report.
If you'd like to help support this video and other videos like this, visit healthrangerstore.com, where everything we sell is laboratory tested for heavy metals and more.
You'll find superfoods, storable survival foods, nutritional supplements, and a full line of synthetic chemical-free body soaps, shampoos, and oral care products.
Everything we sell is non-GMO, and it's all completely free of chemical sweeteners, artificial colors, hydrogenated oils, and other toxic ingredients that you want to avoid.
Export Selection