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March 15, 2022 - Health Ranger - Mike Adams
01:16:28
Situation Update, Mar 15, 2022 - US leaders DOUBLE DARE Putin in deadly game of global "chicken"
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All right, welcome to the situation update for the Ides of March.
Yeah, it's March 15th.
It's a Tuesday, the year 2022.
Mike Adams here.
Thank you for joining me.
And it's a sign of the times of what I experienced today.
Kind of exciting for me.
I was able to purchase, well, to win an auction on a Singer sewing machine made in the 1950s, I believe, and it's called the 201K. It's widely known as the most robust sewing machine ever made, you know, for sort of home or light industrial use.
And, of course, it's got no electronics and You can run it on an electric motor that's in it, or you can buy a little hand crank with it, and you can have somebody just crank that handle.
It's got kind of a flywheel, and you can actually sew things off-grid.
Now, the reason I got all excited about this is because I've been recording my book, Resilient Prepping.
I did, I don't know, five or six hours over the weekend, so that book is getting very close now to being done.
I can't wait to release that.
Thank you for your patience.
And in the book, I was talking about high-tech tractors versus low-tech tractors versus no-tech farming, which is also called working your butt off sweating all day with a rake and a shovel.
But the difference between high-tech tractors and low-tech tractors, of course, is that the low-tech tractors like 1970s John Deere's or other brands, they contain no circuit boards.
So they can survive an EMP attack, and they can also survive a lot of supply chain disruptions.
Because they don't have complex parts made in Japan or Korea or China.
And right now, of course, we're having a supply chain crisis.
So for many years I've been accumulating low-tech things.
And this actually became the inspiration for this book I'm going to put out here for free, Resilient Prepping.
Oh, and that's the website, by the way, resilientprepping.com.
It's not up yet, but that's where you're going to be able to get the book once we announce it.
Anyway, I realized that I did not have a low-tech, off-grid sewing machine when I was recording this book.
And I was telling the story of visiting my grandmother's house as a kid and always seeing this sewing machine that she had.
And a little sewing table, and there was a foot pedal that you would pump the foot pedal, and it was connected via a steel rod to the flywheel of the sewing machine.
And so you kind of rock your feet back and forth, and you can sew with this thing.
And I remember as a kid looking at that, it was always there every time I visited, thinking, well, gosh, how crazy is that?
We have electricity!
Right?
Because that's the simple mind of a child.
Why don't we use electricity?
And today, I'm thinking how much I would pay for that old sewing machine.
Because owning equipment that works off-grid in a no-tech situation...
Is almost priceless.
And oh, and by the way, this Singer sewing machine, this 201K machine, it sews through a total of a quarter inch of leather.
So you can have two pieces of leather that are an eighth inch each, and it will sew them together without any trouble.
How many sewing machines can do that, huh?
And not even need electricity?
That's pretty amazing.
So that's why...
I decided I was going to win that bid, and I did.
It didn't even cost an insane amount.
I think I paid a little bit over $700 for this.
But it was in perfect working condition, and it's fully guaranteed.
They had pictures of the motor, well, the gears, I should say, and a list of all the things that they replaced in it to bring it up to speed.
So I was really thrilled about that.
And the reason I share this story with you It's because look at what's happening in the world with the supply chain breakdown, the risk of EMP weapons being deployed, the risk of nuclear war, and the economic sanctions that are affecting all of us.
We all have to think about low-tech living.
And in my upcoming book, Resilient Prepping, I talk about three categories of things that And this covers all the different areas of prepping and survival, such as health and medicine, communications, shelter, self-defense, maintenance and mending, growing food or storing food, and so on.
All these areas.
And in each of these areas, you have three categories of possible solutions, and they are high-tech, low-tech, and no-tech.
And that's really the premise of this book.
So I go through this whole list of every area.
Like, let's take sewing clothes or mending clothes.
What's a high-tech solution?
Well, a modern Singer sewing machine or some other brand that's got circuit boards and it's got 200 patterns and stitches and everything.
It does way more than you ever need.
And you can use that to sew a patch on the knee of your denim jeans because you've been working in the garden so hard that you actually ripped holes in it.
Instead of what the young kids are doing these days, which is buying jeans with holes that are pre-ripped in them.
Like, oh, I'm pretending to be someone who works on a farm, but not really.
It's a fashion statement.
That's going to go away so fast.
People are going to be mending holes.
Not buying jeans with holes in them.
Because you're going to have to use your jeans, you know?
So anyway, the high-tech approach is high-tech sewing machine, modern sewing machine.
Sew the patch on.
The low-tech approach is like the machine that I just bought.
A pre-1985 sewing machine, let's say.
It's probably got an electric motor and some gears.
Some mechanical parts.
And that's about it.
No complex circuitry.
No hard-to-source parts.
At least not in the electronic realm.
I mean, it's still got gears and things, but...
Those are going to last a lifetime if you take care of them.
A drop of oil every once in a while on that machine would not be the worst thing.
And then there's the no-tech solution.
The no-tech solution is when you buy an awl, a sewing awl, A-W-L. And no, I'm not saying oil for those of you who are Texans.
You think I'm saying, oh, we drilled down deep and we spotted some awl.
No, that's oil.
And I'm talking about an awl, A-W-L. Two totally different concepts.
Sewing all is the slowest way imaginable to sew anything.
And you have to put thread in it, and you shove it through the hole in the leather for every stitch.
And then you have to loop the thread through the hole, through a little loop.
You may pull it back, go to the next hole, shove it through the hole, loop the string or the thread and pull it back in.
And you're going, you know, you might spend 10 seconds per stitch.
Whereas with this old 1950s Singer sewing machine, the 201K, you just crank the handle and it goes, done.
And now you have repaired your jeans or your saddle or your holster or your bag or your leather straps or your belt or, you know what I'm saying?
This, and when you're in a survival scenario, time is of the essence.
You don't have all kinds of spare time because you're trying to have enough time to grow food and not starve to death.
And that's going to take up the vast majority of your time.
You're going to need some time for Running other errands.
I don't know.
Taking care of your animals.
Maybe constructing a rabbit hutch or something.
Maybe some time for perimeter defense.
Maybe some time to repair some fencing or whatever.
So you don't have time to waste on sewing and stitching things by hand.
So anyway, this is what we all have to think about.
How to live in a no-tech scenario because it could go there.
And we're going to get to that next here, the situation in the world today.
That was kind of my intro to what's happening in the world.
We're going to talk about the escalation of the situation in Russia and Ukraine.
And I have a lot of new details from yesterday, but this could get very bad.
This could get Mad Max bad, or we could be pulled back from the brink of total global destruction, and perhaps there could be a peace deal, and then everybody's going to celebrate.
The stock market's going to explode and so on.
It could be very good or very bad, but I don't see any signs of this going in the direction of very good.
I don't see that at all, in fact.
So we're going to get to that.
But before we do that, a couple of things to mention here.
Alright, the first thing is that virtue signaling libtards are going to Ukraine and they're joining the army training camps And then they're taking selfies and posting those online on places like Reddit in order to virtue signal.
Like, oh, look at me!
I'm fighting for Ukraine!
Everything's so awesome in Ukraine!
And, of course, their photos have geolocation data.
So the Russians are just grabbing the photos off Reddit And getting the metadata off the JPEG or whatever it is, oh, look, it's got GPS coordinates.
And then they just feed those coordinates into their missile systems.
And they're just launching missiles, kaboom, at the training bases.
And then there have now been a lot of dead Virtue signaling libtards who thought that this was all a game.
They thought this was all about social credit score.
I'm going to get so many Nikes.
And then they realize, oh, you got a missile shoved up your bum and it detonated and now you're dead.
And I'm sorry that anybody's dying about this.
I guess...
I am kind of mocking their stupidity because, I mean, how stupid do you have to be to go there and do that and take photos and post photos and then like, oh, missiles are incoming!
I mean, people, this is the real world.
And the reason I'm even mentioning this is because I know people who live in Kiev.
And they are very practical people.
And, you know, they understand how to survive, how to dodge missiles, how to not be there when missiles are incoming, how to get food, how to take care of your family, how to trade and barter if necessary, possible escape routes when necessary, and so on and so forth.
From what I can tell, from the few that I know, are very practical people, and in fact, they have a prepping mindset, or at least I should say, they understand how to function in this kind of environment without just being like these foreigners that show up, like American leftists that show up and act like morons.
You know, you don't see Ukrainian families there, you know, virtue signaling about, oh, I'm in Ukraine, don't you love me and give me likes?
You know, they're just trying to figure out, how do I get food?
You know, how do I protect my family?
How do I make sure electricity works?
You know, how do I defend myself under these various circumstances?
Do I need to go into the bunker tonight or not?
You know, what's the situation?
Networking with local people to gather intelligence on troop locations and troop movements and the attacks of nearby cities like Kharkiv and so on.
That's what the Ukrainian people are doing.
And frankly, dare I say, the Ukrainian people don't need libtard leftist Americans walking into their army training camps and broadcasting the damn GPS coordinates all over the internet.
Because that's what libtards do.
They destroy everything they touch.
And in this case, that includes themselves.
There's a story on this from Newspunch.com.
Ukraine President Zelensky announced last week that 16,000 foreign fighters have been recruited to serve in Ukraine's Foreign Legion.
I guess that's the name.
However, given recent events, it appears the foreign fighters may represent a liability rather than an asset for Ukraine.
Oh, you think?
According to Russia, 180 foreign fighters have been killed, and Russian forces do not intend to stop there.
And there's a Russian military guy, Konashenkov.
He says, quote, on the morning of March 13th, High-precision, long-range weapons attacked the training centers of the Ukrainian armed forces in the village of Starichy and at the Yavorovsky military training ground, and that's again Konashenkov, maybe.
I'm trying to get better with the Russian names, but I don't think I'm making any progress.
In any case, so what's in that story is exactly what I just described.
So the foreign people, especially American leftists and Western European leftists and progressives, so when they show up, take pictures, boom, I'm all over the internet, look at me, I'm in Ukraine, I'm fighting for freedom, and then kaboom, big missile takes you out and 150 other people there who thought they were doing the same thing.
And this gets to the issue of denialism.
And there's also something about, for most progressives, their experience with guns is a video game.
And so they don't think any of this is real.
They almost feel like, oh, if I get hit, I'm just going to respawn.
And I'll come back and not make that same mistake the second time.
They think it's all a game.
And that's why they're using the selfies and trying to get the likes and the karma points online and everything.
Because it's just all a big game to them.
Well, I guarantee you, no matter what you think of Putin and Russia and what they're doing, in their mind, it is not a game.
Not a game at all.
This is as harsh as reality gets.
I mean, Russian troops and Ukrainian troops are trading RPGs and javelin missiles and tank rounds and machine gun fire and various missiles and rockets and all kinds of other things.
It's very real.
And I find it fascinating that people who have seemingly little or no experience with firearms will rush into this scenario and say things like, give me a gun and I'll go face the Russian troops!
Just give me a gun!
I know how to aim it.
It worked in...
What are some of the video games?
Battle Force or...
I don't know what the games are.
Sorry.
A video game.
It worked in the video game.
And of course, in the video game...
First of all, you're not being shot at in any real sense, right?
And in a video game, you're not out of breath.
And in a video game, you don't have to account for bullet drop and bullet spin and your crazy adrenaline making you not fire correctly and so on.
In a video game, you don't have to worry about anything that's in real life.
Now, people who don't want to go pick up a gun and face off with Russian soldiers are actually pro-gun people who know what guns are capable of doing.
So people who have experience with firearms...
I.e., typically veterans, law enforcement, civilians who are pro-Second Amendment people, people like myself who carry firearms, who are trained in rifles and pistols and long-range bolt action and shotguns and AKs and ARs and so on.
We do not want to be in any scenario where we're actually getting shot at.
Because we know what happens.
We know what these weapons are capable of doing, and those are even the small weapons compared to, you know, tank rounds.
How big are the tank rounds these days, the Russian tanks?
Are those like, I don't know, 65-millimeter shells or something, or 80-millimeter shells?
I don't know.
Or 20-millimeter on some of the smaller vehicles, I guess.
Those are big rounds.
Just one of those rounds just rips your body to shreds.
And it's crazy that anybody would want to walk in there and, you know, be part of that.
I mean, I'm talking about foreigners.
I understand if that's your homeland, I understand that's different.
You're fighting for your home, you're fighting for your family, you're fighting for your farm, you're fighting for your country.
If that's your country...
Then I totally get it.
What I'm talking about again is virtue signaling leftists who show up and they want social media points and they have no idea what they're getting into.
So there's 180 of those that are dead now.
And I think that number's on the low side.
My guess is it's probably 500 to 1,000 already dead at this point with a lot more deaths coming.
By the way, there's one more note in all of this.
I'm not hearing a lot about snipers in Ukraine, although I've heard a few reports, but it's not an overwhelming number of snipers, at least that I've seen in the media, but who knows.
If a similar war like this were to go down in Texas or rural America, the war would be fought at 1,000 yards plus in terms of its range because so many Americans are capable of long-range shooting.
That you'd be crazy to get up within 300 yards of the enemy if you could help it.
Now, I understand in urban warfare, sometimes you have to get close because it's block by block, city by city, building by building.
But you wouldn't see me or most Texans in that range at all.
We'd be hanging back in 1,000 yards plus to defend our country.
And picking off enemy foreign occupying troops at, you know, hunting ranges times two or three.
That's what we would be doing, trust me.
Not going to get up close enough to be smacked down by your AK, you know, your Chinese AK-47 or whatever weapons people are bringing in.
I saw a video over the weekend of, I don't know, six or seven Ukrainian fighters on a street corner, and they were, I don't know, they were, it was urban fighting, and they were looking around, and they were screaming something, obviously, in their local language, and suddenly a grenade just dropped into the middle of them.
I don't even know where this grenade came from.
And, you know, a second and a half later, kaboom!
Probably took out all six or seven of these people.
You could be standing on a street corner.
Someone just lobs a grenade into your group.
You're too close.
If you're in grenade range, oh my goodness, you are really, really close.
Now, what the Russians are doing by launching missiles at these training bases, it's pretty simple to figure it out.
They're sending a message to every person considering this.
And the message is, oh, if you come train to join the Ukrainian army, or what's it called?
Foreign Legion.
If you come train to be in the Foreign Legion, you might get killed with a missile before you even get out of training.
And I've heard the training is very short.
It's like three days.
You know, you show up.
It's like, what's your name?
Have you ever shot a gun before?
It doesn't matter, but we just want to know.
Do you know which way the magazine goes in?
Which end of the gun goes boom?
You know?
Point at the enemy and pull the trigger.
And then I guess they just send them out.
Three days of training.
Probably comes with instructions where, yeah, only half of you are getting rifles.
And then one of the foreign legion people raises their hand.
Well, what about my rifle?
And the answer is, well, when the guy in front of you dies, you pick up his rifle.
Because those are the kinds of orders that were in fact given to Russian troops.
Back in World War II to battle the Germans, because the Germans had, typically they had far better supply lines of ammunition, and they had vastly superior weapon systems, such as the MG42 machine gun, which I think it was known as the zipper, because it made a sound like a zipper.
When you pull the trigger on that thing, it's a fully automatic machine gun, it would just go...
And those were all bullets, every one of those.
Those were rounds flying out there.
The MG42 was devastating.
And the Russians had nothing like it, and neither did the Allies.
America had nothing even close to it.
That was, you know, German engineering was just off the charts.
So the Russians had to go up against those things with almost nothing.
Today, it's all flipped around.
Today, the Russians have the vastly superior weapons, and the Ukrainian, well, Foreign Legion fighters show up, and they're given, you know, surplus, you know, stamped and rolled AK-47s that may or may not be sided in, that may or may not have ever been lubricated, you know?
Just pull the trigger, see what happens.
Now, in fact, later in today's podcast, I want to go over some of Russia's advanced weaponry because it is truly among the very best in the world, and America is defenseless.
If Russia decides to use its advanced nuclear weapons, America is so screwed, just to put it bluntly.
We're going to get to that, but I've got another Intel update for you from Tina, my contact at the Satellite phone store.
And Tina just gave me another update today.
Let's see, how do I share this without...
I mean, there's certain things I can't share, but you know that all the satellite phones are blown out, right, globally in terms of supply.
And the satellite phone manufacturers, like Inmarsat and Iridium, they're suffering, obviously, from the same supply chain failures and microchip shortages of just about everybody else.
And...
They weren't stockpiling the parts and the microchips they needed, so they're really, really stuck in the same way that many other appliance makers and electronic parts makers are stuck right now.
And I was told today that America will probably not get any more satellite phones until 2023 now.
So last week, that was April.
Today, it's next year.
And we're not even in a full-scale war with Russia right now.
We're just on the verge of a maybe world war.
And it's already so bad that there just are no satellite phones until next year at this point.
That's what I'm being told.
Specifically, I'm being told there were expectations that some of these companies could produce tens of thousands of units this year, and now they can't.
Because it's not their fault.
It's the supply chain problem.
It's microchips, and it's electronic components.
But remember, what does all this have to do with Ukraine and Russia?
Well, those components, of course, on the little microchip circuit boards, those components are made out of metals.
Metals like copper, aluminum, what?
I don't know if tungsten's in there.
I doubt it.
Cobalt, manganese, gallium, and so on.
A lot of metals, they all have to be mined, obviously.
And a lot of those mines are Russia and Ukraine.
So, of course, supply chains are very bad everywhere.
Now, I saw another story that underscores this, also on News Punch.
Experts are warning that diesel sales may be restricted from as early as next month, this is in the UK, amid fears of fuel shortage as the UK phases out imports of Russian oil.
So, the UK largely sources its own petrol.
Half of the country's diesel is imported, and of these imports, a third comes from Russia.
So we're looking at diesel rationing in the UK. My, how quickly that came up on the radar.
We were talking about food rationing yesterday.
Now it's diesel rationing.
A spokesman from the Energy Aspects Consultancy said, quote, risks of energy rationing and ultimately a recession are growing by the day, something most policymakers seem to be ignoring or not grasping right now.
If Russian oil is not integrated back into the market within the next few weeks, we are at a real risk of having to ration crude and products by the summer.
Okay, so I'm here to tell you that the bureaucrats are way behind the curve on this.
They have not thought through the long-term implications or the complex interdependencies of the global supply chain, and so they're going to be just jaw-dropping, slapped in the face with reality.
When all these shortages and the supply chain disruptions really are felt throughout the remainder of 2022 and well into 2023, by the way.
In fact, if we don't stop this war real soon here, within a matter of a few weeks, not only is 2022 blown in terms of any kind of reliable supply chain, including energy and food and metals and mining and so on and fertilizer, but 2023 is blown.
And then we're going to be waiting around for 2024 to get parts for whatever you have that's not running anymore, you know?
Still waiting for that clutch on that Mustang.
You're going to be waiting for a while.
That clutch is made in Korea or wherever.
Maybe it's Mexico and you might be able to drive down there and get it.
But you've got to bring your own security detail.
Oh, also adding to the fun of all of this, Russia just announced they're going to ban exports of wheat, rye, barley, and corn until the second half of this year.
And so that's through June 30th.
That's on top of Ukraine not exporting anything and Hungary not exporting anything.
And where is this?
I have a statement here from some ag group.
Let me find this.
Oh, here it is.
AgWeb.com.
I've been reading AgWeb a lot lately because, well, food matters.
And so here it is.
The headline is Agriculture Ministers Plead Against Export Bans.
Meeting in Germany, the G7 Agricultural Ministers asked all countries to keep their food and agricultural markets opened.
They warned higher food prices and volatility in international markets could threaten food security and nutrition on a global scale.
The group recognized, though, the vital importance of export bans by Ukraine to preserve their food availability, but they don't want anybody else to block exports of their food.
So I guess they're saying, well, Ukraine, you know, they're in a war, they're being attacked, they need their food, but other countries shouldn't do that.
So...
Think about, you know, when a country bans the exports of its grains, it's really, you could say, agricultural protectionism or agricultural nationalism.
And while it may help your country in the short run by maintaining that supply, that harvest of wheat or oats or rye or whatever it is, the world as a whole is Is seriously harmed by the lack of international trade imports and exports.
And this gets back to classic economic theories.
You know, you could grow corn, let's say, in Lebanon.
If you want to use a lot of water and a lot of imported soil and a tremendous amount of money, you could grow corn in Lebanon.
But it's about one-tenth the cost to grow corn in Ukraine, or even Western Russia, for that matter.
And so Lebanon has something else that Ukraine needs, and Ukraine can grow corn that Lebanon needs.
And so, of course, if you have imports and exports, then everybody benefits because certain countries have specialization and local geographic or regional or climatology advantages.
You know, such as rainfall and temperature and growing season durations and things like that.
And so, you know, every country's got the things that it's good at.
So global trade allows countries, obviously, to exchange the things that they're all good at, and then everybody ends up with more stuff, like more food, more goods, more services, more minerals, and so on, when there is international trade.
You start shutting that down with protectionism and nationalism, Then you lose a lot of those efficiencies.
Now, the exception to all of this, and this comes up in the argument of, well, hey, America needs its own domestic manufacturing so that we don't rely on China for everything.
That's a very valid point.
So the exception to all of this is you need certain critical infrastructure in your country so that you can't be cut off in times of war, right?
Because right now, if China cut us off, Walmart would collapse, for one thing.
The dollar store would be gone.
Oh, that reminds me of a little brain teaser I was going to share with you today.
What does the dollar have in common with Building 7?
They're both controlled demolition.
They're going to bring down the dollar in a similar fashion metaphorically to the way they brought down Building 7.
And I'm thinking about what the dollar store is going to be called after this.
If you name your store the dollar store and then the dollar collapses, then what do you call your store?
Formerly known as the dollar store, like Prince.
Maybe they'll just convert over to the mark of the beast system.
The digital dollar store.
Or maybe the dollar will collapse so horribly they'll just change the name to the ruble store.
We'll take rubles because they might be backed by gold.
So anyway, my take on all of this is you don't want to ban all international trade, but you do also want to protect your own domestic ability to produce critical things, which might include antibiotics.
It might include vehicles, fossil fuels, you know, energy, things like that, maybe construction materials, of course, high tech, semiconductor, telecommunications, equipment, mining, and so on.
There's certain industries, aircraft, right, weapons development, and so on.
Certain industries, you want to keep them domestic, no matter what, even if you know it's more expensive to make them domestically.
But America has done a very terrible job of protecting those critical domestic industries, and has basically just, you know, surrendered everything to China or other nations that manufacture just about everything.
So we're in a very dire situation when the world starts carrying out economic sanctions and cutting everybody off.
It's kind of like the American bureaucrats and so-called leaders are sitting in a room and telling each other, oh, by golly, we're going to hurt the Russians so bad, we're going to cut off all the interrelationships and interwebs and trading capabilities and those series of tubes that go in between the countries.
We're going to cut them all off.
Russia's going to suffer bad.
And then the guy next to him says, uh...
Yeah, we're going to suffer worse.
Have you thought about that?
Because we need all those other countries' stuff.
Because we don't make anything in America.
Except debt.
We're like a giant debt factory.
We're really good at printing counterfeit currency and fiat, quote, money.
We're the debt factory of the world.
We make debt and export it.
That's what we do.
We don't make gears.
We don't even make sewing machines anymore, for that matter.
We don't even sew clothes.
We don't make tennis shoes.
If we don't get stuff from China, you won't be able to buy a pair of underwear in America.
You'll have to sew your own somehow.
Doesn't sound comfortable.
Oh, hey there, Bob.
I would say good morning, but I gotta tell you, my wife's stitching on these briefs.
It's really starting to get irritating.
It's riding up.
Someone's gotta smooth out those stitches next time.
I wish I had an old singer's sewing machine.
It wouldn't be so irritable.
Oh, by the way, back to the G7 Agricultural Minister's meeting, they ended their statement with this hilarious threat.
Quote, we will not tolerate artificially inflated prices that could diminish the availability of food and agricultural products, they said.
We will not tolerate it.
And the answer to that is, or what?
What are you going to do?
You going to launch missiles?
And that, you know, that would make it worse.
What are you going to do?
You're going to send in tanks?
That's how we got here.
I mean, every country that just wants to halt exports of food is saying, you know what?
Come and take it, which is the Gonzalez, Texas motto, you know, about the cannon and the Alamo and everything.
Come and take it, bitches, is really what that means.
You want the wheat?
Come and take it.
Otherwise, we're going to eat it here.
I can just see these G7 ministers rubbing their heads, sweating it out in a smoke-filled room in a basement somewhere.
They're not exporting the wheat that we need, so I think we should unleash economic sanctions banning all their bank transfers.
Will that work?
But that would mean no one could buy their wheat, and then they couldn't export any wheat at all.
Would that make it worse?
Oh my God, stop being so negative.
They can't figure out how to punish a country without hurting the food exports, you know?
What if we just ban diesel fuel?
Oh, that makes it worse.
No tractors, no transportation trucks, no harvesting of crops, right?
They just can't figure out how to punish.
They're trying to punish the world into compliance to produce things.
It's like they think, this is the way globalists say, if we punish you enough, we can force you to be abundant.
And that's not the way it works.
I mean, I hate to even bring this up, But it's like an old cotton plantation, you know, slave owner, like whipping a slave and screaming, you know, the whippings will continue until morale improves, right?
I mean, I know it's a horrible chapter of history to even bring up.
I apologize for even using that.
But that's how insane this is.
It's like, we're going to punish you until you decide to work harder and produce more stuff and let us have that.
I mean, all the countries of the world, like Hungary, are going, screw you!
Screw you!
You want the wheat?
Come and take it!
Or in China, oh, you want the rice?
Come and take it!
You want the rice?
So, rice market update, this is from, I'm not even joking, this is a real headline from AgFacts, rice market update.
Oil prices hover over world economy and farmers.
Okay, in this story, again, it's from agfacts.com, Check this out.
You're going to be blown away from the story.
Quote, All right, that's not the shocking part.
Here it is.
To circumvent the obvious concern and ensure fertilizer supplies for coming crop cycles, the Brazilian government has announced an emergency national fertilizer plan First of all, you can just imagine this would be like an endless, like a football field filled with porta potty outhouses and everybody's ordered to come in and contribute to the national fertilizer plan or something, right?
But continuing from the story, quote, in which they intend to be able to produce 40% of their own fertilizers by the year 2050.
What?
By the year 2050?
So we're going to starve between 2022 and 2050?
What are we supposed to do for the 28 years?
Just like eat rats?
What?
This is their plan by 2050 to be able to make 40% of their own fertilizer.
And I guess the other 60% will still come from Russia.
Hey, you know what?
Hey, Brazil.
Not to pick on Brazil, because frankly all the governments of the world are run by incompetent morons, but the fertilizer problem is in 2022.
You're not going to have a problem in 2025 or even 2050 if you don't solve this problem real soon, because half your people are going to be dead, which is also true for a lot of other countries.
Again, not picking on Brazil.
If you don't solve this thing in the next 18 months, You know, our planet could lose 4 billion people.
Brazil's population could drop to half.
Seriously, that's not a joke, not an exaggeration.
You lose, you know, fertilizers for crops.
The world population that's supportable by the food trade ecosystem tops out at about 4 billion people.
That's about half the current population.
I just found that shocking that Brazil, they have this plan, you know, by 2050, We're going to be slightly less dependent on Russia.
Well, that's genius!
What are you going to do for this year?
What are people going to eat, you know, on Christmas?
That's a big question.
Unless they start eating each other and we're in Soylent Green territory or something.
You know, Merry Christmas!
Happy New Year!
Pick the family members you'd like to consume and there'll be a contest and a prize.
I mean, it could get crazy.
That's all I'm saying.
Cannibalism might become a thing.
God, I hope not, but it could.
Give a whole new meaning to the phrase, hey, would you like to have some friends over for dinner?
It's kind of like, which word did you emphasize in that sentence?
For dinner?
Or for dinner?
No.
Like, we're very pleased to serve you, or a welcome to the house.
We would like to serve you.
See, the word that you're emphasizing really matters.
Be very careful accepting invitations if starvation gets a lot worse.
And yeah, listen for the emphasis of the right words.
That's all I'm saying.
Okay, there's a lot of crazy news today.
Here's a story that I thought was just stunning.
This is from the Times of Israel.
Moscow threatens Western firms with arrests, seizures, over sanctions.
And it says report.
Okay, so first of all, let's just consider the fact that this might be totally made-up fake news by the government of Israel or the White House or who knows.
But it's so funny.
It's entertaining.
I thought I would read this for you.
If this is fake news, they're getting very creative.
According to this possibly fake news, Russian prosecutors warn multinational companies such as Coca-Cola, McDonald's, Procter& Gamble, and others that they may seize assets, including intellectual property.
Are they going to steal the Coca-Cola recipe?
I mean, it's just corn syrup and phosphoric acid and some caramel coloring.
It's not a big secret, frankly.
But here it is.
Russian authorities facing potential economic calamity as Western sanctions take hold have threatened foreign companies hoping to withdraw from the country with arrests and asset seizures.
The Wall Street Journal reported on Sunday.
Oh, this is from the Wall Street Journal.
Well, That doesn't mean it's true either, frankly.
So Russian prosecutors have reportedly issued warnings to, like I said, Coca-Cola, McDonald's, Procter& Gamble, IBM, and Yum!
Brands, which is the parent company of KFC and Pizza Hut, according to the Business Daily, citing sources familiar with the matter.
So, first of all, why does Putin have all the good ideas first?
I feel like, shouldn't we just arrest the CEOs of Coca-Cola, McDonald's, Procter& Gamble, and KFC in America?
Wouldn't that be good for America?
Of course, that's satire, of course, obviously.
But if you think about it, if Russia shuts down all these companies, and I know some of these have already shut down operations like McDonald's, it's just going to make the Russian people healthier.
It's going to increase the longevity of the Russian people.
For example, did you know KFC, which of course stands for Kentucky Fried Chicken, And by the way, the reason they're hiding that name, you notice they never use Kentucky Fried Chicken.
Because number one, you know, progressives in America, they don't want anything to be associated with Kentucky.
For some reason, even though Kentucky is an awesome state, by the way, and so is Tennessee for that matter.
But, you know, to progressives living in L.A. and San Francisco and Seattle and New York, Kentucky, that sounds like the South.
They don't like that.
And then the word fried is associated with heart disease and strokes.
I mean, it's almost worse than the vaccine at blood clots in the minds of many people.
So they don't want the word fried.
And then they don't want to use the word chicken because that would imply that it's actual real meat.
What they want to do is they want to transition to fake meat, fake chicken, like I said, cricket, McNuggets, and think, well, I guess that would be McDonald's.
But you see what I'm saying?
Everything is wrong with the name Kentucky Fried Chicken.
Kentucky and fried and chicken, all of these are not liked by the progressives in society today.
Just as a side note, I think it's hilarious.
And this is why a lot of young people today don't even know what KFC stands for.
Now, even middle-aged people don't know what IBM stands for.
And most people don't know that IBM provided the punch card computing machines to the Third Reich so that Adolf Hitler and the Nazis could more efficiently exterminate 6 million Jews, by the way.
So IBM actually enabled Nazis.
And IBM, of course, stands for International Business Machines, by the way.
Because they started out as machines, the punch cards.
They were physical machines, and the data was stored in the holes.
No, I'm not kidding.
I used to play on a punch card machine when I was a kid.
My dad was in the data processing industry.
He was one of the early programmers back in the 1970s and systems administration and so on.
And he would work on the airline reservation system.
Sometimes he'd have to go in on the weekend.
He'd bring me in and let me play with all the machines, all the computers.
It was like giant rooms filled with computers and tape drives and punch card machines.
Those were the most fun ever.
Because as you type on them, they punch holes in the cards, right?
And of course, the Nazis were using that to keep track of which Jews they were slaughtering or, you know, turning into slave labor into the labor camps or what have you.
I was just using the punch cards to make pretty designs.
Look, diagonal lines in the punch cards, right?
Just tap, tap, tap, tap, tap.
Look at this.
This is so fun.
Just playing around as a little kid.
But the data was stored in the holes.
So the reason I say all this is because technically, historically, Russia has every right to not like IBM because IBM enabled the Nazis that were attacking Russia in World War II. Seriously.
Maybe Putin's planning a little payback for international business machines.
Who knows?
And then Procter& Gamble, they're the ones that came up with partially hydrogenated vegetable oil shortening And then they paid off all the scientists and all the media back in the, what was it, 1970s, I think, late 70s and early 80s to say that everybody should eat shortening because it was cheap garbage seed oils,
you know, that only later on we found were heavily associated with heart disease and blood pressure and degenerative conditions and even neurological disorders and so on.
But made Procter & Gamble billions of dollars pushing garbage processed junk food on the world.
And if Procter & Gamble were pulled out of Russia, the Russian people would be healthier.
Same thing with McDonald's, same thing with Starbucks, Coca-Cola, Yum!
Brands, and so on and so forth.
Frankly, this is true for Russia as much as it's true for the Philippines or Hawaiians or anybody.
You want to be healthy, get back to the diet that your great-grandparents ate.
And stop eating, you know, Pizza Hut and KFC and McDonald's and Taco Bell.
Taco Bell, by the way, is the only place you can still get gas for under a dollar.
Because they have 99 cent burritos.
Someone sent me a meme on that today.
But anyway, stop eating all this junk food.
Get back to your indigenous diet and you will be far healthier.
It's true for Central and South Americans, Amazonians, Australian Aborigines, traditional Chinese, Japanese, Koreans, Asians.
Everybody, get back to your traditional diets.
You're going to be way healthier.
But now, from the story, apparently sourced from the Wall Street Journal, quote, without using the word nationalization, Russian President Vladimir Putin has said he's in favor of appointing external administrators to head such foreign companies in Russia, quote, in order to transfer them to those who want to make them work.
He's saying that the Russians might just take over McDonald's.
You know, Russian Big Mac, right?
Whatever that looks like.
It's like your Happy Meal comes with a side of vodka or something.
You know, it's like Russian bottle of Coke.
What makes it Russian?
Bottle half empty.
Now take over Procter& Gamble.
Russian shortening.
What makes it Russian shortening?
We are running short on shortening.
Everything is running short.
Russia takes over yum brand.
Russian yum brand is not very yum.
Kind of nasty, actually.
It's kind of super nasty.
That's why we add vodka.
More vodka and make it yum.
I tell you what, I have a proposal for Putin.
We'll give you McDonald's.
You can have it.
We'll give you Procter& Gamble, man.
You know how much better America would be without McDonald's, Coca-Cola, Starbucks, Procter& Gamble, KFC? We should just...
Give them all Russian passports and just ship them over there.
Here, Putin, have them.
That's actually kind of an act of war against Russia is to inundate their country with the junk foods that are killing Americans.
Think about how many Americans are dying from diabetes and heart disease and cancer.
And, you know, heart attacks and everything because of all the junk food and the processed food and the trans fatty acids and the fake meat burgers and all this garbage that's sold by, you know, McDonald's and Coca-Cola and KFC and so on and so forth.
You know, everything on the KFC menu has monosodium glutamate in it.
Did you ever read the ingredients at KFC? They put MSG in things that don't even need it.
Like biscuits got MSG in it.
And the gravy, of course, has MSG. The chicken!
Chicken's got MSG in it.
Why do you need MSG in a chicken?
Now, technically, kind of an exaggeration.
Not every menu item does, but most of them, most of the things at KFC have MSG. It's like a bucket of headache.
For people who are sensitive to glutamate.
Anyway, it's like, hey, you know, Russia has hypersonic missiles aimed at America.
America has processed junk food and excitotoxins like MSG served to the Russian people.
Like, which one's more dangerous, actually?
Which one is a more effective weapon system?
I think America's invasion of Russia with fast food has been a pretty effective weapon system, come to think of it.
It's increasing healthcare costs in Russia.
It's shortening the longevity of Russian citizens who are silly enough to eat Western food.
Why would you do that?
Don't you know this food is an act of war against your people, by the way?
Putin has fast missiles.
We have fast food.
That's right.
We have drive-through death.
Russia has heavy tanks and military equipment, but in America, we have Big Macs and McRib, which no one can figure out what's in that mystery meat.
That might be Soylent Green McRib, for all we know.
We're still not sure.
DNA tests are pending.
We are Russia.
We have intercontinental ballistic missiles.
We are America.
We have pepperoni pizza with the sodium nitrate that causes cancer in the pizza.
Would you like some?
That's obviously a New York pizzeria, right?
With, like, true Italian New York immigrant.
We got a pepperoni pizza.
You eat too much of this, you're going to wish you had miso.
I'm just realizing I haven't done Italian voices for you here, I don't think, before.
So that's the debut today.
Okay, getting serious.
Russia's advanced weapon.
There was a great article, overview, at endoftheamericandream.com.
That's Michael Snyder's website.
And he went through some of the weapons.
This is no joke now.
Stop laughing.
We're going to get serious.
The RS-28, known as the Satan II, You know, because Satan 1 wasn't bad enough.
They're like, what's worse than Satan?
Satan 2.0.
That's what they named it, apparently.
Let's see, this has been in development since 2014.
It's a Russian missile system, quote, capable of wiping out parts of the Earth the size of Texas or France, according to Russia's media.
Range of 6,385 miles, carries a warhead with multiple independent reentry vehicles, MIRV. In other words, a lot of different nukes that just scatter.
Combined destructive yield of 50 megatons.
In other words, the SR-28 carries a destructive yield greater than 35 times that of America's nuclear ICBM known as the Minuteman 3.
I guess Satan 2 is way more badass than Minuteman 3.
Okay, then we have Russia's Navy.
They've got Project 877-class submarines, known as the Kilo-class.
That's what NATO calls them.
Their nickname is the Black Hole Submarine because they can't be spotted.
They're very, very quiet.
They have an air regeneration system so the crew can stay...
Underwater for two weeks without resurfacing so they can sneak up on America or other opposing nations.
Then they have something else called the Status-6.
This is a Russian submersible drone.
It's like a submarine drone.
The drone could travel autonomously towards its target, covering 5,400 miles at depths as low as 3,300 feet.
And then it simply parks itself and waits for commands to detonate.
These are the continental shelf burrowing systems, I believe, that kind of just drive up underwater, park themselves off the East Coast, just hanging out, waiting for signals.
To go kaboom and then unleash a radioactive tidal wave that wipes out pretty much most of the East Coast.
Yeah, Russia has that.
And there's no defense against that, folks.
There's no defense.
In fact, Michael Snyder writes, theoretically, the Russians could deploy these Poseidons to all of our major coastal cities and detonate them all simultaneously.
On board this submersible drone is a massive warhead.
Some claims saying it carries the same nuclear yield as the RS-28.
That's the Satan-2.
And others claiming twice that.
I guess that would be Satan-4.
According to some Russian officials, the Status-6 can be equipped with a 100 megaton weapon, which is twice the size of the largest nuclear weapon that's ever even been tested.
So it could unleash a radioactive tsunami.
I already mentioned that.
It's a doomsday weapon.
Quote, it's the sort of weapon you build not to win wars but to end them.
I think to end civilization.
And by the way, Steve Quayle told me that according to his sources, the Russians actually have not only a 100 megaton warhead, and not only even a 200 megaton warhead, but they've even developed a 300 megaton warhead that, I don't know what you even call that.
It's kind of like, you know, planetary suicide detonation.
Like, we all die!
You know, that's pretty much what that would be.
Probably rip a continent in half or something if you detonate that.
Probably form a new moon, you know?
Or just split the planet in two or something.
That would not be good.
The Russians also have the S-400 and the A-135.
What are these?
Oh, these are...
The S-500 intercepts and destroys intercontinental ballistic missiles, and it can even intercept hypersonic cruise missiles and aircraft It gives Russia air defense against America's missiles.
It's got a range of 370 miles for its anti-ballistic missile capabilities.
It's got air defense range.
It can detect and engage up to 10 ballistic hypersonic targets flying at a speed of 5 kilometers per second.
That's fast.
That's 3.1 miles per second.
That's, what is, how many Mach is that?
To a limit of 7 kilometers per second, it also aims at destroying hypersonic cruise missiles and other aerial targets at speeds higher than Mach 5, as well as incoming spacecraft.
What are you planning for?
Like an alien invasion?
What?
So, anyway, the point of this is that the Russians have advanced weapon systems that can actually halt America's nuclear missiles and America's cruise missiles, whereas America has no such defense systems that can stop Russia's missiles, and especially Russia's hypersonic missiles, and the MIRV weapons, you know, multiple reentry vehicle warheads, the scattered nukes, basically.
So, The minute you realize this, you realize, okay, wait a second.
Mutually assured destruction, game theory, MAD, the only reason that the two countries don't launch nukes against each other is because they both have no defenses against the nukes and they would both die.
But if you have one country, i.e. Russia, that could defend itself against America's incoming missiles, while that same country, i.e. Russia, has weapons that America cannot defend, then you no longer have mutually assured destruction.
And in that game theory, it becomes advantageous for Russia to launch a first strike attack.
Thank you.
That's game theory.
I'm not saying they're going to do that, and I certainly don't hope for them to do that, because it would be the end of the world, as we know it, obviously.
The end of America, for sure.
But that's what game theory says.
That if you have the advantage and your enemy cannot stop you, but you can stop them, then you should strike.
It's also, as I've mentioned before, you know, two scorpions.
In a jar.
If you can sting the other scorpion, but he can't sting you, then it's in your interest to go ahead and sting the scorpion and kill that scorpion, and then you eliminate the risk of that scorpion ever stinging you.
Same thing.
This is game theory.
So you see, the Russian government has been busy for the last 20 years building advanced weapon systems, hypersonic missiles.
They also have really advanced electronic warfare jamming systems, by the way.
They can take out the F-35s and make them fall out of the sky, which they tend to do on their own anyway.
But they can be helped with Russian jamming the systems.
And what has the American Pentagon and military been doing for the last 20 years?
You know, Hosting transgender ballroom dances of men in high heels and funding transgender surgery of soldiers in the military and painting helicopters with rainbow flags because they're celebrating the all-gay helicopter crew and things like that.
It's been this mission of virtue signaling and culture wars and wokeism at the expense of actually doing the one thing the military is supposed to do, Which is to basically build systems that threaten your enemies so they don't attack you.
You know, that's really the function of the military.
You're supposed to build big, badass weapons that are so scary and horrifying and effective that no one dares think about attacking you.
And they can't even do that.
So they've made America weak and vulnerable.
They've given countries like Russia a first-strike attack.
You know, plausible scenario here.
That's a very dangerous thing for us, and it's the weakness of America's virtue-signaling progressive culture that has taken over the military and tried to turn it into, I don't know, some kind of LGBT playground instead of an institution that at its core is supposed to be about the potential to inflict violence upon others, frankly.
You know, just to be honest about it.
The military is not supposed to be an institution that plays nice with everyone and welcomes everyone and hugs and kisses.
No, it's like, mess with us, we'll kill you.
Because the world is a dangerous place.
I mean, for people who've never lived outside the country, especially if they're more progressive or liberal, they might not realize this.
The world is a very dangerous place, and if you're weak, the sharks will take a bite out of you.
In fact, they'll just chew you up.
If you're weak, they'll conquer you.
So projecting strength is critical to not being messed with.
So when you see Joe Biden up there fumbling with his words, that does not project strength.
It projects weakness.
It's like Joe Biden is almost saying to Putin, like, we dare you.
Hit us now while we're weak because we're so pathetic.
That's the signal that Biden sends to the world, which is why we've got to get Biden out of there.
If we had Trump in there, nobody would be messing with us.
China wouldn't be messing with us.
Because Trump, he's got this combination of not just the ability to negotiate, but he's also got just enough of...
A little crazy vibe where if he says to Russia, like, you mess with Ukraine, we'll nuke Moscow.
That's actually believable when Trump says it because he just might be crazy enough to do that.
So because it's kind of believable, Russia is like, okay, let's wait.
Let's not invade when Trump is in the White House.
And they didn't.
Even China backing off while Trump is in the White House.
Then Biden gets in, and then, of course, Russia and China are like, this is our moment!
Swoop in!
Destroy America!
Invade Ukraine!
Do everything we want to do!
Biden's at the helm!
He's got no clue!
See?
Elections have consequences, as I said, and especially rigged elections have very bad consequences.
So when you think about these lunatic rhinos in America, like Lindsey Graham, Mitch McConnell and so on, and how much they seem to want war with Russia.
They talk like they're big, tough guys.
You know, didn't Lindsey Graham say, oh, we should, somebody should assassinate Putin, just take him out.
You know, they're talking big and puffing up their chests and everything.
Be careful what you ask for, because I'm pretty sure those people live on the East Coast.
In the swamp area.
And if you live on the East Coast and Russia detonates those submersible drones with the, you know, 100 to 200 megaton warheads, you know what that does to D.C.? The swamp becomes like a radiation zone for three centuries, by the way.
No one, it'll be uninhabitable for 300 years.
So it kind of reminds me of those liberals I mentioned at the front of this podcast, part one, where they go over to Ukraine and they virtue signal about how they joined the foreign legion and they're fighting for Ukraine and then they take selfies and they post them online and then the Russians get the GPS data off the metadata from the photos and they just send missiles to those coordinates and then these virtue signaling leftists end up dead.
This kind of reminds me of Lindsey Graham right now.
He's like, you think you're virtue signaling like you're some super tough guy, and then Putin presses the button, and you end up under a tidal wave of radioactive ocean water from a 100-megaton warhead detonated 70 miles off the East Coast or something.
This is not a video game, you morons.
Stop talking like you're such a tough guy.
You're not.
More likely, you're a bunch of perverts.
Weird, twisted people.
You're not that tough, and you can't survive a radioactive tidal wave, it turns out.
And then you have these climate freaks, these Democrats like Al Gore and others, who are out there saying things like, oh, it would be so bad if we had a nuclear war because it would be bad for the climate.
Is that really how you process that?
So, the radiation doesn't bother you.
It's just that...
You'd think there would be weather pattern changes.
That would be bad.
They really don't get it.
Nuclear war is a civilization-ending event, given the size of the nuclear warheads that Russia has and the number of warheads that multiple countries have.
Believe me, climate is not going to be your concern.
Your concern is going to be not dying of radiation poisoning.
But, I don't know, this thought never enters their minds.
It's just incredible.
I mean, the level of denial out there in all of this is just off the charts.
It's just, I don't know, they're just living in their own delusional worlds, you know?
You know, it reminds me of this story, the true story from the Daily Mail.
Here's the headline.
I'll just read it for you.
Billionaire banking heir, 31 years old, is killed by a boat propeller after leaping into the ocean to save his fiancée, 30, who was accidentally knocked overboard by the captain during a Key Largo fishing competition.
So, dude, there's a propeller down there.
Turns out the fiancé was rescued and she's fine.
But this 31-year-old guy who was going to inherit billions of dollars because he's the son of what?
The founder of the Venezuelan bank called Banasco.
He's the son.
He's going to inherit billions of dollars.
He got all chopped up in the propeller because he dove at the propeller.
I mean, people...
People need to think, don't take your small poodle for a walk next to the marsh swamp gully in Florida, because there's probably going to be a gator in there.
Don't dive into the ocean where the propeller is rotating swiftly, because you're going to get all chopped up in that propeller.
And finally, don't dare Putin to nuke you.
Lindsey Graham and Sean Hannity and all the other insane lunatics who are calling for that.
You should be begging for peace, frankly.
I mean, you should be pushing for peace, if not begging for it, and stop beating your chest.
So, to summarize, what does all this have to do with you and me and our plans and how we're going to survive all this?
Well, all this today, this is just more proof that We do not have sane people at the bargaining table here.
And if you ever needed a reason to triple down on your preparedness plans, this is it.
You know, if Trump were in the Oval Office right now, I would say, you don't have to worry.
Putin is not going to do much of anything against us, because Trump...
Carries a big stick and he's willing to wield it.
We're going to be fine.
You don't have to have a whole year's food supply if Trump is in the White House.
But we have the pathetic Biden creature in the White House.
You better have a year's supply of food because who knows where this thing is going.
We do not have sane, rational people in charge.
Or kind of a mental shortcut on this.
When Democrats are running things, double down on your preps.
That's for sure.
When someone like Trump is in charge, you can take it easy for a little bit and just sit on the stockpiles you have.
You might not need to add to them.
And things are more affordable when someone like Trump is in charge.
You know, gasoline, vehicles, food, ammunition, everything.
You notice what's happened to ammo prices, too, since the situation with Russia and Ukraine?
Yeah, ammo prices going back up again.
It's going to cost a fortune!
To shoot the zombies.
You're going to need a loan, basically, to defend yourself against the zombie wave.
You're going to be firing so much metal downrange, it might equal the other metal you have in your safe in terms of value.
You're like, dang, man, I just blew $1,500 on that attack wave.
How many zombies did you get?
Well, pretty much all of them, but cost a fortune!
Copper is going to be so expensive that after you shoot the zombies, you're going to go out there and retrieve the copper.
That's a gruesome mining operation.
A little post-zombie salvage going on right there.
That's when you know copper is very expensive.
If you're salvaging zombie carcasses for minerals, then you're in a Mad Max scenario.
No doubt about that.
All right, but jokes aside, I know it's kind of a gruesome joke.
They get worse throughout the podcast.
They get more and more insane.
Jokes aside, definitely double down, triple down on your preps.
You're probably going to need it.
And think about, of course, low-tech or no-tech prepping.
Remember, I've got my free audiobook coming out soon.
It's called Resilient Prepping.
I did do many hours of recording on that book over the weekend, so I'm getting very close to wrapping that up.
It's going to be great.
And again, it's a free download.
I can't wait to get that released for you.
You've got a lot of great ideas in that book.
I really have enjoyed presenting that information, and it teaches you how to have multiple layers of redundant prepping so that you're resilient even without a power grid.
Or even with the loss of fossil fuels, I have solutions in there for no power grid, no diesel, no gasoline, no combustion engines.
There are still solutions for all the areas of preparedness that you need to pay attention to.
And then in the meantime, of course, support us at healthrangerstore.com.
We are shipping every day.
We have so many superfoods and supplements, and we've got ranger buckets coming up again soon, the certified organic lab-tested storable food.
We've got certified organic freeze-dried fair trade coffee in number 10 cans for long-term storage.
Good barter items.
It's expensive, by the way.
It's not cheap coffee.
It's freeze-dried.
You just add water and you have coffee.
So it's a great barter item, but it is kind of pricey.
It's certified organic, too.
And we've got a lot of freeze-dried fruits, by the way, fruit chunks and so on, in number 10 cans for long-term preparedness and storage.
Remember, the freeze-dried fruits give you the vitamin C and other fruit-based nutrients that most, quote, survival food is lacking.
So it's always good to stock up on survival fruits, especially if they're freeze-dried.
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No, it's talking to satellites.
And so you can send and receive emergency texts even if everything else is down.
So I'm providing these to all the key people in my business and in my personal life.
And we are setting up an emergency text message network.
And also, by the way, Anytime someone in my business, a principal in my business or a family member travels, I'm making sure they travel with this bivy stick so they can send and receive emergency text messages from the road in case maybe war breaks out when they're on the road.
Maybe there's a nuke.
You know, God forbid, or something crazy happens on the road.
Sure would be nice to be able to get text messages and be able to stay in communication, wouldn't it?
So that's the bivy stick.
You can find those at sat123.com.
That's sat123.com.
Those are called bivy sticks.
They do have several thousand of those now available.
I think it's a few thousand that they have.
They'll probably go pretty fast, but they have a few thousand right now.
Alright, so thank you for your support.
Thank you for listening.
Thank you for your prayers.
And thank you for putting up with me as I try to navigate all of this with at least some sense of At least a comedic attempt.
Let's just not be living in doom and gloom all the time.
Even though the situation can be gloomy, we can mock it from time to time.
We can have a chuckle as we're getting down to the serious business of surviving possibly World War III. We don't have to live in doom and gloom all day.
Let's find something to laugh about.
Laughter is good medicine while we're getting ready for things to get crazy.
And I'll stay online as long as I can.
I'll bring you this daily update as long as I can.
So check out my channel on brighteon.com.
I do five of these a week, sometimes six.
And also you can read my articles, of course, at naturalnews.com.
Thank you for listening today.
Be sure to buy yourself an old vintage sewing machine before I buy them all.
There's not that many.
Not that many out there.
You might want to get one while you can.
All right.
Thanks for listening.
Take care.
A global reset is coming.
And that's why I've recorded a new nine-hour audiobook.
It's called The Global Reset Survival Guide.
You can download it for free by subscribing to the naturalnews.com email newsletter, which is also free.
I'll describe how the monetary system fails.
I also cover emergency medicine and first aid and what to buy to help you avoid infections.
So download this guide.
It's free.
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