Situation Update, Dec 22, 2022 - How humanity REBUILDS after the collapse (feat. Dr. Robert Malone)
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Welcome to the situation update for Thursday, December 22nd, 2022.
That's a lot of twos, right?
12, 22, 22.
Anyway, of course, there is a lot of interesting and important news to cover here today, but first, I'm going to bring you today's interview.
I'm going to put it right here at the beginning because, as you'll see, this is a critical and profound interview with Dr.
Robert Malone.
And this is an interview with Dr.
Malone that certainly I've never done before.
I don't think anybody's done this kind of interview.
The discussion we had was so profound.
That's the only term for it.
It transcended the normal topics of just mRNA and vaccine damage and, you know, corruption at the CDC and things like that.
We didn't talk about that much at all, in fact.
We talked about how human civilization survives this and moves forward and rebuilds itself after, frankly, the failure or the collapse of this current centralized system of junk science and corrupt medicine and politics and everything else that's going on, the weaponization of injections against the people, all of that What about on the other side of that?
Because I don't know about you, I plan to survive this.
I think you do too.
We plan to be here.
What's it going to be like on the other side?
Well, that's what Dr.
Robert Malone and I talked about in this interview.
It's about a 40-minute interview, and it sets the tone so perfectly for what I want to talk about after that.
I'm just going to bring you the interview right here, right up front.
So here we go.
Now, just a little disclaimer.
It starts off a little bit slow.
But if you hang in with it, it gets very deep and very enlightening, I think, about the cycles of the rise and fall of civilizations and where we are on that map, on that timeline right now, and how we make it through this as a civilization.
So here we go.
Check out the interview.
I think you'll enjoy it, and I'll be back with you on the other side of that for further discussion.
Welcome, everyone.
Mike Adams here, the founder of Brighteon.com, and today we're joined by Robert Malone.
He's, well, he hardly needs an introduction these days.
You've seen his work everywhere.
But he's also the author of a relatively new book, Lies My Government Told Me and The Better Future Coming.
And today we're going to talk about that part of the book and the title, The Better Future Coming.
Welcome, Dr.
Malone.
It's a pleasure to have you on.
Mike, thanks for having me on again.
I think the last time we spoke, I was sitting in a cabin in a boat on the Bosphorus.
That's right.
You are correct.
Hopefully not observed by your audience was that I was actually kneeling on a pillow in order to try to get the right height to the camera.
You did not see that.
That must have been a little bit difficult, just physically, to hold that posture.
It was a little rough on the knees.
I was a carpenter, and I've been a farmhand, and we work our farm here, so I'm I'm used to doing things like laying floor, but as I get older, it gets harder over time.
Yes.
Well, I was thinking about you and your horse business and all the things that you do.
I gathered these large square bales of hay and I was distributing some of them today to my donkeys because this big freeze is coming.
As you know, I want to make sure they've got plenty of calories ahead of the big freeze.
So I was thinking about you today while I was doing that, even though I don't have horses.
But, you know, it's a similar kind of thing.
Yeah, we've got to get another few tons in the next couple of days before Christmas because I don't want to be pestering my hay guy during the weekend.
Yeah.
You always got to be thinking about these things.
And we've got five pregnant mares.
And one of them is just...
She could drop any day.
I thought she was going to drop a week ago.
Wow.
She started waxing up and the udder got full.
And then it retracted.
She's a maiden mare.
So maiden mares are always a little twitchy.
You never quite know what's going to happen and when it's going to happen.
And that's just the nature of the thing.
You hope...
You hope that it doesn't happen right in the middle of the coldest part of all this that's coming.
I don't mind, and they don't mind, you know, I can move her into the barn.
We've got to keep our eyes on her.
And the foal comes out a little wet, of course.
What I don't like is wet, cold mud.
Yes.
That's not good.
Agreed.
Agreed.
Well, let's go from the mud to something a little more positive.
I mentioned your book, Lies My Government Told Me and The Better Future Coming.
And that's available everywhere, folks, Amazon and you name it.
And let me give you a shout out to your listeners, Mike.
Tony Lyons at Skyhorse, which is the publisher and the marketer.
Very generously offered and is activated that everybody, especially here in the U.S., but I understand Canada and the U.K. too, can get the e-book for free.
Starting last Monday through Christmas.
So you don't have to spend any money.
Our goal is to get the information out.
And so you can readily download it or download it and send it to your mother or your boss or whoever it is that you want a red pill and not have to pay 15 bucks to Amazon to do it.
Yeah, great point.
So is that a PDF? And where do they go to find that?
No, it's an e-book.
So you can download the Kindle app or whatever your favorite e-book reader is.
Oh, I see.
Yeah, Kindle is currently $0 on Amazon.
Okay, I see that.
Yeah, pretty cool.
Also, I almost forgot I'm obliged to plug We Carry Your Book on brighteonbooks.com, the physical version.
So if folks want to get them, hand them out to people in the physical version.
We should definitely buy the hardcover from brighteon.com.
Brighteon Books.
Brighteon Books.
Well, we're just happy to be able to carry it.
But folks, get it for free on Kindle.
Did you say through the end of the year?
Is that right?
No, Christmas.
Through Christmas.
Oh, okay.
So this is Merry Christmas from Skyhurst Publishing.
Awesome.
All right.
Tony Lyons is the best.
He's amazing.
All right, so how do we get to a better future from here?
Is it about the lessons that we are learning the hard way?
Because it seems like, in my view right now, people like Fauci and others are doubling down on the insanity instead of learning from this.
Although we did see the Australian Medical Association director recently come out and talk about vaccine injuries, or the former director.
But what's your take on this?
And apparently there's also a data dump coming from Germany.
Consequent to FOIA that may open some eyes.
But I'm of the opinion, and I suspect you probably share that point of view, that this COVID crisis that we've experienced is more of a skirmish.
It's not the big battle.
We're clearly now in an environment where The plans that have been concocted since World War II by those who believe that the nation-state is obsolete and the future of their world is a single-world government,
apparently run by corporations if the World Economic Forum has their way with us, and steers us towards this transhumanism, fourth industrial revolution world that they're trying to shape for us,
In which you will own nothing and be happy and will live under a command economy based on utilitarian principles and digital data on all of us and virtually a digital leash on all of us in the form of central bank digital currency and other things.
So what is the alternative to that rather dark dystopian vision?
That we've all seen play out in so many different movies.
Of course, The Matrix is the profound metaphor that many of us move towards when we talk about red-pilling.
But we remember Terminator.
We remember the Borg.
We remember Mad Max.
So many examples of dystopian future visions that are very much of this world.
The centralized fourth industrial revolution fusion of man and machine world that is discussed in The Great Reset and Homo Deus by Yuval Harari and so many other books that these globalists have shared with us.
What's the alternative to that?
Many people, including many that I have learned from and had the pleasure of working with and interacting with over the last three years as I've traveled all over the world, have been speaking of a world that is much more decentralized as the opposite from this centralized command economy that's envisioned.
A world that is...
There's a bunch of different words used...
But one of them is based on intentional communities, is one word.
Communities of people, they can be religious-based, they can be political ideology-based, they can be based in living practices, agrarian practices, but people coming together with a common philosophy and common purpose to form either physical or virtual communities where they can share information and Live freely in
the ways that they wish to.
And no stranger to you, Mike, and probably most of your audience, I don't know why people ridicule Ayn Rand, but Atlas Shrugged, I think, is an important work and really the basis for the name of my substack, who is Robert Malone.
I'm a little, I feel that it's almost arrogant to use that term because, of course, it refers to who is John Galt in Atlas Shrugged, which John Galt of Galt's Gulch has described is an intentional community.
So I've heard all over the world people talking about the idea of intentional communities and And their interest in forming them and forming a matrix of such communities in various ways, and trying to solve the problems of how do we Barter or exchange goods between such communities.
And people talk about, as opposed to centralized digital currency, the decentralized digital currency based on blockchain, as one token that can be used to exchange between such communities.
But what I found fascinating as time went by is apparently in one of the early editions of 1984, George Orwell provided a prelude in which he envisioned, he discussed his belief that it was almost inevitable that eventually we would find ourselves in a world that would be basically a pharmaceutical industry dominated state Mm
and compliant.
And he, George Orwell, writing, you know, mid-century, mid-20th century, century, drew the conclusion that the only way that this would not occur, in his opinion, was if there was a movement towards a decentralization rather than centralized power.
So these ideas that many people, and I suspect even you and many of your listeners have discussed, of a more decentralized world, was envisioned as the logical alternative to the direction that was being was envisioned as the logical alternative to the direction that was being developed for the UN and many other globalist organizations And yet here we are, still discussing it.
I think that this is the way forward, is we need to create a vision, a compelling vision of the future that the undecided,
persuadable middle can look at and compare to this dark transformation You know, dystopian vision that is being promoted by the World Economic Forum and their associates and say, hey, I would rather my children live in that world rather than the indentured servitude that this trade organization of the thousand largest companies would like to put us in.
And I think that is the way forward to that better future is rebuilding community, And actively seeking to advance humanity towards a world that is not...
dominated by imperialistic tendencies, the need for one nation state to dominate economically, etc.
A world more like that, which the founders of the United States envisioned, one with a more limited federal government that basically functions almost as a treaty organization to maintain defense one with a more limited federal government that basically functions almost as a treaty organization to maintain defense
Yes.
a guiding light for all the world.
And in my experience, in my travels, and maybe it's biased because people know that they're talking to an American who's committed to the original intent.
But I hear again and again, people continue to look to the United States as really the beacon of hope, the last bastion of hope for the world in the face of this enormous economic the last bastion of hope for the world in the face of this enormous economic power that's been coalescing around this, you know, these thousand largest companies and the likes of
And I don't think our children have to live in that world.
I think they can live in a much better world in which they're connected to the earth, to nature, and to each other through community.
Over.
You've hit on so many important themes here.
So let me bring a couple of topics to the surface that transition from what you said.
From the globalist point of view, one of the reasons they hate the United States, I believe, is because the United States of America under the model of federalism, which means states' rights, has that decentralization of states versus one overarching federal government, which is what most nations have.
Now, look at what's happening with these states and the AGs right now.
Engaged in lawsuits to reveal documents to challenge mandates and all that.
And of course, Ron DeSantis needs to get a shout out for having a pair as opposed to...
I'm sorry to say, even our governor here in Virginia seems to be scared of his own shadow in many ways.
Yeah, we've seen that.
But you mentioned, this is absolutely critical, the decentralization of, you know, I talk about decentralization of food, so local food production, and decentralization of money, which is probably coming as the debt-based fiat currencies fail in their original intent.
Decentralization of science.
This is something you speak about, where we don't need one Fauci controlling the funding of who gets the grants, who can run the labs, and who cannot, because running a lab requires millions of dollars just to even start up something.
It is the structure of the funding of science that is developed largely during Tony Fauci's tenure is one in which older and older, smaller and smaller numbers of older and older established researchers who are invested smaller and smaller numbers of older and older established researchers who are invested in the dominant paradigm control more and more
And the younger innovators that are coming up are again forced into positions of being indentured servants.
Only we call them postdocs.
Right.
Well, and I would add this overall layer to the decentralization argument that you're making, which is that the topology of decentralization is naturally more resilient.
It's less vulnerable.
Absolutely.
And more likely to foster innovation, by the way.
I was going to say that next.
It is more competitive.
The better ideas rise to the surface instead of being quashed by the...
Those that are invested in the dominant paradigm.
Exactly.
So we need this structure.
And through concepts of federation, local communities can still make their own rules and laws, even about money, but then they can trade with each other through a common translation.
But we still have to solve those problems that the Founding Fathers addressed of needing common defense and security and some form of regulation of trade.
All of those things are fundamental human problems.
Yeah.
You know, they may have been rich landowners mostly, but they had the luxury of buying the best books and going to the best schools.
And at a time when there was just an enormous, incredible renaissance of thought, and they were at the forefront of that thinking, just because they were rich landowners doesn't mean they weren't Good thinkers.
And they didn't come up with good viable solutions that still serve, I think, as the model for the world.
The challenge, though, Mike, as you probably have thought through, is it's easy for us to become convinced of our version of utopia.
And not do the hard thinking about how to really enable that.
And the thing that worries me a little bit, or I'm focused on, is how do we avoid making the same mistakes of the past?
For instance, if we imagine this matrix of communities, well, they're going to have to have a communication scheme.
That's probably going to be something like the modern internet or some iteration of it, maybe with some VPN-like tunneling capabilities to avoid the overlords.
But we're going to find ourselves needing to have sensors.
I mean, we can all agree that we don't want snuff films, pediatric snuff films, right?
Right, right.
And so then somebody's got to say, nope, no snuff films.
And then whoever it is that gets put in the position of the power to say no snuff films, while they're sitting around, they're saying, what else should we not have?
Right?
And then pretty soon we're back at Twitter 1.0.
So my intuition is that we can't realize the potential of collective immunity.
Humanity.
And I don't mean collectivism in the socialist sense, but the potential of us as a species, if we were to be able to function in a matrixed world of semi-autonomous communities...
My fear is that we fall back into the same solutions and the same patterns of behavior because the very fact that we're familiar with the way things have already been done is going to bias the solutions that we come up with for the future.
And I... This is why I'm really wary of people that believe that they know what the answer is.
I'm of the opinion that we can't know what that answer is, what that future is for our children.
It's taken them four generations to put us in this box.
And if we think we're going to get out of it in the next year and a half, I'm sorry, my friends.
This is going to be a multi-generational problem.
You're going to have to teach your children and your children's children, and they're going to have to keep pushing this rock up the hill for quite a while.
See, I agree with that assessment, and I would add that I think the end results that we observe in most societies end up being projections of the internal morality and teachings of the people.
Nicely put, yes.
Right?
So the fundamental education of moral, exactly.
This ends up then being expressed through what become the laws or the understandings or the integrity of the rule of contract, for example.
In a society that teaches no morals, you really can't have a basis.
Exactly.
If you have no integrity, you can have no commerce.
Exactly.
You cannot form community in an environment that lacks integrity.
And this is the basis of Ed Dowd's and other colleagues from Maui, their brilliant little essay, monograph that they put out that they named The Malone Doctrine,
which is all about how to enable and validate integrity so that those that would endorse those principles Could be relied upon in transactions between organizations, between individuals.
I think I so strongly concur with you that the foundation has to be an ethical one, a shared ethics.
And I'm persuaded by the argument that Whether you believe that the Bible as a document was produced through a direct intervention of a monotheistic entity that we call God,
or it represents some mix of divine inspiration and learned ethics over time through millennia of the human species, Whatever your persuasion,
those documents that we call Bible and the other central documents for many of the monotheistic world religions capture the learned wisdom of millennia.
And to discard them, is pure hubris and believe that we could somehow conceive of solutions to fundamental human problems In the span,
you know, by, you know, Novel Harari writing a couple of books is just profoundly, profound hubris.
Yes.
And for no other reason, we should reject them for that.
There may or may not be insights in what Harari has to say.
Personally, I think he's naive and naive.
And it's just a fashionable trend among certain elites to follow him.
But to reject the Judeo-Christian tradition, I think, is a fast road to hell.
Yeah, well said.
And I think what Harari is giving character to, at least this is my observation, among the younger generations right now, they grew up in an environment following the cycle of innovation leading to comfort, which leads to apathy, which leads to loss of morality and kind of an instant gratification mindset that we saw, I think, play out in the crypto space recently.
Have you read Jared Diamond, Guns, Germs, and Steel?
No.
Okay.
It's very much in line with what we're talking about, where the sustainability of civilizations in the long run often comes out of the hardship and the The actual ecological hardship, you know, climate hardship, having to plan for seasons of food instead of starving because you don't have instant gratification of year-round, you know, papaya to eat at every moment.
You actually have to plan and...
Exactly.
I think that's what he's saying.
There's a deep truth in that.
God knows I've experienced it.
I'm not whining, but I think any of us that have lived enough years and lived close to the land have experienced our share of bumps and bruises and challenges, huh?
Yeah.
Indeed, and you mentioned something there, very critical, living closer to the land, because I think that a decentralization in terms of geography, also getting more people out of the cities and onto homesteads, or small plots, or larger plots, it changes your philosophy of life.
So this is why in the last section of the book we have a chapter dedicated basically to Victory Gardens.
I think that you and I share an ethic.
We have to be careful here or it's just going to turn into a mutual love fest here.
But I'm with you.
I'm reminded of the key line in Candide, we must all go work in the garden.
One of the fun facts is that during World War II, with the rise of the Victory Gardens in North America and the United States in particular, we ended up having a greater output of food from these local community gardens than we had had produced from established agriculture.
They built Victory Gardens in Central Park in Manhattan.
I mean, imagine that.
Yeah.
It was a huge movement.
And then it got quenched.
Basically, it got killed by big ag.
Yes.
And Earl Butz, during the Nixon administration, get big or get out, just destroyed the small farm to promote big ag.
Mechanization.
Mechanization, exactly.
And when you destroyed the small farm, you destroyed...
The local communities...
And the other thing that I think people never...
I never hear people talk about, but you probably understand since you live closer to the land.
During the wintertime, Midwestern farmers and farmers in general hole up in their garages, maintain their equipment, and tinker.
And a whole bunch of innovation comes out of that.
You know, a case can be made that...
The automobile or even powered flight was in part the consequence of innovators tinkering in small garages.
So I think we've lost this, you know, I don't mean to overstate things, but we lost a key part of our national soul when we killed the small farm.
That's right.
That's exactly what has happened.
And look, I know we've just barely scratched the surface here, but in the interest of time, I'm going to wrap this up, but I just want to point out that in your book, you talk about this better future coming.
And may I ask you as the last question, you believe that humanity will overcome this current dark period and that we will go on and learn from this and do better?
Absolutely.
Let's say I have a cautious, optimistic hope, and I'm doing my best to help communicate that we don't have to live in this dark, grim reality that they wish to shape for us.
We can choose otherwise.
And to that end, I've started discussions with Chris Langan.
Are you familiar with Chris?
I'm not.
So you might want to look him up.
Really, I think he'd be a great guy for you to interview.
He has one of the highest IQs in the United States.
He's right up close to 200.
But he was a bouncer in New York City for about 15 years.
Wow.
He lives on a farm in the Midwest.
They have horses, him and his wife.
It's an old 1800s farmhouse, just like the rest of us that have lived in old homes.
I just was with them on a Zoom call for a couple hours a couple days ago, and they were talking about Chris tore a major tendon in his leg because they were moving some heavy equipment and part of the floor fell in.
You know, he's a real guy.
He used to be a bodybuilder.
He's now around 70, so a little longer in the tooth.
But another person that has lived a very rich intellectual life No formal higher education in parallel to living in the real world at the same time.
So fascinating guy.
And he has spent decades...
Really thinking hard about this same set of questions about religion, meta-religion.
What is the future?
How do we realize the full potential of humanity?
What is the nature of being?
What is the nature of reality?
He's asked these hard, hard questions and really built his own language around it.
But I encountered his work A couple of months ago and wrote an essay on the Substack.
And I was fascinated.
He'd written papers back in the 90s that spoke about a future of decentralized matrix-connected humanity and the potential that could be unleashed.
And it was far, far ahead of its time.
But in talking to him and reading about his work, which is not easy to follow, it's deep in philosophy and fundamentals of thought, but he has absolutely been making but he has absolutely been making major advances in helping envision a better future for all of us.
And if you want to reach out afterwards, I'd love to connect you to him and see that you could get him on your podcast.
I can tell you, one of my gifts is that I'm not that smart.
I'm smart enough that I can converse with folks that are at that level.
But in my experience, sometimes they live in their own worlds and it can be sometimes hard to communicate with them.
And Chris can go off.
He's so bright.
That sometimes it can be hard to follow him, but I think it's well worth the journey because he has thought deeply about God, religion.
He is absolutely a believer in humanity and unleashing the human potential.
And I think that's kind of where we have to go in addition to living in the real world as opposed to the virtual world.
Also allowing ourselves to imagine what the full potential of humanity might be and how we might get there.
Mm-hmm.
Outstanding.
Yes, I would love that introduction and to explore those topics with him.
I'm right there with you, because as much as I talk about collapse and what people would say, doom, I'm only talking about the near-term doom.
The long-term is not doom, because we're either going to learn or die, and actually I think both will happen.
Some will die, others will learn.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And for the sake of our children, hopefully we make it so there's less tragedy and a little more comedy and joy.
Yes.
And I know we're trying to wrap it up.
If you'll allow me just a moment.
Please.
And I've just come back from Austria where we spoke to groups there about the importance of resiliency and And about the season and what we've all experienced over the last three years and where we're going from here.
And in those discussions, I focused very much on this better future.
We're right now...
We're in this position, this point in time, as we head into Christmas in just a few days, where the ground is frozen, as you said.
It's asleep.
It's recovering.
The fruit trees are starting to build their bud.
The bulbs are asleep.
And then we're going to merge into spring.
And the daffodils will come out yet again.
The cherry trees will flower.
And I suggest that we use this period of time.
I think today may be the winter solstice, as I recall, today or yesterday.
So it's that transition, that ancient transition that we all experience in a deep way.
And is often historically a time for reflection, introspection, rebirth, and also forgiveness.
And I've been trying to emphasize in my discussions not that we should forgive those that have done this to us.
I think they need to be held accountable.
But in our daily lives, I believe we have to allow ourselves to forgive our neighbors, our brothers and sisters, the folks around us.
We've all been torn apart from each other in so many different ways.
And if we can find, during this season, the ability to extend a hand, give somebody a hug, Forgive a little bit, even if we don't forget.
Then we're more likely to be able to come back together.
In my opinion, we must oppose these forces that are trying to tear us apart as a community.
And in fine ways to find common ground and come back together, that's how we get to resilience.
And I think that's an essential thing to fight and resist these individuals who seek to define our lives for us.
I think they've been working on this and they have so much economic power.
And political power that we're not going to be able to triumph if we allow ourselves to be fragmented.
Yes, well said.
So that's my closing on this is absolutely I'm not saying that we should forgive Tony Fauci or Klaus Schwab or Tedros or all these other nefarious actors that have...
I've breached their vows to defend the Constitution and maintain the laws of the United States, etc.
But that on kind of the local level, do our best to try to heal during this time so that we can be stronger as community.
Over.
Well said.
Yes, I think our audience would agree with that, and I would only add that we must remember that those who hold centralized power almost never historically give it up, and what usually happens is they become obsolete, or they create so much failure and inefficiency that their system implodes upon itself,
and then organically something else rises up I would rather boot them out than have to go through a major economic downturn, but I'm afraid we may be heading into that.
that.
I think probably you and I both share the belief that it is wise to hope for the best, but prepare for the worst.
Exactly.
Well, So, Robert Malone, this has been a real pleasure.
I think this has been the most meaningful, profound discussion that you and I have ever had, for sure.
I think our audience will love this.
I just want to remind them, your book is called Lies My Government Told Me and the Better Future Coming.
It's available for free through Christmas in the Kindle version on Amazon.com, or you can purchase it in hardcover, including on brighteonbooks.com, should you choose to do so, or Amazon, Barnes& Noble, wherever.
So thank you, Dr.
Malone.
Oh, and your Substack is rwmalonemd.substack.com.
Just so.
Perfect.
Thank you for joining us.
Thanks for having me on, and Merry Christmas, all.
Merry Christmas to you as well.
We'll talk again, and please don't disconnect yet.
We have to finish the file sync on your side.
Understood.
Yes, Riverside.
Okay, yeah.
Thank you for joining me.
It's been a pleasure.
Take care.
Okay, bye-bye.
And to all of you listening, feel free to repost this interview on your own channels and platforms because we want to share this message with as many people as possible.
I'm Mike Adams, the founder of Brighteon.com, and this has been an interview with Robert W. Malone, MD. Thank you for listening.
All right, now continuing with the podcast, I hope you enjoyed that discussion.
I certainly did.
I felt like we were only getting started, actually.
That's the kind of conversation that could go on for an hour or two, and we would still only scratch the surface.
But clearly Dr.
Malone is a deep thinker about how we get through this, as I think I am as well.
I don't just dwell on the doom of the short term.
I'm also talking about how we get to the other side of this.
And it was almost eerie hearing Dr.
Dr. Malone, talk about so many of the things that we talk about here on this podcast, which is how decentralization is the critical transformation of the structure of how society is organized that will get us through this and get us to the other side.
But what I want to bring up now, now in light of the interview you just heard, is that we've got to be even more imaginative than perhaps we have been so far in understanding what the future of is that we've got to be even more imaginative than perhaps we have been so far in understanding what the future of human civilization is going to Okay.
I don't even think that we're going to have nation states per se structured in the way that we currently have them.
And we're certainly not going to have one world global government that persists.
They might try it for a short time, but it will fail.
It will collapse due to corruption and inefficiencies and bad ideas and all these things.
The future structure of society is a decentralized or local structure where we are producing local food and we're using maybe regional currencies and we're engaging in free trade.
Under the right of contract, without having governments intruding in every aspect of our lives or trying to force us to make decisions about vaccines, for example, or environmentalism, or forcing you to speak a certain way, forcing you to stop using certain words, as is happening in the woke culture of today.
So the future is decentralization.
But as I mentioned in the interview with Dr.
Malone, the current power structure of centralized authoritarian power will never willingly give up that power.
It will only surrender that power Through collapse or revolution of some kind or if it becomes obsolete.
You know, a new paradigm comes along, for example, and makes the whole system obsolete, which can happen with money, by the way.
In some ways that may be happening right now, I think that's only going to accelerate.
But we've got to understand that We're never going back to normal, nor do we ever want to.
Because normal, i.e.
the pre-COVID world that we grew up in, that we've lived in all of our lives, that world is not the best rendition of human civilization.
It's not going to allow us to achieve our maximum potential or to make our maximum contributions to society through creativity and innovation and abundance and wellness and all these things.
Because the world you once knew, remember, it was a world still steeped in Federal Reserve debt note printing, fiat currency, devaluation, corruption, rigged elections, corporate control, censorship, big tech fascism, intelligence community corruption and infiltration of the institutions of society and so on and so forth.
There isn't really much about the way things used to be that we would want to return to.
And besides, it's too late.
Because the powers that be, the elitists or the globalists or whatever you want to call them, they're now going for broke.
They realize they've lost the consent of the people.
They've lost the willingness of the masses to consent to their globalist authoritarian measures.
So instead of relying on consent and voluntary measures, they are now moving into the authoritarian slash coercion phase, which is the last phase before collapse, by the way.
So this transition is going to be probably violent or In the sense that governments will be committing violence against their own people and it will involve a lot of suffering.
There will be a lot of victims of this phase and this phase can last several years or it could be much quicker than that.
It could be very short-lived, just a few months.
It's hard to say exactly.
But it's going to be a phase of, again, coercion, of government violence against the people, of forcing people to do the bidding of the authoritarians since they can no longer convince people to do things voluntarily.
So this phase is going to be characterized by things like forced quarantine camps, medical kidnapping of children, taking them away from their parents.
There's arrests of dissenters who oppose government policies, and we saw, for example, New Zealand just announcing that a few days ago, that anyone who disagrees with the government's response to COVID might be an extremist, might be a terrorist, and might be planning some kind of terrorist attack.
That's the official position of the New Zealand government.
And you're going to see similar positions in Australia and Canada and the UK and the United States and so on.
These are all characteristic of this final phase, the coercion phase, which ends in collapse.
And the reason it ends in collapse is because the hyper-centralization of power, the power to print money, the political power, the power of speech or to control speech, censorship...
The power to control the institutions of society, education, culture, Hollywood, all of these things.
that power inevitably destroys itself.
It's almost like it resorts to self-immolation because that power is so corrupting in and of itself that those who wield that power lose touch with reality.
And before long, they are making choices or making demands that destroy themselves.
In other words, they lose common sense.
They lose morality.
They lose ethics.
They lose reason and rationality.
And we're seeing that in spades right now.
Which university was it recently?
Was it Harvard that put out that new language guide that says you can't use the word American because that might trigger people?
And then they said you can't use the word trigger either.
So it's like, what?
And you can't use man.
So no, you can't say American, you can't say man, and you can't say anybody's triggered.
So in other words, saying that there's a trigger warning is itself a trigger to the woke police that are being pushed in this insane culture.
But it won't last, folks.
It will collapse because it is detached from reality, because it is insane.
It's insane the idea of drag queen story time for little children.
That's insane.
And it will end.
These things will come to an end and they will implode.
And on the other side of that, we have to make conscious choices As the survivors of this horrible collapse, this vaccine holocaust, if you want to call it that, or whatever you want to say, the depopulation, the genocide, the corruption, the, I don't know, the extermination attempt on humanity, we will survive that and the survivors then get to choose.
How will we move forward?
How will we structure society?
Because The structures that we currently know and understand will be destroyed.
When the dollar collapses, the United States of America as we know it, for example, will be insolvent, and it's questionable whether it will continue to exist in its current form.
How can they pay salaries if there are no dollars?
Or if they can't print dollars because no one's willing to buy the debt any longer?
And how will they push more jabs on more people when those left alive no longer trust the institution of corrupt medicine and fraudulent science or big media, for that matter?
And how will they control people when everybody moves to alternative ecosystems of social media or information or alternative news, which is happening in spades already?
Who will trust The media and the CDC and the FDA when the full truth comes out about these vaccines.
And who will trust government and the Treasury and the Federal Reserve when the dollar collapses and people's life savings are wiped out and their pensions are destroyed?
You see, the collapse of society is really the collapse of public faith or trust in the delusions of society.
It's not the right word.
It's People are spellbound into believing in certain constructs that define society.
And it's this shared belief that actually creates the structure upon which society is built.
For example, the belief in the freedom of speech or the belief in following the rule of law or the belief that violence against children is bad.
Or even the belief in the outcome of an election because that's what's been stated by the media.
Well, these beliefs may not be rooted in reality, and the beliefs can be altered very radically and very quickly when faith-based systems collapse, such as, for example, the pensions or the stock market or the dollar itself, or belief in government or belief in medicine, pharmaceutical medicine, or belief in science or what have you.
So Our society as currently structured is more fragile than you might suppose.
And the way that society has been structured is not a permanent structure, and there are no cosmic rules that dictate that that's the form it must take.
We can restructure society in a way that is more decentralized, as Dr.
Malone and I talked about, and decentralization leads to liberty.
Decentralization leads to self-governance.
Decentralization leads to innovation, local creativity, local inventors, local ideas being shared from one community to the next because they work.
And it starts to look like a thousand local experiments or laboratories of what works and the good ideas get shared and the bad ideas get replaced.
And that's why decentralization of society is a much better model for moving humanity forward in all kinds of ways, including food decentralization, money decentralization, science decentralization, and so much more.
So in a very practical sense, once you understand this core concept that we're moving into a collapse of Ending after the stage of government desperation and violence and coercion against the people.
But after that system collapses, there's going to be a restructuring of the way in which surviving members of human civilization interact.
And one of the things, this is just one of many that are very practical, is that cities as they are currently structured will be obsolete.
Cities will not survive in terms of their current, you know, real estate value, for example, or the density of the infrastructure, for example, the number of streetlights, the density of roads and highways and so on.
And in fact, there's a piece of news today that speaks to this.
So in the midst of a collapse of real estate that's happening, mostly nationwide, but especially in blue states and blue cities, areas like Silicon Valley and so on, U.S. farmland is actually going up in price.
And remember, by the way, when I've mentioned three things, gold and silver and land, things that hold value, you've heard me say that a thousand times, right?
Well, from Bloomberg News, buying a plot of land in rural America has never been so expensive.
And that's even with soaring interest rates.
So rising commodity prices mean farmers made record amounts of money this year, spurring a rush for space to plant in 2023.
More demand!
Just as people fled to the countryside during the pandemic and investors turned to fields as a hedge against inflation.
Farmland prices in the Midwest have jumped 20% in the third quarter from a year earlier, bucking a downturn in the residential real estate market.
So they go on and they talk about how farmland prices would likely double over the next 10 years.
And this is a nationwide trend.
So land is going to have value because, of course, food production has value, but also importantly, people are moving out of the cities.
And one of the things that the COVID lockdown showed us is that, well, for a lot of jobs, you don't need to actually be there physically in the office.
And you don't need to be in a city that is very expensive to live there.
Now crime rates are through the roof in many cities.
There's a lot of noise and there's a lot of pollution.
And it's not a very kind place to live, especially if you enjoy nature.
Or if you have pets, if you have dogs like I do, like the bunny gobbler that I mentioned yesterday.
She needs space to run around.
And gobble bunnies, apparently, but she needs space.
You've got to have something more than a concrete jungle, and there's a mental health aspect of this that's critical to understand, that humanity is going to increasingly move out of the cities, and people are going to spread out into more rural, homesteading type of environments, where they will produce some amount of their own food.
And food inflation, food scarcity, and fertilizer scarcity will only accelerate this trend.
And so out of this, it's a natural setup for the kind of decentralization local food exchanges that Dr.
Malone and I sort of spoke about in the interview.
I mean, think about community-supported agriculture.
Think about seed exchanges.
Think about local farmers markets.
Think about just bartering with local neighbors and other community members when you're trading, I don't know, tomatoes for, you know, beef or whatever.
This is the kind of thing that spurs local innovation and resiliency or redundancy.
It makes you less vulnerable to centralized shortages or scarcity or problems in mechanized corporate agriculture.
So this is happening naturally.
And frankly, every time the supply chain suffers some kind of a collapse because of the centralization of corporations and big ag and long supply chains.
And we talked about it yesterday, that meat importer declaring bankruptcy.
So all these transportation companies losing out on millions of dollars that they're owed.
Well, that was all meat from other countries.
In a sane society, you shouldn't need to import meat from some other continent or some other country even because there should be a diversity of production locally or regionally where you can trade within your own nation and provide all the basics that people need.
And so when I say that the current centralized systems are going to collapse, you're watching that happen in real time.
You're seeing the collapse of the medical system right now, hospital homicide, loss of public faith in doctors and pharmaceutical companies.
And then yesterday we talked about the nationwide shortage of Tylenol, children's Tylenol, and what else?
Cough syrup for children and things like that, and infant formula, it's out of supply.
You know what the most decentralized form of infant formula is?
Breastfeeding, folks.
Breastfeeding.
You can't get closer to home than that.
And, you know, the mother makes the milk, obviously.
It almost seems strange to have to state it.
But mothers make nutrients for their children.
That's the ultimate infant formula.
And so we're going to return to that more and more because the centralized systems of artificial processed food and long-distance supply chains, complex just-in-time delivery, those systems are failing.
And it's failing because of the arrogance and the corruption and the complacency of those who have run this as a centralized system for far too long.
And they can't keep the system running much longer.
They can't even keep the shelves stocked with baby food.
Think about that.
That tells you something about the failure of this structure of society.
Now, there's a related story on all of that, by the way.
There's a winter kill risk that will affect U.S. wheat and also citrus crops in Florida.
And because of this crazy cold wave that, by the time you hear this, is probably already beginning to pour into the continental United States from the north, obviously.
It's going to plunge, what, the eastern half of the country, for the most part, into really crazy sub-zero temperatures.
And even parts of northern Florida are going to be very close to zero degrees or at least approaching that.
And even parts of Texas as well, especially north Texas and much of the Midwest and so on, and the Great Lakes regions and a lot of the northeast and so on.
Basically everything east of the Rockies, roughly, you could say.
This is going to devastate a lot of the wheat crops, the winter wheat, which normally relies on a snow cover, a snow blanket, which believe it or not has insulation properties and protects the winter wheat from freezing to death.
Yeah, it's true.
So the lack of snow cover on a lot of fields is going to cause the wheat crops to be destroyed in places like Colorado and Kansas.
That's what's being reported right now.
And that was covered by Bloomberg, by the way.
And in Florida, the citrus crops, many of them are going to be quite devastated.
So And that's following the recent hurricane that blew through Florida also, which devastated some other citrus crops.
So, you know, there are weather events that are affecting crop production, but this also speaks to the need for the resiliency of decentralization of the food supply.
Now, I understand that certain foods can only grow in certain regions.
Florida is especially amenable to citrus crops.
In the Midwest, the breadbasket works really well for wheat crops and corn and sorghum and things like that.
I get that.
But if we decentralize production into small local farms rather than big centralized corporate agriculture slash monoculture operations, then we eliminate a lot of the risks associated with big companies going broke because of, let's say, bad cash flow management or over indebtedness. then we eliminate a lot of the risks associated with We have smaller operations, but a lot more of them,
more of them, more numerous small operations that all try different strategies and thus one big problem can't wipe them all out because they have diversity in their operations.
And that creates resiliency.
So even in terms of business operations or business survivability, it's better to have a lot of smaller companies rather than a few giant corporations like Apple and Google and whoever else dominating the landscape.
And also banks.
Look at how evil Wells Fargo has been.
They just got fined $3.7 billion.
Billion dollars for ripping off their own customers with car loan schemes and home loan shenanigans and all kinds of things.
So big mega corporation banks are evil just like big government becomes evil or big tech becomes evil or big ag, big medicine, big media, big Hollywood you could say.
It all becomes evil.
The answer is decentralization and that answer is coming because these big evil systems are going to implode and you're watching it happen right now.
The implosion is underway.
Now another thing that happens with these big centralized governments and control systems is they become incredibly arrogant and they become incompetent.
Eventually they end up being ruled by, well, idiots, which you can see happening in the Oval Office right now.
These idiots, whoever they may be throughout history as well, when you look at the fall of Rome, these idiots, they overestimate their power and they end up thrusting themselves into situations that are highly self-destructive.
And I would categorize the current war with Russia as exactly that kind of scenario.
And there's news over the last day from the UK Daily Mail.
Here it is.
Putin prepares for next stage of Ukraine war.
Nuclear combat readiness raised.
That's key to understand.
Troops boosted.
To 1.5 million and Navy armed with hypersonic missiles and military sent West to tackle NATO wannabes Finland and Sweden.
That's all one headline, by the way, from the UK Daily Mail.
They've got the longest headlines in the world.
But basically, Putin is warning that Russia is strengthening its nuclear arsenal.
And he said he is putting in whatever financial resources are necessary to win in whatever way he defines that.
And he's adding another 350,000 troops to get the numbers to a reported 1.5 million troops, which is huge.
So given the fact that Russia has these nuclear-capable hypersonic missiles and that NATO countries have essentially zero defense against them, and that Russia has the Sarmat-2 missile system, I don't know, the new multiple reentry vehicle,
hyperglide vehicle-capable ICBM, and so many more advanced weapons, I think that Joe Biden is walking America into a path that We're good to go.
And they think that because America has ruled the world for so long with this empire attitude of do what we say or we'll assassinate your leader or we'll attack your country, we'll destroy it like with Libya and Gaddafi and with Iraq and so on, desert storm and all that.
I mean, America has wielded its empire weapons quite effectively for many decades.
But That seems to have met the end of that era with Vladimir Putin.
And so Putin is willing to fight back and China is going to fight back with the new world reserve currency system that will probably make the dollar obsolete.
And so America as the bully of the world, or at least I should say the corrupt regimes that have ruled America as bullies, I don't mean the American people, but the corrupt governments, they are setting themselves up for total destruction.
And I think it's quite likely that we could find ourselves in a nuclear world war.
Which would, of course, destroy much of the system that we currently know.
It would destroy nations, Western Europe in particular, especially the UK, and probably Germany on top of that.
It would destroy the United States.
It would destroy the dollar currency.
It would destroy the agricultural abundance of many Western nations, including the United States.
And it would be, of course, a devastating civilization-changing event that's very, very dark.
And yet we're being marched directly into that by the foolish incompetence and arrogance of this Democrat regime that rigged elections, stole power, put incompetent idiots into power.
In the State Department, for example, look at Victoria Nuland and others.
And are now marching us directly into a nuclear conflict that could mean the total destruction of the United States of America as we currently know it.
And that's not an exaggeration.
That is one outcome that is quite likely if we stay on this current course.
So if you're asking, how does this system implode?
Well, that's one way.
There are a variety of ways.
Another way might be an economic implosion, or let's say a currency failure that is not deliberate, or a currency failure that's engineered but goes awry.
Where it spins out of control.
Like they want to crash the dollar, but then they didn't anticipate these other effects that would happen, and then they lose control of it, and the system ends up collapsing, and then people have to invent their own new local money systems, state-based systems.
Currencies, perhaps, or some kind of agreed-upon digital exchange system that is decentralized, like a crypto or some kind of a peer-to-peer non-central bank system.
Or maybe in local communities, people return to using junk silver or gold and silver or barter, seeds and ammunition, all kinds of things.
There are many different ways, or perhaps all that coexists, by the way.
Especially in certain areas like Texas or Utah or Wyoming or Florida, you know, all of that could coexist.
But there are a number of ways that the system as we know it could crumble.
And it's really only a question of which one happens first.
We know the system as currently structured is unsustainable.
So by definition, it will end.
We just don't know exactly what that end looks like.
We do know, though, even as we are optimists for the future of humanity, and I hope that you are too, because I think...
The whole concept of prepping and survival is about getting through this dark time so that we can participate in whatever next society we form on the other side of this.
That's the point of surviving.
It's not to survive back into another phase of doom.
It's to survive so that there's sunshine on the other side of this.
There's a sunrise.
There's light at the end of the tunnel.
And right now...
The doom of our world is actually the corrupt governments, the terrorists who are posing as democratically elected regimes.
The darkness and the doom comes from the lies of the media, the lies of the medical establishment, the deceptions, the misinformation pushed by big tech, the censorship, the deplatforming, the defamatory attacks on good people.
The control of allowable narratives, the manipulation of the Overton window by the intelligence communities, and all the things that people like Edward Snowden warned us about, or WikiLeaks for that matter.
Folks, we're living in doom.
Why would we ever want to return to this same doom?
We've been living in doom for a very long time.
So when people say, oh, you talk about doom and gloom.
No, not really.
We're talking about a collapse that ends this system of doom.
Because what's on the other side of this is far more promising.
It's far more humanitarian.
It is more compassionate.
It's more empathetic.
It's more innovative.
It's more fair.
It's more just.
And it's just a happier place to be, frankly, what we create on the other side of the collapse of this system.
So, in effect, to some degree, even hoping to get through this, hoping that the current corrupt system implodes upon itself is not a negative thing.
It is, in fact, an optimistic thing.
Because that's the process by which we get to the other side of this.
In other words, for money to be rooted in freedom and liberty, the current system of money has to collapse and fail, you see?
So it's not that I'm hoping that people would lose money in a collapse.
I'm hoping that people would find themselves in a new system of honest money.
That's what I'm hoping.
But to get to honest money...
The current system of dishonest money, of centralized Federal Reserve notes, has to collapse.
In that collapse, yes, some people are going to be hurt.
A lot of people.
Which is why we've urged everybody to get out of the way, you know, of the risk of holding fiat currency so that you can, you know, avert as much of that loss as possible.
But on the other side, honest money will benefit everyone.
Honest money will revolutionize society, and so will honest medicine, so will honest food, which is decentralized local food, honest government, honest elections, honest education, honest entertainment, honest communities, honest churches.
You see?
So the way we get to those things is to see the collapse and to survive the collapse of all these current institutions.
The megachurches as we know them today will collapse because they're ruled by Satanists, as is the Pope himself.
He is a Satanist.
The Vatican is ruled by demons.
That's not hyperbole.
That's a factual statement.
So to see the collapse of the demonic systems and the Luciferians is actually a very positive thing.
It is a necessary good thing for humanity to be free and for humanity to experience abundance and compassion, empathy, innovation, wellness, all these things that characterize a golden age of society.
We can get there, but we are going to go through hell first.
No question about it.
You are going to witness a mass die off.
It has already begun.
It's happening all around us right now.
Tens of millions worldwide already dead from the vaccines.
Over a million in the United States dead and several million injured or disabled because of these vaccines.
These numbers are only going to accelerate.
And as you know, the food scarcity will get worse next year.
There will be more division and violence and uprising and social unrest and homelessness and destitution.
All these doom and gloom sounding things, they will occur.
They are real.
This will happen.
But it doesn't have to define our reality.
It doesn't have to define our focus.
Our focus, right now, in my opinion, should be on preparing for these systems to crater.
Which reiterates the importance of having off-grid solutions for everything.
Money, food, shelter, medicine, communications, self-defense, all of it.
And I've defined what off-grid means.
It means decentralized, frankly.
It means getting away from centralized control systems.
So off-grid self-defense means instead of calling 911 and begging for other men with guns to show up wearing badges to solve your problem, you solve your problem yourself because you have...
I don't know, a 12-gauge Remington or a Glock 9mm or, I don't know, an AR-15 with some special rounds in it or whatever, or a.300 blackout rifle.
That's my favorite kind of self-defense caliber.
.300 blackout pistol with a folding arm brace, that kind of thing.
That stuff works, and that's an off-grid solution.
And you've heard me go through these before.
You know, off-grid money is things like gold and silver or perhaps certain types of crypto.
Off-grid food is food that you grow yourself or that you store, you know, storable food.
Off-grid communications, our sponsor of the Satellite Phone Store, you've heard me mention a lot, sat123.com if you want to check them out.
Satellite phones and two-way satellite text messaging devices, off-grid communications.
Off-grid heat solutions.
You know, how do you heat your home without using electricity from the central grid?
grid.
So, you know, a wood-burning stove is an off-grid solution or a small fireplace that burns isopropyl alcohol, which I've talked about recently.
You can heat a room with IPA in a relatively safe manner.
So all of these solutions exist.
And if you've been listening to this for any length of time, you're probably pretty well prepared in most of these areas.
So this big freeze that's happening right now, yeah, you may have to wrap some pipes and let the water run at night and so on and double check on your animals and things like that.
And You know, you've got to check out a few things.
I do as well.
I've got my tractor ready to go with my backup PTO power generator just in case.
I started the tractor today just to make sure it's totally ready.
But overall, we are prepared.
We are ready.
You've got stored water, I assume.
You have an off-grid water filter that you could use in an emergency.
You have containers for water, you know, buckets or barrels or bottles or whatever.
You've got solutions for off-grid food in case you need to cook your own food over a rocket stove or something like that or boil water.
If the power grid's down, if you can't get municipal water or if that water is contaminated, whatever the case may be, you're probably more ready than most.
So as this freeze moves in, if you're located in those areas of the United States, let this be a practice run.
I know it will be for me again.
And I'm hoping that I do better than I did in February of 2021.
So for me, I'm very optimistic about making it through this cold wave without losing electricity and water and communications and everything.
So we'll see how it goes.
But you, my advice is you use it in the same way.
This is a practice run to see what level of preparedness that you've actually mastered.
It shouldn't be crazy difficult to get through this because there are far more difficult times coming.
What we're going to live through in 2023 and I think 2024 is going to be way more difficult than just this freeze wave.
It's going to be way more difficult probably than anything we've faced in our entire lives.
And once the dollar collapses, which could happen in 2023, it's not clear, but it might happen.
Once that happens, America, or at least America's cities, are going to be turned into Mad Max scenarios, and a lot of people are going to be fighting for their lives, like actual survival, kinetic survival, on the streets, book of Eli time, get out your sword, all that stuff.
So try not to be there when that happens, but use this storm as an important practice run to prepare for what's coming.
And finally, understand that the act of preparedness is a positive act.
It is an act of optimism.
Because if you're preparing, it means that you believe things will get better if you just make it through the crisis.
In fact, I would say pessimists are people who don't talk about survival and preparedness.
Those are the pessimists because they don't have any plans to make it through.
That's the ultimate pessimism.
It's almost suicidal.
Prepping is optimism.
Because we plan to survive this.
We plan to get to the other side.
We plan to participate in the restructuring of society after the collapse of this system.
In fact, that's your homework assignment.
That's what we all must do.
I want you to think about these topics.
I want you to think about how society can be structured.
And I believe that structure must be based on a system of morality.
I believe that we have to teach children.
We have to teach principles and morals.
We have to return to the Christian founding of this nation.
We have to teach the Bible.
We have to teach these critical features of a functioning civilization because without morality, as I discussed with Dr. Malone, without morality, nothing else works.
You can't have the rule of law.
You can't have contracts.
You can't have interstate commerce unless you have honest interactions, which requires a fundamental basis, a cultural basis of morality.
And as our culture has moved away from morality, it has only accelerated its collapse into destitution and failure.
So any system that is sustainable, I believe, will be based on moral principles.
And those principles have been quite eloquently laid out for us in the Bible itself.
So that's why the Bible should be the foundation of any kind of sustainable system for the future of humanity.
So in wrapping this up, I want to wish you the best in getting through these difficult days ahead.
They'll be difficult for me as well.
My podcast might be really short, but I'll give you updates and hopefully everything is all good.
But if you find yourself with extra time over these next few days, I'd like you to ponder some of these topics.
How would you choose to structure society?
How do we bring out the best of humanity and make sure that we don't allow the worst people to gain power over others and to rise up and dictate?
Because that's what always happens it seems in societies over time.
The more corrupt rise to the top and then they try to rule over everybody else and eventually it collapses.
There's a revolution and then the cycle starts over again.
But a lot of people get hurt in that process.
How can we end that desperate cycle of failure and just get to something that is sustainable and fair and something that is pro-human and pro-Christian, by the way, or pro-Christian principles?
How do we get there?
Ponder that.
It's an important topic.
All right, lastly, if you want to stock up on something that is actually very, very useful, we have pink Himalayan salt at the Health Ranger store.
It's available in fine ground format.
Pink Himalayan salt, why does it matter?
Because this is salt that's been mined out of, well, the caves from the insides of the mountains in the Himalayas, and it's from millions of years ago.
I.e., before microplastics pollution and before all the toxic heavy metals have been unleashed upon our world.
So if you collect salt right now today from the ocean, it's filled with microplastics because that's what's in the ocean.
So you can't actually get modern salt that is clean.
I mean, not from the oceans, anyway, because of the pollution.
So you've got to go to pre-industrial salt, which is the Himalayan salt.
And in addition to being free of microplastics, it's also free of synthetic pesticides and herbicides, obviously, because it's not an agricultural product, number one, but the salt formed before the invention or the creation of those molecules, which are only what?
Less than 100 years old in most cases, you know, only been around a century, whereas the salt has been around for millions of years.
In fact, if not for the fact that the lattice structure of salt is an inorganic chemical structure, you could call it organic.
But that would be silly because it's inorganic from a chemistry point of view.
Nevertheless, technically, you would call it organic from the point of view of saying that it doesn't have pesticides or herbicides or anything like that.
But again, that would be silly.
There's no such thing as organic salt.
It's all inorganic, but you get the idea.
It's clean.
It's very clean.
You can get that at healthrangerstore.com.
And the pink Himalayan salt also has more trace minerals than does ocean salt or certainly the cheap iodized salt that you buy at the grocery store that's brought up from salt brines, salt mines and drilling operations and so on, which is mostly completely devoid of other minerals, which is why they have to add iodine into it.
That's why they call it iodized salt, because it lacks so much iodine that it's deficient.
So they put a little bit in there.
Anyway, should you choose to get some salt, it's a great barter item.
It's a great food preservation item.
It lasts essentially forever as long as you don't get it wet.
And it stores forever, i.e.
for millions of years because that's how long it's been there.
It will outlast you and I. So it's a store of value.
And also it's delicious in certain foods as well.
So multiple uses right there.
Very, very handy.
HealthRangerStore.com if you wish to support us in that way.
All right, so that's the podcast for today.
I'll be back with you tomorrow, God willing, assuming the power grid functions in Texas.
We'll see.
But stay warm, folks.
Get ready and think about all these things because, well, this is our future.
We're building it.
We get to determine what we do from here forward.
God bless you all.
Thank you for listening.
I'm Mike Adams here at The Health Ranger.
Talk to you tomorrow.
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