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Jan. 4, 2023 - Health Ranger - Mike Adams
02:01:41
Situation Update, Jan 4, 2023 - The 10 biggest THREATS to your FOOD SECURITY in 2023
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Okay, welcome to the situation update for Wednesday, January 4th, 2023. welcome to the situation update for Wednesday, January 4th, 2023.
Got to keep remembering to say that now.
This is Mike Adams.
Thank you for joining me.
I'm going to get more quickly to the point today.
And the topic is the 10 most important factors affecting your access to food this year.
And my special guest today is David Dubine.
So we're going to talk about food and access, and it might be more than 10 by the time I get to it, but I do wish to apologize.
I got some complaints about yesterday's podcast.
They said I was beating around the bush too much, talking about Jeremy Renner running over himself in a snowplow.
I apologize.
And speaking of apologies, I'm really glad that my name today is not Dana White.
Because Dana White, the president of the UFC, was seen on camera slapping his wife in public.
Like, kind of a hard slap.
Not just a little pat, like, oh, honey, you know, a little tap.
No, this was like a full-on manly slap type of thing.
Not quite the Will Smith slap that we saw last year, but close to that.
The thing is, she slapped him first, and then he slapped her back, which, of course, every man knows, oh, you cannot do that.
You cannot slap her back.
You take the slap, because, you know, you're a man.
And anyway, Dana White has been all over the media.
The president of UFC Ultimate Fighting Championship, if you don't follow the fighting sport, you may not know who he is.
But he's a big shot in the fighting world.
And since I train in Brazilian jiu-jitsu, of course, I know who he is.
And people like Joe Rogan were from that world and so on.
Anyway, he has apologized at least a thousand times for slapping.
But apologies don't quite cut it.
And it's never the right answer to slap her back.
And also, it looks horrible to be doing that in public because then people are like, well, what do you do in private when you're not in public?
Because this looks bad already.
So I just want to say, for all of y'all, as a New Year's resolution for you men listening and women listening, let's make 2023 the year where nobody slaps their spouses.
Although I know some of you women listening are thinking right now, you're already plotting, you're thinking, well, my husband does something slap-worthy about every week.
What am I supposed to do about that, huh, Mike?
I can't slap him?
Let's see if we can make 2023 a zero-slap year.
Not zero COVID, but zero-slap-vid.
How about that?
But you know, in the bigger picture of what's happening right now, isn't it kind of horrifying that a male doctor can essentially murder a woman with an injection?
It's almost like euthanasia.
mRNA jab, you know, vaccine-assisted suicide.
And apparently that's okay with the media.
But if that doctor slapped that woman, that would be the worst thing ever.
But, you know, killing her with the vaccine.
Now, again, the CDC is all in favor of that because depopulation and everything.
How about we adopt a philosophy of no violence against women?
No slapping, no jabbing, no punching.
And how about this?
Also, no medical violence against children.
Could we agree on that principle starting now?
You know, if not before, how about now?
Let's say today, no medical violence against women or children.
Could we agree on that?
But of course, not in the medical system, not in the media, not in government, not at the CDC, not at the FDA, not at Big Pharma.
No!
No, it's all about using them for medical experiments because, well, you know, again, depopulation.
So we are not the ones who need New Year's resolutions.
It's, you know, it's the CDC. It's Walensky.
It's Fauci.
Fauci needs a New Year's resolution.
How about, you know, hey, Fauci, make a resolution to not carry out genocide this year.
That would be great.
Thank you very much.
Okay, I promised I wasn't going to get off track, and here I'm already doing it.
Let me move forward into the actual news.
All right.
As part of the new year, we have a new U.S. Congress.
This means that Nancy Pelosi is no longer the Speaker of the House.
She's no longer in Congress.
I know.
It seems like that would never happen.
And nor is the annoying Liz Cheney from Wyoming.
She's out of there as well.
We have a new Congress, but we don't yet have a new Speaker of the House.
There's a lot of drama over the day, yesterday, in Congress because there were three votes to try to decide who would be Speaker of the House.
Kevin McCarthy was the mainstream candidate, kind of the rhino favorite, and he lost all three votes.
Nobody else has anywhere close to the number of votes to become Speaker of the House.
Jim Jordan has been nominated by some people, but Jim Jordan is supporting Kevin McCarthy, and so is President Trump.
So I don't know what happens from here, but it could end up taking weeks, actually, to figure out who's going to be Speaker of the House.
And until this takes place, they can't begin the investigations into the corruption of the government, the election rigging, the surveillance state, the censorship ordered by the government, and all these other issues.
Hunter Biden's laptop, you know, January 6th cover-up.
Oh, by the way, one of the last acts of the previous Congress was to seal all the January 6th committee documents, all the videos, everything, for 50 years.
So there's your transparency for you.
After they raked America over the coals with claims of insurrection, they seal all the documents and videos to make sure that no one can see it for 50 years.
Hey, I think the new Congress should just vote to unseal them and then release everything, kind of like what Elon Musk is doing over at Twitter.
Now, speaking of Elon Musk, have you noticed that Tesla stock continues to crater?
Tesla stock, it was at, what, $350 a share a year ago or so?
And now it's close to $100 a share, maybe $105, something in that range.
What does this tell you?
It tells you how manipulated stock prices are.
So if you're someone who's a favorite of the globalists, they'll make sure that your company's stock continues to rise and rise and rise.
But if you do something the globalists don't like, such as, oh, I don't know, releasing Twitter files that expose the deep state coordination with radical left-wing fascists at Twitter to censor certain channels and to cover up the truth about COVID vaccines and so on, Well, then your stock will be made to crash.
So the crash of Tesla stock is, in fact, engineered.
It's engineered to punish Elon Musk and to take away his assets so that he can't buy more companies.
Notice that Elon Musk has now lost $200 billion in personal wealth, most of which was in Tesla stock.
But because he's lost that wealth, he can't make purchases like he just did with Twitter anymore.
And this just tells you how rigged the entire system really is.
The stock market is not rational.
It's not based on supply and demand.
It's not based on dividends, earnings, asset valuations, nothing.
It's based on how well you tow the line of the uniparty establishment.
If you do what they want you to do, your company stock price will go higher.
If you anger them, it'll go lower.
Because, of course, if you're the Federal Reserve, you control so much money, you can just print money and then use it to buy or sell or short stocks or whatever you want to do.
So it's all manipulated.
The entire market is essentially fake, just like the last election and the one before and the one before.
It's all fake, folks.
Fake science behind the vaccine, fake news media, fake elections, fake currency, all of it.
Fake stock market.
Here we are.
Welcome to 2023, the year of the fake.
All right.
Now, yesterday I did spend too much time talking about Jeremy Renner on the snowcat and the accident, but there is one new fact that came out.
A spokesperson for the actor said that he had, quote, suffered blunt chest trauma and orthopedic injuries in the accident.
So it's a lot worse than what I suspected.
This metal or steel-tracked snowplow vehicle ran over Jeremy Renner's I mean, ran over his chest and his leg, which means it had to have run over his pelvis at the same time.
I mean, looks bad.
Looks like he got chewed up very bad.
We wish him a speedy recovery.
And again, be safe around all your equipment, folks, because these things are dangerous.
Okay, moving on.
Alright, now in another important story on injuries, you know what happened to the football player Damar Hamlin.
We talked about it a little bit yesterday.
A lot of updates over the last 24 hours.
Gateway Pundit has an update.
Fed operatives move into place at Cincinnati Hospital where Damar Hamlin is a patient.
What are Fed operatives doing?
Well, obviously they have to control the narrative on this because the whole world just saw somebody collapse with a cardiac event on live television that couldn't be dismissed.
And, of course, everybody suspects this is a vaccine injury, another jab injury problem among a professional sports player.
So the Gateway Pundit carried a tweet with more updates about Mr.
Hamlin that news outlets at the scene tripled in the past two hours.
Let's see.
Reporters are getting angry about the lack of updates.
And then here's the tweet.
As previously reported by Nick Sorter, that's the tweet, the Twitter name, at Nick Sorter, who's still at the hospital covering the story, the U.S. government has set up outposts near the UC Medical Center where DeMar Hamlin is in critical condition.
The feds got startled and brought in additional resources because Joe Biden is coming on Wednesday.
And they didn't want trouble if Hamlin were to die under mysterious circumstances.
So there you go.
So the feds are moving in, and it reminds me of Tiffany Dover.
And if you recall, Tiffany Dover was a nurse who took the vaccine on live television and then passed out, and many people suspect that she died shortly after that.
But of course, the so-called fact-checkers said she's fine, and one of the fact-checkers famously did a whole series of investigating Tiffany Dover and said she's fine, but never found her.
Was never able to have a conversation with her.
So to this day, Many people believe that Tiffany Dover has already died and it's a giant cover-up.
You know, to try to bury the story of vaccine fatalities.
And it looks like this is what may happen with Damar Hamlin.
Now, we hope it doesn't.
We hope that Mr.
Hamlin recovers and that he's healthy.
And apparently he's raised more than $3 million on his GoFundMe page.
He had some kind of like a Toys for Children fundraiser a few years ago.
And people have been finding that and donating to it.
He's already raised $3 million, maybe more by now.
So he's getting a lot of financial assistance from people who are concerned about him, but the government has even more concern about people finding out the truth about vaccines.
So you can bet this is going to be completely controlled by the feds, by the media, by the CDC. You are not going to hear anything else that would lead anybody to think that a vaccine might be involved here.
You're just going to have to figure out the rest of the story yourself.
Because the cover-up has begun.
All right, moving on to financial news from CNBC. Gold surges to six-month high, and analysts expect records in 2023.
Gold prices have been on an incline since the beginning of November, citing recession expectations and more gold purchases from central banks.
Oh, it's rare that CNBC would admit that central banks are buying gold.
Because, of course, they always say that, oh, gold is an ancient, useless relic.
Well, then why are the central banks buying it?
Well, and several analysts are projecting record highs for the precious metal in 2023.
Let's see.
I'm not going to go through these experts.
I don't know.
Some people think it's going to be $2,000.
Others think it's $3,000, $4,000.
Look, I've always said that you shouldn't speculate on metals because I think it's silly to even talk about gold in price of dollars.
You should talk about gold in price of gold.
I mean, it is what it is.
It's the element.
It's the dollars that are fluctuating up and down.
We should talk about dollars priced in gold, not gold priced in dollars.
So I don't care how many dollars it takes to buy gold.
What I care about is having physical gold and silver in my possession because I know that throughout all of history that we know of, it has been a store of value.
And the gold and silver has outlasted the rise and fall of civilizations, hundreds of them, perhaps more, through all of recorded history.
So Yes, gold's going to get higher in dollars, and dollars are going to go down in value because of, well, more money printing and more inflation, and also compared to other global currencies such as the euro, the dollar is starting to settle from its recent highs.
Anyway, yeah, I do encourage everybody to get some medals, but not as speculation.
Not to buy low and sell high, but rather to save assets as a store of value.
Alright, now, next news item.
Speaking about history and the rise and fall of civilizations and so on.
Here's a story out of the UK Daily Mail.
It says that bones found in Germany suggest ancient humans were skinning bears.
For their furs, at least 320,000 years ago.
So experts found bones of the cave bear, which is apparently an extinct species.
They were at the site of Schoeningen in Lower Saxony, Germany.
or Schoenangen, maybe.
They found very thin cut marks on the bones of the animal's throat and foot, and the scientists believe that this is because the animal was cut for its skin.
So the skin was harvested off the animal, and they dated this animal and its bones to 320,000 years ago.
So in their scientific paper, the scientists that are being cited here say that these cut marks indicate delicate butchering.
And show similarities in butchery patterns to bears from other Paleolithic sites.
It says this species of bear lived in Europe and Asia and went extinct 24,000 years ago.
So, you know, this is interesting because it shows that, well, early humans not only were around 300 plus thousand years ago, apparently, but that they were clever.
And they were, you know, harvesting skins and meat and probably sinew and so on of the animals around them.
And they were figuring out, of course, you know, how to use tools and how to protect themselves from the elements by using animal furs and so on.
Now, this is all relevant to what we're going to be talking about with a couple of scientists coming up soon because we have now two interviews scheduled with a comet impact theory scientist.
It's going to be, I think, quite fascinating to hear from them coming up in the next week or two.
And this refers to the comet impact of the Younger Dryas period, or the Younger Dryas boundary, roughly 12,800 years ago, during which it is believed by people like Graham Hancock and others and these scientists that a comet impacted Earth and caused this great global deluge, the Great Flood, or one of many Great Floods, wiping out ancient civilization.
And causing ocean levels to rise dramatically because of all the melting of the ice shelves that were hit by apparently comets.
So we are going to be talking about that with some of these researchers.
And by the way, I've had some feedback on this subject that's been a little surprising.
I've had some people react to my coverage of this in a negative light, saying that no, nothing existed before the Bible's timeline.
That it all began with Adam and Eve, you know, I guess a few thousand years ago.
And there couldn't have been any humans on Earth before that time.
Well, if you check around...
A lot of people believe that the Bible refers to maybe 7,700 B.C. or 5,000 B.C. or something along those lines.
But clearly there were humans on this planet before that time.
So how does that coincide with what the Bible teaches?
And, you know, I'd never thought that Christianity had to be limited to a specific time epoch.
I'm pretty sure we can understand all of history and still be Christians, right?
Well, I found an interesting paper on this from the, what is it, the Research Center for the Dialogue Between Science and Theology.
It was published in 2016.
It's on a website called SSRN. I'm not even sure what that stands for.
But SSRN.com.
And here's what this paper says, which is just an interesting note.
That inherent in the creation versus the theory of evolution war...
There is a scientific belief in the millennia-long evolution of humankind versus the Christian belief in the creation of the biblical Adam and Eve, roughly 7,700 BC. My research shows,
however—again, this is from the paper author Eloise Choice— She writes, That's interesting.
Applying mitochondria DNA and archaeological evidence integrated with the Judeo-Christian and Muslim scriptures, writes this author, I show that after God created Homo sapiens, he created the biblical Adam and Eve about 9,700 years ago, and that Adam and Eve were the prototypes for present-day man, referred to in my paper as Homo sapiens sapiens.
Very wise man.
Okay.
The double sapiens.
Moreover, archaeological evidence suggests that Adam and Eve were created during the Mesolithic period and coexisted with Homo sapiens, and that Homo sapiens were subsequently eliminated.
Thus, all humans today are descended from Eve.
So that's one interpretation.
It's interesting.
It's saying that God created multiple waves of humans, and that the most recent wave is the Adam and Eve wave from which we have descended.
So anyway, something to think about, folks.
I know there's going to be a lot of opinions and controversy in all of this, but obviously it's going to be a lot to think about.
But it is clear to me that humans...
Have been around much longer than 10,000 years.
In fact, civilizations have been around longer than even 12,000 years.
We're living on a planet of amnesia, where previous civilizations have been lost, only to be rediscovered now, which is why we're talking about them.
But there's a whole history of humanity that has been lost and is just waiting to be rediscovered.
Okay, now, speaking of God, let's talk about the antithesis, Satanism and Luciferianism for a second, because there's a story on News Punch.
World Economic Forum declares pedophiles will save humanity.
I know.
It's crazy.
The story says that the WEF is calling for the decriminalization of sex with children, arguing that laws against, quote, age gap love, which you and I would call pedophilia, the WEF says, well, that violates human rights to have laws against pedophilia, you see.
I mean, yeah, crazy.
And as News Punch reports, Klaus Schwab is stating that That this pedophilia is, quote, nature's gift to humanity.
At least that's how it's being reported by News Punch.
And they're saying that the WEF is claiming that pedophiles are being created by nature in increasingly large numbers for a reason.
So they're saying, oh, this is natural.
This is like evolution or something.
No, it's not.
It's devolution.
It's demonic.
But as News Punch is reporting, the WEF shares this global vision to destroy families, and they see pedophilia and the whole LGBTQ agenda as the way to attack families and attack reproduction and achieve global depopulation and demonization.
And so, of course, yeah, of course they're pushing pedophilia and grooming.
And then the story talks about the New York Times saying, Arguing that pedophilia, they say, should not be a crime, that civil rights protections must be extended to pedophiles, you know.
So they've been fighting for gay rights for a few decades, and then more recently, you know, transgender rights, and maybe in the 1960s and 70s, women's rights, but now it's going to go to pedophile rights, because as the New York Times says, quote, without legal protection, a pedophile cannot risk Seeking treatment or disclosing his status to anyone for support.
I mean, oh, oh, so the pedophiles are the victims now.
I see.
Okay.
All right.
That's the New York Times.
What's next?
Are they going to say that, like, murderers can't get counseling if they admit to being murderers?
You know, serial killers.
What if they have to say the truth that they've been killing people?
Then they could not see a psychiatrist.
Okay.
Yeah.
Is there anything the New York Times won't argue for in terms of violence and child rape and child murder?
Geez.
And then the article goes on to talk about different media outlets pushing pedophilia and saying that they are victims, not predators.
CNN, Salon, the BBC, a bunch of different outlets are all saying that there should be sympathy for pedophiles, saying it's not their choice.
They didn't choose to be a pedophile.
They were born that way.
So you can see the whole thing.
You know, this is all Luciferianism.
When they tweet out, the World Economic Forum tweeted out that age gap love laws violate human rights.
No, they don't.
We have to protect children from predators and pedophiles and groomers.
But then again, we are at war with the Luciferians, so don't be surprised when they use the media to try to excuse their child mutilations and their child predations and just exploiting children in every way imaginable.
All right, different topic now.
UK Daily Mail says the amount of microplastics found on the seafloor has tripled in 20 years.
Tripled.
Tripled.
Plastic debris has been building up at a depth of more than 100 meters.
So there's plastic 100 meters deep in the ocean.
So they got this information by using coring.
They were drilling cores into the sea bed.
And this is how they discovered not only the fact that there's triple the amount of microplastics now, but also that the microplastics pieces that were deposited as long ago as the 1960s have not degraded at all.
They're still there, fully intact.
So this plastic is going to last, I guess, forever on the ocean floor because, you know, there's no sunlight reaching down there, really, to degrade it with ultraviolet radiation.
There's not necessarily microbiology there that can break it down.
There's nothing to break it down.
One day, somebody's going to have to run like a plastic vacuum over the entire sea floor across the whole world.
There's a job right there, never-ending job.
And the most abundant form of plastic was polypropylene.
Yeah.
Which, I hate that stuff.
I don't like polypropylene at all.
I like polyethylene for containers because it's so much better.
But anyway, polypropylene is all over the ocean floor.
And it's, again, we are living in the great pollution epoch of humanity.
And after the collapse of this civilization, which is beginning to occur, future archaeologists are going to look back and they're going to dig up the remains of us and they're going to say, whoa, wow, this was like the era of trash.
This is crazy.
Why did they make so much plastic and just dump it everywhere?
What's wrong with these people?
Well, look around.
You see it firsthand.
As a side note on all of this, there's one more reason not to buy sea salt, because sea salt can be full of microplastics, by the way.
No, seriously.
This is why we have Himalayan salt.
I didn't mean to turn this into a product plug, but Himalayan salt is from hundreds of thousands or millions of years ago before plastics.
And so it's not contaminated with plastics, unlike modern-day sea salt.
But Keep that in mind.
If you're eating almost anything, it's filled with plastics.
Like there's this other story on the UK Daily Mail.
It says health fears as experts find that a pot roast dinner can contain up to 230,000 microplastic particles.
Did you know that?
Do you know you're eating plastics in your roast?
Oh boy.
Get your vitamin P for plastic right there.
Oh, any modern food is going to have some plastic in it, it turns out.
It's very hard to test foods for plastic, by the way, because plastics are just usually just hydrogen and carbon and oxygen, HCO. And so there's no elemental test.
It's not like looking for lead, which is relatively easy to do.
Plastic, it's just common elements, just arranged in a certain way.
So you can't use a mass spec instrument to look for plastics.
I mean, you can use a microscope if you want to dig through at, you know, a thousand times magnification and try to identify little chunks of plastic.
That's no fun.
It could take forever.
So I'm not even sure what a good test is to find out how much plastic is in something.
Maybe you would have to, like, burn it and Capture all the off-gassing and test those off-gasses for certain chemicals or something like that.
That's interesting, but I'm not familiar with a simple way to test food for plastics.
All right, and then one more story on food here.
This is from the Gateway Pundit.
Very interesting.
Former lobbyist says that soda companies paid the NAACP and other groups to call opponents of soda racist.
So a person here named Callie Means, a former lobbyist, he says that Coke, Coca-Cola, paid the NAACP to call Coke's opponents racist.
And this person tweets out, quote, early in my career, I consulted for Coke to ensure that sugar taxes failed and that soda was included in food stamp funding.
Gee, you know, that's pretty evil, right?
He goes on, I say Koch's policies are evil because I saw inside the room.
The first step in the playbook was paying the NAACP and other civil rights groups to call opponents racist.
Koch gave millions to the NAACP and the Hispanic Federation directly and through front groups like the American Beverage Association.
This picked up in 2011 through 2013 when the Farm Bill and soda taxes were under consideration.
The conversations inside these rooms were depressingly transactional.
The effort was successful and the message was carried in thousands of articles between 2011 and 2013.
Coke's position was clear that soda is one of the cheapest ways to get calories.
I watched as the FDA funneled money to professors at leading universities, as well as think tanks, on the left and the right, to create studies showing soda taxes hurt the poor.
They also paid for studies that say drinking soda did not cause obesity.
We shouldn't be surprised at any of this.
I've been talking about this for many years.
Anyway, that goes on.
I'm not going to read all of it, but isn't that a fascinating look how these powerful corporations selling just junk, garbage, processed food products, junk products, how they can use money to recruit groups like the NAACP or the FDA or the USDA. To fake the science and try to get people to keep drinking something that is made with high fructose corn syrup and phosphoric acid that promotes obesity
and promotes dental cavities and promotes blood sugar disorders and all kinds of things, you know, diabetes type 2.
We all know this now, but the battle has been going on for a very long time.
And I remember when McDonald's was also paying all these online influencers to say how healthy McDonald's food was.
Because you could get a salad there.
You could get a salad in addition to the fake McNuggets and the big smack or whatever.
The fake McRib that has no ribs in it.
It's just more fake food.
But these corporations have always used money to try to rig everything and to basically run psychological operations on the public.
And what's interesting is the same techniques have been used but amplified a thousand times more For COVID vaccines.
So the vaccines are kind of the ultimate or the propaganda surrounding vaccines.
It's the ultimate demonstration of this kind of lobbying and psyop and deception and propaganda to the public to try to get people to consume something that's going to hurt them, i.e.
mRNA injections or drinking high fructose corn syrup.
Or eating GMOs or eating artificial sweeteners or whatever the case may be.
Folks, if you keep your diet clean, it's going to solve 90% of your health prevention goals.
Keep your diet clean and don't consume this garbage.
Now, speaking of keeping your diet clean, we've got a New Year sale event at the HealthRanger store.
You can go to HealthRangerStore.com slash NewYear.
You'll see all the specials.
What we have that's cool is that we have restocked Most of our number 10 cans of the certified organic, freeze-dried, lab-tested foods.
So the number 10 cans are these steel cans that are sealed for long-term storage.
And we've got, back in stock, we've got blueberries, kale, goji berries, mango pieces, palm sugar, which is a low-glycemic sweetener, really great.
We've got peas.
We've got tiger nut flour, which is not made from tigers nor nuts, by the way.
We've even got fair trade instant coffee.
And I highly recommend this Fairtrade instant coffee as both a preparedness item and a barter item.
Instant coffee has value to almost everybody because everybody needs some amount of coffee, it seems.
Now, I don't drink coffee, but I do sometimes put this instant coffee into my smoothies, although I have not since...
I don't know.
I guess since December 20th or something.
I decided to go totally caffeine free during this entire Christmas and New Year's break.
And I forgot to put it back in today.
So I haven't had any caffeine for, I don't know, a couple of weeks.
But normally I'll use a little bit of this instant coffee in the smoothie.
I like the taste and I like the antioxidants.
And it does give me a boost when I need to focus.
Hey, maybe that explains my lack of focus yesterday on the podcast.
Maybe I had a caffeine deficiency.
Well, but I don't have any caffeine today either.
It seems to be going okay.
Anyway, you can get all this, if you wish, at healthrangerstore.com slash new year.
Check out all the specials.
We've got some free bonus items like the Health Ranger Select Silver Breath Spray and so on with orders over a certain amount.
You can check out all the details there.
We thank you for your support.
We've been working hard to get these items back in stock and we've finally been able to keep things like the Ranger buckets back in stock.
We've got something like a thousand of those buckets available right now and for the first time in a long time If you go to our online store, you'll see that things are available instead of, you know, like sold out, gone, missing in action.
No, we have stuff now.
So thanks for your support.
Okay, we're about to jump into the 10 most important factors affecting your access to food this year, except it's more than 10.
I started out with a 10 title, and then as I made the list, it became more than 10.
So currently it's 12.
We'll see what happens by the time we get through the list.
But it's a pretty short list.
We're going to go through it here.
It's very important to understand these factors.
One thing I just want to interject before that is some additional information on the Buffalo Bills football player, DeMar Hamlin.
And there are people saying that he's probably brain dead because he was given CPR for nine minutes on the field.
And according to cardiologists and heart experts and so on, it is extremely unlikely for anyone to come back after nine minutes of CPR. It probably means the brain did not have oxygen or at least insufficient oxygen during most of that time.
And it hasn't been said that he's died, but we need to be prepared for this possibility that he not only may never play football again, that he may not be functioning as a healthy individual forever, forevermore.
So it's sad to report this, but it's also sad that there's been such an attempt by the establishment to cover up any questioning about the vaccines and the role that vaccines may have played in causing this condition, because the vaccine pushers are killing people.
And the only question is, are they maiming DeMar Hamlin as well?
Did they do that?
Did they force him to take the vaccine in order to play?
And then is the vaccine the major factor in causing this situation that looks like it's not going to have a good outcome?
And then, as I mentioned earlier, is this why the federal government is getting involved because they have to cover this thing up?
So they're going to say, oh, he retired from football and he's doing fine, but you'll never hear from him again.
He's frolicking in a happy retirement place.
Don't believe it, folks.
Don't believe it.
We need to start asking the question, where is Damar Hamlin?
Why haven't we heard from the hospital?
Where is Damar Hamlin?
What is his status?
If he's okay, can we hear from him?
Can we make a video?
Can he make a video?
Can he share the video?
Can we get a report from his doctors?
Or are they just going to try to sweep this thing under the rug and pretend like everything's fine?
And by the way, wouldn't it be fascinating if a football player is the one that was the tipping point for the world to awaken to the truth about vaccine deaths and vaccine damage and vaccine, you know, heart attacks wouldn't it be fascinating if a football player is the one that was the tipping point for Wouldn't that be an outcome that's just almost unimaginable to think that an NFL, a professional football player may have been the tipping point on all of this?
So let's stay informed.
Let's pray for him and his recovery, if that's possible.
And let's also pray that those who are harming professional athletes are identified and outed and brought to justice.
So if we care about Damar Hamlin and others like him, then we should try to pinpoint the culprits who are hurting these people.
And one more note, I'm still working on my song, which is called Sorry Y'all Had to See That Too.
And now I think I have to add another verse, or at least a line or two, to add Damar Hamlin to that song.
So I'll keep you posted on that.
Okay, moving on to the 10 most important factors affecting your access to food this year, or 10 plus.
Number one.
Of course, food inflation at retail.
Can you afford the food?
Now, probably you listening to this, you can, because we tend to attract people who are well off or successful or capable, you know, almost by definition.
But there are a lot of people out there who are barely living paycheck to paycheck, and they won't be able to afford even a 10% increase in food without missing a house payment or missing a car payment or, you know, missing a health insurance payment or something.
So something's got to give in the lives of a lot of people just because of food inflation.
Okay, number two, fertilizer scarcity.
This is being caused by, of course, the shutdown, the deindustrialization of Europe, the shutting off of Russia and Belarus from the global transaction systems and transportation problems and so on.
Shortages of natural gas and price increases of natural gas.
So fertilizer scarcity will get worse.
Number three, geoengineering.
So, of course, we've interviewed Dane Wigington about this multiple times.
We're going to see more droughts, floods, storms, and freezes throughout 2023 and beyond.
It's going to get crazier.
It's not going to be normal.
It's going to be engineered.
So geoengineering slash terraforming operations will be underway with the express purpose of disrupting the food supply and causing global famine and crisis.
Okay, number four, transportation disruptions.
Barges are in trouble as you know.
Shipping companies are facing financial insolvency and trucking transportation companies are going out of business like never before.
Yes, rates have fallen for international shipping on containers.
Rates have fallen for trucking quite dramatically as consumer demand has fallen off.
But The downside to that is that trucking companies can't stay in business at these current rates.
So you're going to see a lot of bankruptcies and a lot of companies selling off their transportation equipment, which is very difficult to ever get back.
So if consumer demand ever ramps back up, well, at that point, you've lost a lot of the transportation infrastructure and the businesses and the personnel and the entrepreneurs who make that system work.
Okay, number five, food facility sabotage, which continues to this day.
And you saw the stories last year about all the food facilities being burned down and attacked and so on.
Well, that's going to continue for years to come.
Number six, the coming labor lockdowns.
So we are anticipating another artificial pandemic, i.e.
a plandemic, will be launched sometime this year.
It may have already begun with the whole China situation that they're trying to export to the world.
We'll see.
But when it gets bad, in America and in Europe, they're going to have more lockdowns, and also in Canada, more lockdowns to keep people at home To destroy the economy yet again, to shut down the supply lines, to empty the meatpacking facilities, to empty the grocery stores of labor and so on.
Without labor, the food supply system does not function.
That is coming, and I think that the next pandemic that they will release, as Bill Gates likes to hint about, is going to be far worse than the one we all just went through.
Far worse.
Because, of course, they have crazier strains in the Fauci freezers.
Get ready for that.
Okay, number seven.
Diesel fuel scarcity and high fuel costs.
So you'll notice diesel is still very pricey right now, even though gasoline has fallen.
Why is that?
Well, it has a lot to do with Russia and oil from Russia and the supply chain of petroleum processing and so on.
But diesel...
in a plentiful supply scenario right now in the United States.
Supply levels are very, very low, and they're only being maintained because there's such a drop in demand for transportation.
So if demand increases, diesel outages could get a lot worse very quickly.
But even if they don't, fuel costs continue to stay high, which means farming tractors, right?
Transportation trucks, barges, ships, everything that runs on diesel, trains, all of that, the rates are going to stay high.
And that's going to add to, of course, food inflation, making it more unaffordable.
All right, number eight.
Vaccines in the food supply.
Have you heard that mRNA injections are going to be used in cattle?
Have you heard that?
Yeah, I'm very concerned about that as well.
Because it makes me wonder whether USDA organic meat products can be derived from cows who are injected with mRNA vaccines.
There's a question, right?
So I'm going to be asking around to try to find out the answer to that.
And also, if you eat, let's say, hamburger meat from a cow that was injected with mRNA, are you eating spike proteins?
I mean, this is a legitimate question.
I don't know the answer yet, but it would seem like, you know, if you've ever had raw ground beef, there's some blood in it, right?
If there's blood in it, there's spike protein in the blood if that cow's been injected with mRNA and turned into a spike protein factory, right?
So you're not even really eating a hamburger at that point.
You're eating a spike burger.
And what happens when you do that?
Does the spike protein get fully digested and it's no problem?
Or what if you have a hamburger that's not entirely fully cooked?
What if you have a steak that's like, you know, rare or medium rare or whatever?
Some of you people like to eat bloody steak for some reason.
You're going to do that when it's full of spike protein too?
Really?
You can have your, you know, Ebola filet mignon or whatever.
Have your sirloin spike protein plate buffet.
Yeah, good luck with that.
I'm not touching that stuff if the cows are injected with these mRNA, you know, hijacking experimental whatever that turns them into spike protein factories.
And I am going to ask questions about certified organic beef.
Because, frankly, I'm not even sure what vaccines are allowed right now in certified organic beef.
You might know the answer to that, but I'm trying to think.
And I don't.
I don't know the answer to that.
I should find that out, so I'll do so.
But you can imagine they're probably going to put mRNA vaccines or so-called vaccines into chickens, too, right?
Yeah.
And it won't be long before you'll be going through the drive-thru fast food, maybe.
You know, what do you want to order?
The mRNA nuggets with the special, you know, spike sauce, dipping sauce.
Give me the McSpike filet sandwich, please.
With a side of spike fries or whatever.
And no, this is a big question.
If you thought your food was processed and gross and dangerous before, wait until they start hitting all these animals with mRNA injections.
There's something you want to watch for.
I'll probably end up doing a whole episode just on that topic.
All right, number nine, food riots are coming.
And organized retail theft is going to increase dramatically as food inflation gets worse and food scarcity gets worse.
So I predicted that food riots are going to begin real soon here.
And food thefts are already on the rise.
So that's done.
That was happening last year.
We've seen meat thefts.
We've seen some flash mob raids, grocery store thefts, shoplifting.
We've seen retailers talking about that, Target, Walmart, grocery chains, and so on.
But I think food riots are going to be more common around the world, not in every city, not in every state in America.
But I think Europe first, and they're not that far away from what I can tell.
Okay, number 10 is the collapse of the labor pool because so many people are being killed by vaccines or disabled by them.
And we've talked about this here on the podcast.
7,500 Americans every day are either killed or disabled by these vaccines.
And that comes out of the data from Ed Dowd and his analysis using U.S. Labor Department statistics and insurance industry statistics and so on.
We've been over that many times.
7,500 people a day.
And most of those are working age people.
So your labor supply is shrinking by the day in dramatic fashion.
And those people are obviously no longer available to work in a grocery store, to work in a meat facility, to drive the trucks that transport the food, to drive a forklift at a warehouse, at a distribution center that serves grocery stores, to drive tractors and farming equipment on farms or what have you, right?
All that.
So as people are dying off, the food supply is not able to be produced as it used to be.
So speaking of lack of labor, here's a story out of the UK Daily Mail.
Here it is.
Rise of the restaurant robots?
Chipotle and White Castle are spending over $500,000 a month on automation to combat labor shortages and rising food costs.
So it says that fast food chains are employing robots to flip burgers and brew espressos and greet customers.
White Castle uses a burger-flipping, fry-making robot at 100 of its locations, and it spends $3,000 a month per robot, which is cheaper than paying an employee that doesn't show up or shows up high.
Chipotle, or as some Americans say, Chipotle, has a robot that makes tortilla chips at one site.
This costs $3,000 a month.
So your tortilla robot makes Three grand a month.
Cheaper than paying a human worker, says the UK Daily Mail.
The rise of restaurant robots is upon us.
And don't forget that, by the way, McDonald's is testing a restaurant concept that has no cashiers that are human.
No greeters.
Nobody to hand you your food.
There's nobody there in the front.
It's just you and kiosks and automated ordering.
And then there's people in the back.
Making stuff or, you know, punching buttons like fry or whatever.
And then I guess it comes out on a conveyor belt or something.
Here's your order.
But there's no humans up front.
So humans are being removed from the fast food industry as quickly as this industry can manage it.
And by the way, the same is going to be true at the warehouses owned by Amazon.
So they are putting all kinds of money into warehouse robot systems.
Some of them are getting quite good.
I've seen some videos to do picking and packing, which is the hardest thing for robots.
It's very, very difficult.
Because, you know, objects that you sell, or that Amazon sells, come in all different kinds of shapes and sizes, and sometimes they're wobbly, and the weight is all on one side, and they're made of different materials.
Some are more fragile than others, and so on.
And so you have to know, you have to have...
Hands, basically.
Pick these up, move them around, wrap them up, put them in a box, have it make sense.
It's actually a lot more complex than it sounds.
Not that Amazon workers are doing a great job at this.
Sometimes, you know, they'll just take a bunch of cans of dog food, like throw it in a box, and then throw some piece of shredded cardboard in there.
They're done!
It's like, really?
This is the best job you can do?
Robots can do a better job than a lot of the current Amazon workers.
There's no doubt about that.
But the great replacement is nearly upon us.
Okay, point number 11 is forced rationing.
So this is going to be happening soon, starting in Europe, I believe, where, you know, central bank digital currencies You'll be required to be part of that system, and then there will be limits of how much food you can buy.
And in order to enter the grocery store, you'll have to prove your ID or have a biometric scan or something, or like at the Whole Foods, a QR code scan just to be able to enter the store.
So they'll know who you are.
They'll know how much food you've purchased.
They'll have control over your digital wallet.
And you'll be limited to what you can buy.
You know, one chicken a week for the family.
One stick of butter a week or whatever it is.
And that's it.
No more for you.
No soup for you.
And then finally, the last factor that's going to affect your access to food this year and next, by the way, will be global demand for the domestic supply.
So because of shortages in other countries, because of droughts in South America, for example, Or floods in China or war in Europe.
You're going to see more demand internationally for the domestic supply in the United States that would traditionally go to mostly to Americans.
So this is, I mean, I know America has always exported plenty of food, but the demand for the exports is going to be much larger this year compared to last year.
And that means there's going to be price pressure So that the domestic supply will end up costing more in order to compete with the international buyers who are willing to pay more.
So Middle Eastern countries in particular, for example, will be willing to pay more for grain out of the US than what US cereal producers and so on would like to pay.
So there's going to be a lot of competition and some scarcity effects in place because of that dynamic.
So those are the 10 plus 2 factors.
Now, the good news in all of this, the good news is that if you're living in the United States, and not Hawaii because Hawaii imports so much of its food, but if you're living in the continental United States, I should say not Alaska either necessarily, but the 48 states, you're not going to but the 48 states, you're not going to die from starvation.
You're just going to face much higher food prices, and there are going to be outages from time to time.
So there's going to be regional scarcity.
There's going to be scarcity that lasts a period of time, but then the supply comes back in.
It's going to be more sketchy than before, but you're not going to die of starvation.
You'll still be able to find a loaf of bread, a stick of butter, a gallon of milk if you drink that homogenized stuff, a spike protein hamburger, beef patty, an artificial beyond meat, synthetic process, partially hydrogenated, genetically modified, synthesized fake meat product.
Whatever you eat, you're still probably going to be able to find some of that stuff, most of it.
But in Europe, not so much.
And around the rest of the world, where there's a lot of poverty, you know, a lot more poverty and less ability to afford food inflation, it's going to lead to uprisings, civil unrest, as people can't afford the food basics that they're used to purchasing.
So just basic supplies of wheat and corn, for example.
And cooking oil, right?
So if you go to Central or South America, people are buying corn oil or canola or soy oil all the time.
And they're buying corn and they're buying lard and they're buying, you know, just ground wheat.
And they're making a lot of food items out of these, such as, you know, tortillas, for example.
Well, when the cost of a tortilla doubles, Because the inputs go up.
Well, a lot of people in developing nations can't afford that.
And then you have social unrest.
And we're looking at a possible civil war in Brazil right now already.
And I'm predicting increased social instability.
Across African nations, some Middle Eastern nations, definitely most of Europe, including Eastern Europe, as well as Central and South America and some Southeast Asian nations as well because of the increased cost of food materials.
So that's something to watch for this year and beyond.
It turns out that Bill Gates, through the Gates Foundation, has partnered with the DFID, that's the Department for International Development of the United Kingdom, in order to push mRNA Yeah,
so basically GMO animals and mRNA-injected vaccinated animals that have turned into spike protein factories.
So this is the Gates view of the world.
All being done in the name of, you know, having more food, but actually turning out to have a lot less food or more contaminated food.
Would you like some dipping sauce with your spike protein nuggets?
Huh?
Hey, I wonder, how is the USDA going to cover this up if all the cows start dying suddenly in the fields?
Right?
I mean, because we're watching football players and soccer players and newscasters just drop dead or drop unconscious.
Sometimes on live TV. And then we're all told, oh, that's normal.
Well, what if cattle start dropping dead after they're vaccinated with mRNA jabs?
Chickens and goats and pigs and everything starts dropping dead.
Do you think the farmers are going to notice?
Because I think they will.
Because farmers notice when cows drop dead because, well, it's expensive when that happens.
There's a financial incentive to keep your livestock alive.
And if farmers inject, you know, 500 cows and five of them drop dead in 48 hours, they're going to figure something out.
And then, oh gosh, look, two weeks later, you know, another five or ten are dead.
And a month later, there's like 50 dead.
Yeah, they're going to figure this out.
Of course, there'll be a cover-up.
They'll never tell us this, but you'll find it in the independent media.
So bottom line, don't eat mRNA-injected animals.
That's one thing.
It's almost biblical, isn't it?
Old Testament time.
Don't eat the blood of sickened, diseased animals.
Don't take the jab yourself unless you want to join the dead.
And, you know, practice good, healthy habits, wellness, exercise, you know, eating healthy, avoiding processed foods, avoiding toxic medications.
You know, I mean, work with a naturopath.
Get yourself healthy because it's going to be critical in the days ahead.
There's going to be a lot of sick people filling the hospitals and maxing out the crematoriums, which is what's happening in China.
This is rumored to be that way.
But take care of yourself so that we can get through this together.
The big die-off is upon us.
The annihilation agenda is here now.
And food scarcity is one of the vectors that they're using to try to kill us off.
So learn how to grow food.
Learn how to use nutrition.
Download my free audiobook, survivalnutrition.com.
It's free, survivalnutrition.com.
If you want to check it out.
And that's getting published as a hard copy book coming up sometime later this year, I believe, by the way.
So that'll be exciting.
And I've got more books on the way.
So thank you for listening.
Again, check out our New Year's sale at healthrangerstore.com slash newyear.
No space, no dash, just altogether New Year.
And I'll be with you again tomorrow with whatever news happens between now and then.
Should be interesting.
And my special guest today is David Dubine.
Welcome to the feature interview for today.
I'm Mike Adams and our special guest today is David Dubine.
And his channel is called Adapt 2030.
He's also a host on brighteon.tv every other Friday at 2 to 3 p.m.
Eastern Time.
That's a free stream to catch there.
His channel, Adapt2030, is also on brighteon.com and other platforms.
And he's also got the mini Ice Age Conversations podcast.
He's an analyst of global trends in food, fertilizer, crop production, and a whole lot more.
And he has been calling it correctly for as long as I've known him.
So, David Dubine, it's an honor to have you on.
It's great.
I mean, thank you for joining me.
This is going to be great.
Yeah, thanks for having me on.
And I'm glad, you know, a few things played out last year that we talked about.
I remember us having a talk back in March and how much of that came true.
There were a few things that didn't hit, like the rationing cards, the digital rationing cards didn't come in full play by the year-end here of January 1st.
But, you know, we're definitely on our way.
So at least identifying the trends and then definitely hitting a bunch of specifics.
What about the food supply in 2023?
That's really what we want to talk about.
Well, that's true, but I do want to mention, just popped up in the news over the last day, that in the UK, all the retailers, including food retailers, are using massive ID and surveillance tech tools now, and that is preparation.
For the food rationing that's coming.
So, you know, a lot of times you and I and others who can see pretty far in the future, you know, we talk about these trends and we take a guess at a date.
Sometimes it takes a little longer.
Sometimes it happens a little sooner, but it's all moving in that direction.
So you're nailing it.
So thanks for...
Yeah, thanks.
You have to think about Whole Foods.
You know, they put that thing in where you have to scan your palm print before you're allowed in the gate.
I mean, where does that, you know, drop in the definition of it?
Well, right, and clearly that's a pilot store that they have.
Isn't that on the East Coast right now?
I think it is, yeah.
You know, once I saw that, I was just repulsed by it and just decided to brighten my day and move on from that one.
Well, yeah, yeah, one more reason not to shop at Whole Foods.
But here we are at the beginning of 2023, and people have already experienced food inflation, right?
We don't have to convince anybody that food is more expensive, right?
Everybody who eats has figured that out by now.
Food scarcity here in the U.S., shelves aren't empty, obviously, but selection is reduced.
There are shortages of certain things, like infant formula is still in shortage.
There are supply chain problems.
But the main thrust of what I want to ask you about today is What you think the food supply situation is going to look like this year and next year.
And then I want you to cover from your research some of the trends that lead you to those conclusions.
So where would you begin?
Well, I would start right back into the deindustrialization of Europe.
You know, that is ongoing and it has not ceased.
And Mike, since you and I were talking to some of the same people telling us the smelters were going to close and there would be a full shuttering of all heavy industry across Europe, that has, past tense, already happened and has been months way in the past.
That's right.
Nothing's moving.
So we have no fertilizers, no herbicides, no pesticides, nothing coming out of Europe.
And that was 40% of the world's production of fertilizer and all the other farm implements like insect protection and control, competition species plants, otherwise known as weeds that you would kill off with herbicides.
Every one of those factors that's in play in a field decreases the yields.
So, you know, when you start to look at the fertilizers, it's around a.8 to a one-to-one loss, depending how little you have of each of those.
So even if you do simple math, minus 40% on the grain crops.
Now we've got Brazil going into a possible full civil war, and they're a huge, huge grain exporter.
Now, I don't, and correct me if I'm wrong, know many countries that are embroiled in a full civil war where their exports are functioning at full potential, and the supply chains are running, and everything is still working from the farm to the port, and the ports are loading and they're moving out on time.
I just don't remember that in history.
Maybe you do, but I don't.
No, they're headed into a very dangerous situation there, but I remember a recent headline where China is buying corn, now directly from Brazil, instead of purchasing it from the United States.
So China seems to be creating global redundancy in their food supply chains, anticipating either shortages or conflict with the U.S., And perhaps a trade war with the United States.
So there are those implications as well.
And I know we're going to talk about Ukraine and Russia and all of that, but, you know, grain exports out of Ukraine are going to factor into this year and next year for sure.
And then, you know, the reason I was talking about Brazil and Argentina, wheat, this sort of thing, if you start to look at all the things that have happened just in the last, say, one month, So we're now having what the possibility of stoppages in Brazil.
Argentina continues into its drought, so it's missing yet another plant and maturation season.
That cold that swung down through the United States and North America was so cold that it killed winter wheat all the way way down here in Tennessee.
And all parts in the Midwest, I've already gotten reports, replanting is going to be done.
And I've seen here, it's either brown or yellow out in the fields, and it's pretty much a complete loss.
It hadn't really gone to dormancy here, because our season's a little bit different.
It doesn't do that until January.
I got hit with a cold.
We got the Hunga Tonga eruption, which is a wild card, and I still can't believe nobody's talking about this.
Largest watery vapor ejecta ever recorded in Denting into crop production, and now that water vapor has eclipsed the equator and headed up to our North Pole.
Now it envelops the entire planet.
We are also heading into a year without a summer.
The onset, if it follows historical recorded patterns, should be about one year to one year and two months after the eruption.
So we have to go January 2022, and if we bring that out to January 2023, just this month, At another two months, then we should get somewhere near the max cooling on that.
And that shall roll.
Whatever effect that takes is going to roll for another year and seven months at these temperatures.
So however, it affects crop production.
So you're saying that that water vapor effect is going to kick in for the northern hemisphere roughly late spring, something like that?
Yes, right in our planting season.
And I'm wondering how much this cool spell had to do with a year without a summer onsetting.
Because it's a bit strange.
We get the coolest temperatures, you know, in some places ever.
And this water vapor was up there and following the same cycles of onsetting year without a summer in our spring planting season.
Well, my question though, David, is has anybody done the math on the volume of the water vapor that was dispersed into the mesosphere versus the cooling impact?
Because there's a direct correlation, I know, but has anybody actually done that math?
I mean, how do you estimate the cooling severity from that event?
On the Pinatubo eruption, the El Chinchon eruption, the Tambora eruption, and Laki, Mount Laki, that was in Iceland in the 1790s.
You know, going back into these types of eruptions where they have very solid data on when it occurred and what the global impact or what the regional impacts were that was so severe that populations had to migrate.
So what was seen with the Hunga Tonga eruption sits in that somewhere depending on how many, what's the measurements that they're using looking through the optical aerosols to see what the density of aerosols are up there still.
Mainly it's water vapor, there's still some sulfur dioxide, etc.
And then, you know, you covered on your show, they want to start doing some atmospheric perturbation, aerosol injections, what's that, make sunsets company.
Yeah.
This is a runaway nightmare scenario.
You start doing geoengineering during a year without a summer and, you know, come clean.
They've already been doing geoengineering for so many years.
And David Keith, that was one of their main worries was to put this program in play.
And this is before, you know, make sunsets.
This stuff's been going on for years and years as geoengineering.
One of their nightmare scenarios was they had their program in full play and then we got a VEI 7 or 8 and that would take three years to come out of the atmosphere.
And they were conducting Concerned is an understatement about a runaway cooling event if those two were to over-couple.
And it seems they have in some fashion.
The Make Sunsets company, for those who aren't familiar, is a company that wants corporations to basically engage in virtue signaling to pay the Make Sunsets company to pollute the atmosphere, to dim the sun in exchange for some kind of carbon credits.
So this would be, if this idea takes off, powerful corporations would funnel billions of dollars to a pro-pollution group that would pollute the skies for profit in the name of saving the planet, which is completely insane.
But that's what this is.
And the reason they call it Make Sunsets is because, you know, if you dim the sun, you have more interesting sunsets because of all the redness and the orangeness and so on in the sky.
But you also have global food crop failure and mass famine and death.
So maybe making sunsets is not such a great idea.
But there we go.
Well, that's one of the markers that originally set me on this quest for looking at the water vapor data.
What they call volcanic afterglow.
You know, just days and weeks after the eruption in the southern hemisphere, the volcanic afterglow was already in Antarctica.
It was already southern New Zealand.
It was already in southern parts of Australia, where people were talking about how vivid and how long-lasting and how purple these sunsets were.
But you've got to realize that eruption was at 20 north.
Their viewing point was 40, 50 south.
And down to the Antarctic, that's at 90 degrees south.
That eruption, 20 degrees south latitude in Tonga, and it rolled down to the bottom of the planet and back up again.
It caused significant cooling, and it's called afterglow.
Yeah, volcanic afterglow.
So...
Then, you know, you talked about crop failures in the southern hemisphere because of the shorter growing seasons and the shortage of short season seeds.
How much of that are we able to see in terms of data, or is it still too early because it's, you know, their season's not even over yet?
Well, what's been known so far is the planting has been delayed in many places.
The soil temperature and the moisture was just too much.
There was nothing in there.
They knew if they put seeds in, it wouldn't germinate, it would rot, and they would have to replant.
So it's delayed planting in many a place across the Southern Hemisphere.
But the lucky phase for them was after that eruption had happened, the onset cooling usually is a 12 to 14 month window where it hits the bottom.
Like they'd come through the harvest season already during that window.
Now we're entering the coolest of, from now, these next two months are going to be the bottom of the cooling and you'll start to see it dropping.
And if in any way it's coming to a year without a summer, we are going to have the most brutal February.
And the winter's going to hold on far longer because you've done some reports on this.
You know, they were talking about snow at the end of June and into July in New York and New Hampshire and Vermont.
But right now, Europe is unusually warm, and we're seeing LNG prices falling, but that could be very temporary.
You know, it could be part of the weather temperature perturbations that happen.
But they're getting a lucky couple of weeks here of warm weather for the moment.
Yeah, they are.
And you have to think about, you know, when would they start to riot and demand change?
If it was as cold as it was here in North America, the United States, Canada, Mexico...
If it was really that cold in Europe at that time, there would be riots and revolts on the streets already.
At what point does it have to go?
They are so blessed to have this warmth now that governments aren't being toppled by the minute because of just the people freezing in their homes, pipes busting, no basic services.
That social contract that we have.
As obedience, you know, not myself, but I'm just talking the general populace, the obedience is you give us a better way of life, a better possibility of life, and we will behave and obey the rule of law, pay the taxes, and do all the good things we will just to play the game so we have the opportunity.
That's broken!
And you throw in massive cold wave with no food, no heat, and expect people to continue to behave, It's just ludicrous.
So I really say they're so blessed to have this warmth that, hey, people aren't dying and freezing in their homes, but it gives them another couple days, weeks or whatever to figure out what they have to do with the energy there.
They don't have enough electric or natural gas to heat even Europe in a normal winter.
So where does that take us from now?
There's no industry either.
Yeah, right.
So joblessness is a huge problem there.
But did you see that Germany's energy minister announced a couple of days ago that it's never going back to normal, that energy prices are going to stay elevated for as far as they can see?
So anybody there who's maybe like, let's say, a manufacturing business that's been holding on saying, well, you know, we'll reopen when the electricity goes back to normal.
It's not going back to normal there, Hans.
Never.
Yeah.
Your leaders just told you that.
So they're facing a very bleak decade, I would say.
Yeah, didn't I see up on Natural News that the German government was asking their citizens to take a shower only once a week?
True.
Are you telling me that one of the most apex societies on the planet is now degraded in less than a year and they've fallen that far?
That they're burning firewood and they're asking their citizens to take a shower once a week.
How fast it happened is shocking.
It itself happening is shocking.
That's a collapse of a civilization and an apex economy.
To drop that fast is shocking too.
That is true.
I mean, the deindustrialization and now this hygiene factor, although me being satirical and politically incorrect, I had to joke and say, for some parts of Europe, once a week would be an improvement.
But across the board, I get it.
That's going to be a big problem for a lot of people, especially if the showers are cold.
Like, oh, you can only shower once a week, and it's a cold shower.
Like, it's barely above freezing.
That's not going to be any fun.
So what are you going to do?
Heat a bowl of water or a pan?
A pot of water on a wood stove and then try to mix it with cold water and take like a lukewarm sponge bath out of a bucket?
Is that what it's coming to?
Because that's no fun either.
I've done that and that sucks.
Not a good way to live.
Yeah, you can only embrace the Wim Hof method for a while before you get cold and you're like, well, that's enough of that.
It's the middle of winter in Germany.
Right, right.
Yeah, the room in which you're bathing is also cold, like crazy cold.
Just getting water in your skin makes you start to shiver.
So, you know, not a good situation, but there's no end in sight to this.
That's the thing.
And even the governments are now admitting this.
And I mean, and they're warning about the blackouts that are coming to across Europe, even in the UK, warning about blackouts, or at least the potential for them.
So I think that Europe is going to face a very, very difficult year.
And in America, we've actually got it a lot better than the Europeans right now.
Probably also on the food supply, wouldn't you say?
Yeah.
I would, because I have some new numbers.
The Agricultural Minister of Ukraine came out just about a week ago, just before the new year onset, probably like the 20th or somewhere around there of December of just last year, 2022, and said that they're only going to plant 30% of their field space due to damage from the war.
And this would include shrapnel and unexploded ordnance, You know, whatever had been parked in the field that has just stopped.
Like, imagine if you bring in a bunch of battle gear and it's just still on the field and everybody, and it moved to a different place, you have all that debris still there.
They're having a very difficult time even considering planting 30%.
So, you know how it is.
They start really rosy forecasts, but by the time it comes down to reality, it would not shock me if it was only 20% of all Arable land in the Ukraine was planted this year, because they've even had more strikes on their electrical infrastructure since that news report was put out some weeks and weeks ago.
Well, and the other factor is that there's apparently a major Russian offensive that is being planned and is almost certain to be carried out before the spring thaw of the ground.
So imagine, you know, tracked vehicles running across more fields.
Probably targeting Kiev and then moving westward from that if they succeed in taking Kiev.
So, you know, the breadbasket areas of Ukraine, of central Ukraine, are going to get hit with more combat and, you know, more tracked vehicles, more ruts.
And, you know, you...
I mean, I own tractors.
You can't drive tractors across a field reliably if it's full of ruts and pits and mortar holes.
You have to fix the field first.
I mean, it's just physics.
If you ever watch this movie, it's titled King Corn, and it goes through the whole corn ag industry here in the U.S., but they were saying that they would buy tracts of land from a farmer, and they would tear down the farmhouse because they didn't want to have to turn their tractors as much.
So now you're telling me that they're tearing down old farmhouses because they don't want to go turn their tractors on a 500-acre plot, but you're supposed to spin your little tractor around every mortar hole and bomb crater there and get a yield in?
Right.
Come on.
Yeah, that's not going to fly.
Yeah, every crater is...
Heck, here in Texas, even just wild hog digging up for wild onions, that causes enough damage to fields that it drives the local farmers totally bonkers.
And if you're riding in a tractor over that land, you're in a roller coaster ride.
It's like a shake and bake there on top of the tractor.
You can barely drive the thing because you're getting rock and rolled all day long just from the hog poles.
You don't want that.
And then you have to think about in Belarus and also Russia, the amount of nitrogen fertilizer that they export, as well as phosphorus as well.
All of that's going to stop.
So that's just going to continue to add in to what Europe was not able to produce.
So then you have to think about the Belarusian potash that they mainly export.
They've got Himalayas and that stuff over there.
And then Russia itself.
So take all of that off the table.
In a cooling climate where, you know, growing conditions are not going to be optimal anyway.
And then how is that going to play out?
I mean, you've grown crops before.
I have too.
And without the fertilizers or amendments or compost or whatever you're going to do, it just doesn't work as well.
You can still get something.
It's going to be scrappy yield.
But, you know, in reality, if we don't have 50% of the farm inputs for the world, then, you know, what are the yields going to be is the question.
Yeah, absolutely.
And then at least those inputs, typically a farmer can have some control over it, right?
So you might be able to get fertilizer if you're willing to pay five times as much, let's say.
But there are things you can't control.
And I want to ask you about this next, because this is what really concerns me, and it's geoengineering.
It's weather weaponization.
It's not just the cold wave that we just had, but then droughts and floods and heavy winds in storms that destroy orchards.
Everything from avocado orchards in California to the citrus orchards in Florida.
Just one windstorm, boom, and it's gone.
And it takes a decade or many years, let's say, to recover from that.
But the geoengineering seems to be cranking up like never before as well, and you can't control that.
So I think...
Farmer certainty or the farmer's ability to project, you know, with some degree of certainty, the crop yields is eroding rapidly.
What are your thoughts?
Well, I would add to that the statement of the planted acreage in the forecast doesn't matter anymore because before that's basically how they would gauge the forecast is they had an average on the acreage, but you can't do that anymore if you don't have all the farm inputs.
So it's not reliable.
It's not going to be reliable.
I would imagine it being more regional than it will be a countrywide market or a global market anymore because the yields are going to be so varied and so different from continent to continent, state to state, even regions within the state.
Here, East Tennessee or Central Tennessee, West Tennessee, it'll be very different even in those regions.
So I just...
Don't know how the market is going to continue to function to price it in.
It'll probably move to a cash market in just a regional basis where you're close to a place that's producing it unless you're going to pay massive fees to move it somewhere.
I don't know.
There's going to be a breakdown in systems of how we price commodities, specifically grains.
And then where's the knock-on from that?
I mean, that's just going to take down the rest of the system and the derivatives.
And if you can't price an asset, And then there's other derivatives priced and based off of that asset, then everything down that daisy chain is corrupted and has to be revalued or stranded and gone to zero, whatever way that might go.
Well, you've hit upon something that's really key here.
Thank you for that segue into the financial system, because as you know, tools such as commodities futures, when they are used correctly, they are designed to reduce risk for a producer, right?
So a farmer that grows wheat, he might buy wheat futures or sell wheat futures, depending on his financial goals.
And in doing so, he could even out the risk of his crop failure, let's say.
But when those tools are used by, let's say, speculators, or when derivatives are based on those tools, like you just mentioned, then the risk actually gets amplified, especially when those financial tools are owned by individuals who are not actually part of the production chain.
because they're not farmers, but they're speculators or they're bankers, and then they're amplifying risk because they want higher rates of return, that kind of system can blow up like the big short with housing.
But we can have a commodities bubble burst or a commodities risk apocalypse that bleeds into the whole financial system.
That's kind of what you were just describing, right?
And you could taper that onto silver as well if...
If you look, I know this financial might not go exactly with the grains, but I do believe they're intertwined because they're both commodities.
Like at the COMEX and over in London as well, the LBMA, they are running super thin on silver.
They literally only have five months left of physical silver.
So if we start to get, you know, the discontinuities of grain pricing going to cash versus what is offered on contract.
And then, you know, something the same thing happens where there's non-delivery because so much demand for silver and they literally can't get it out.
I don't care if you're taking thousand ounce bars out or if you're going to get 10 ounce bars out.
It does not matter.
There won't be enough for anybody.
And once that realization, you're going to watch again, the paper market's going to break from the physicals and people will bid and pay whatever they can to get that asset.
It does not matter and it'll move to all cash at that point.
So contract pricing will mean nothing because nobody will abide by it.
Because you can't have whoever has a physical in hand wins.
Those contracts are often counterfeit anyway.
They don't represent real physical silver underneath the contract.
It's just paper manipulation.
But you're right.
If people start demanding delivery on these options or futures contracts, Then if enough people demand delivery, then the game is up because it exposes the fraud of the paper manipulation.
Now, I don't know enough about other markets like copper or platinum or nickel or what have you or iron or I don't know how much of a similar manipulation is taking place in those markets or even in grains or pork bellies or what have you.
Are you aware of similar manipulations in other metals beyond silver and gold?
Well, I'm not really familiar.
That's not really my wheelhouse, but at the grains, when it comes to do the same exact thing, when they want to take delivery and there is not enough there, we saw that happen with the nickel.
And they rolled back all those trades.
The physical is not there to facilitate the demand.
So what happens when that's corn at this time?
Or it's wheat.
Everybody wants it, but then there's going to be a realization date and time that you will remember for the rest of your life when they knew that there wasn't enough grain for everybody that wanted to buy it.
And the frenzy that will cause, I tell you, that might be the very well thing that spills over and collapses the financial market.
They'll have to.
They'll need a distraction because when you're telling people on the globe, I'm sorry, we're not going to grow enough food, and we don't even have enough now to supply everybody who got money in their hand to come to buy it.
I'm sorry.
Some of you are going to have to take a dramatic cut, and we're going to all world work together, equality, we all have to cut to 1,200 calories.
Oh, you're not being inclusive.
You're eating more.
Oh, you're such a...
Fill in the blank XYZ that we heard through the COVID time to point fingers at the unprepared.
Hey, you guys are too prepared.
You're not fair.
Well, let me throw this into the mix and ask you a question along these lines.
I read financial reports recently that show that farming has actually been surprisingly profitable for those who can manage to produce in the United States over the last year.
So we have an issue of You know, inability to produce, right?
Creating scarcity because of supply chain, lack of parts for tractors, high diesel prices, transportation breakdowns with the barges and things like that.
But for those farmers that did manage to produce, they actually got good prices.
This last year.
And farmland itself has maintained value even as housing prices have been falling and as the real estate bubble is popping.
But farmland, that is viable production farmland, is not falling in price.
So wouldn't you say that farming, if you can actually get it done, could be a very viable and profitable business in 2023 and beyond?
I would, and I can add a little bit of information to that.
I spoke at a dairy conference in October, and they spoke exactly about that.
Farmers were flush with cash.
Problem was, they were going to get massive tax bills with that, so they were all running out to buy anything they could.
reinvestment back in so they didn't get taxed.
So you have a choice.
Okay, let's say your tax bill is $50,000 because you made millions off of your crops.
You have a $50,000 US dollar tax bill.
You can reinvest that in a new machine or you can pay the government $50,000 and get nothing out of it.
They were cash rich.
They were running out to buy anything and everything they could just to get rid of the cash so they didn't have the tax liability to it.
And moving to marginal lands, like some, you know, you're talking about prime land is what you're describing there, prime farmland with the high acreage or yields on the acre there.
But it seems that there's a frenzy for leases on marginal land.
So what you're talking about, you know, if you got the holes in there and the ruts, you're going to have to come in and at least work those fields to get them up to some production.
But the world we're moving into, some production is better than none.
Mm-hmm.
acre as the new high, you know, they're gonna be happy to get 40 to 50 bushels off a marginal acre because the prices are expected to go so high that some is better than none because they're gonna move to cash pricing.
When there's still when this rift occurs of, you know, price discovery on a contract versus cash, it's happening.
It was so close with the delivery last year.
I think it's poised for 2023.
Okay.
All right.
That makes sense.
Now, another thought in all of this is that farmers that fail to be able to plant crops, often on marginal land that you were just talking about, they could still run cattle on that land because, of course, the cattle do their own foraging.
And the cattle can walk around ruts and erosion or craters or what have you, right?
They do their own thing.
So I could see a lot of situations where farmers, maybe they can't grow alfalfa this year or soybeans or corn, but they might run cattle for a season or two And at least in the United States, but in Europe, of course, they have a war against livestock because of the nitrogen output from the urine.
So in Europe, they don't even have that option in many places now, like the Netherlands, where they're shutting down thousands of farms.
So they're taking away one more option from a farmer.
It is.
You know, you talked about in the Ukraine, imagine how much fence has already been installed in Ukraine because they have, you know, a lot of animal husbandry there.
You got tanks and battle vehicles going through ripping down, you know, hundreds and thousands of miles of fence.
You know, that's not an easy task to put it back up again in a matter of minutes.
It takes a bit of time to bring that back in.
True.
Yeah, that's a really good point.
You're exactly right.
Fencing and fence maintenance is key to raising livestock.
But also then irrigation and the availability of water, which brings us back to the geoengineering.
Because when, you know, you saw over this last summer, right, that intense...
There's a heat wave and drought in Kansas and Oklahoma, and we've had, of course, bad droughts in Texas over the years.
And when that happens, man, the ranchers just sell off entire herds, or 80 to 85 percent of their herds, and they just keep the best genetic specimens to kind of regrow their herds next year, but they can't maintain the current population because there's no grass, there's no water, and then hay bales feed A big round bale can end up costing like $500 or some insane number, or more, in these droughts.
And that's all geoengineering, and it seems like that's accelerating too.
Yeah, because that was also spoken about at that dairy conference that I attended and spoke at was cattle genetics and then feed efficiency.
Because it's going to come down literally to grams of food into the cattle.
When we come into these food lean times, they're going to have to make a choice like they did in England, say 1550 to 1700 on which types of animals.
You saw a rollover and a changeover from cattle into pig and sheep slash goat.
Because they were smaller, they could wild forage a lot better than a cow can, and there was less input into it.
And that lasted for 100 plus years.
And then you could see the roll out of that, too, where they started gravitating back toward cattle again once food production became more bountiful after the natural cycle had run its course.
And also, given local production, a lot of people are using rabbits, for example, as a meat source.
You know, food experts like Marjorie Wildcraft talk about that, raising your own rabbits for food, feeding them garden scraps, and then harvesting the rabbits for meat.
So, I mean...
You can't get any more local than your backyard.
You're a hutch full of rabbits to skin and cook up, I guess, in a stew.
I can't do that, but a lot of people are doing that, and it definitely is a survival resource.
It is.
And you've got to think about, you know, like these redundancies and the frugality.
I mean, yeah, you could go shoot your squirrels every day and, you know, put out your safe traps and catch something every night.
I swear to you, 100% of nights that we would put a safe trap out, there would be something in it in the morning.
100% of the time.
You know, instead of trying to use snare traps, just use those little safe traps that the front snaps down on it.
You're always going to get something in it.
Yeah, but not necessarily something you want to eat.
That's right.
You know, armadillos and such.
I've eaten an armadillo.
I was down in Costa Rica and they had armadillo.
And Guatemala, they also had armadillo.
And I tried it a few times.
It had a zingy taste to it.
That's the best way I can describe it.
Zingy meat.
Okay.
I'm not sure I want that for breakfast.
Armadillo burrito breakfast.
Yeah.
Layer it on the oatmeal.
We're all good.
Yeah, right.
Extra gravy makes everything go down or just add wild boar bacon.
But okay, what else can people do?
You know, folks who are listening here and they're well informed and they have a good sense of what's coming.
But in terms of a practical series of steps locally to secure a sustainable food supply, not just stockpiling food, but getting involved in local agriculture and so on, what can people do to help support an area that produces food on an ongoing basis? what can people do to help support an area that First, find the people that are doing the same thing already so you're not starting from scratch and having to reinvent the wheel.
There are people everywhere that are doing this, and the awareness over the last two years or so has really pushed a lot of people into action in local areas.
You're always going to find a local community garden or somebody who's doing chickens like we are or growing their own food, like you say, raising rabbits.
Sometimes they raise guinea pigs.
Again, it's not my thing, but...
There's a lot of options.
People have goats, sheep, that sort of thing.
If you have enough land, you could fence in or use somebody who already has fenced in land and let maybe your cow run over there and have a cow share.
But again, we saw that, ooh, bad Amish.
Can't let people have raw milk and pure grass-fed whatever.
Right.
But it's going to come down to the locality again.
I really believe that it's going to be the trading of skills.
Everybody's got a different skill.
The combining of skills that could be used to improve output.
Or just straight up, like a dentist, if a dentist is in your community that would be willing to trade you dental time for a task such as setting up their garden or planning out their garden or food forest or whatnot.
Something familiar with food, a fish pond, whatever it is.
To be able to move people and enhance their lives and make their transition into this new world that we're moving into more comfortable and more secure in the mind.
Because if you know you have a food forest in your front yard and backyard, that looks like any other bunch of plants.
So somebody who didn't really know wild foraging or plants would walk right by it, which is probably 95% of the population.
True.
So these things to give yourself longevity of security and longevity of peace of mind is really what's going to be key.
The short-term wins, yeah, yeah, applaud it, yay.
But you're really going to need to be looking out past, you know, replacing what you use because if we're going to go into this breakdown of supply chains, you're not going to be able to go to the store and get it.
You're going to have to regrow it or replace it yourself season after season after season.
And then hope everything improves in the next 10 or 15 years and we get back to some sort of normal.
Right, right.
And hope it's not highly irradiated croplands for the next 100 years following a thermonuclear war.
I mean, that's the other part of this.
I mean, look at Russia and the conflicts there and the risk of nuclear weapons being used or nuclear terrorism as maybe a false flag justification for war.
And think about what that's going to do, David, to the available croplands.
If you have a nuclear event in eastern Ukraine and the wind is blowing westward, you've just rendered all of Ukraine, you know, unfarmable for, what, 300 years?
Something like that, from a cesium-137 fallout?
A similar thing with the east coast of the United States, right?
If you get the Poseidon secret Russian nuclear underwater unmanned submarine doomsday weapon, and that goes off, and you get this radioactive tidal wave that hits the east coast, well, guess what?
There's going to be radioactive water vapor in the air falling across all of the United States as well.
It's not just...
Water fallout.
It's radioactive water fallout.
It's like, you know, they can ruin the whole world just like that.
And there's mad men at the helm right now.
This is the problem.
Yeah, and add in, you know, several thousand tons of depleted uranium rounds or whatever it might be.
And then you're just adding to that contamination.
Because you can't tell me looking around over in EDOC, you know, how much DU we put down there.
And you're going to tell me that they're still going to farm after all the depleted uranium was splattered all over the place and across the entire country.
You know, you're just adding, you know, on to that.
So...
I hope it doesn't come to that point because that truly would be...
If you wake up in the news in the morning and that truly has happened where there was some sort of device over the Ukraine or Kazakhstan would be another one, we are literally going to have a famine that same year to the point where...
Yeah, I wouldn't want to be there.
That's really like biblical scary type of, you know, end times type of thing there on the famines.
And by the way, I saw some...
Oh, I was looking at a couple predictions for the year.
And here was one.
Economic disaster.
The prices will get so high in wheat that man will eat man.
Meaning the failed economy leads to cannibalism.
And I'm already looking at a zero, barely functioning supply chain.
No fertilizers, no pesticides, few herbicides.
And honey shall cost far more than candle wax.
So I'm sitting here going, hmm, we're getting pretty close to that.
A few more moves on the chessboard and we'll be right there where, then again, it's biblically.
You talk about the, you know, what was that?
A day's wage for a loaf of bread, something like this.
Hmm.
That's what you would expect after that detonation over that.
A day's wage for a loaf of bread.
Wow.
Wow.
And, you know, you just mentioned cannibalism.
So, a very concerning trend to see, but there's been in the media a lot of talk of cannibalism over the last year or so and the way things are going here.
It might be a very popular YouTube channel like Cannibalism Recipes or like Human Jerky.
Do it yourself with a dehydrator and some soy sauce.
You know, I mean, it sounds crazy, but this is the world that we appear to be going into.
And I have the question for you about, you know, cities versus rural living.
So if you're in a city and we suffer a catastrophic breakdown of diesel fuel or transportation, then you're in a food desert instantly.
Where if you're in a rural area and you've had connections with local farmers and producers of some kind, and you have some surface water, you've got some ponds and streams and so on, you have options.
I mean, they may not be pleasant, but you have options.
But if you're in the city, you're eating your neighbor, you know?
I mean, sadly, that's what it seems like it's going to come to unless the global supply chain is fixed here.
Yeah, you know, and that's a great point you brought up.
Because, you know, for me, there's lines I will never cross.
And I don't care how hungry I get, I will not eat another human.
I would prefer death to eat another human.
But at the same time, if somebody's coming in, a group of people are coming to rob your supplies and overtake you in your home.
There's lines you're going to have to draw for yourself mentally before any of this happens.
And I already know where a lot of my lines are in terms of light versus this dark vibration where we sit in this battle between literal good and evil.
And I've drawn lines everywhere, and I will not cross so many of them.
Regardless of what happens to me, there's just some things that will never, ever do.
You've got to be ready to make those choices already.
Other people will cross those lines because we live in a very immoral society, right?
And I know you realize that.
I'm just pointing it out that even though you're not willing to eat your neighbor, your neighbors are probably willing to eat you.
Well, that's where we're going to have a problem.
Exactly.
Exactly.
Okay, we don't need to go into details of what that will entail, but I will just tell people, don't Don't eat your neighbors after you've riddled them with lead in self-defense, okay?
Because it's cannibalism and lead poisoning, two rolled into one.
Not a good scene.
So try to live near reasonable people who are preppers who don't have to eat each other.
How about that?
Could be like a New Year's resolution, you know, for 2023, neighborhood-wide community resolution.
Let's not eat each other for a whole year.
How about that?
Well, I'm moving into the neighborhood near you because you'd have to think on top of that lead poisoning inside, it'd be cesium poisoning, radiation poisoning inside the flesh too.
Like, you know, if you get to that point where people are going to start eating each other, like really the hygiene standards would be so low.
And I'm sure, Mike, you can attest to more, way more than I can.
And if your hygiene gets to a certain point, then your body doesn't function any longer correctly.
Your mind doesn't either.
At what point can you let hygiene go until it becomes a serious mental and physical health issue for the self, not to others?
Well, it would be to others, too.
But, I mean, you wouldn't eat somebody who's been living on the street.
Like, would you pull somebody out of San Francisco, the most grungiest person that's been living in filth like that for years and years and go eat them?
Like, no, you wouldn't.
Well, look, I don't know.
I mean, first of all, this conversation took a really dark turn here just about a minute ago.
But you make a point, which is because I've done a lot of lab testing.
I've tested a lot of human hair versus wild animal hair, for example, for heavy metals.
And I can tell you that human hair, even my own, Is way more contaminated than wild rabbit hair, which I have tested, and wild hog hair that I've also tested.
Because, you know, I found animals on the ranch, and I clip some hair, take it to the lab, and I test it, right?
And wild animals are very clean compared to people.
And I guarantee you folks that If people, like, people meat would not pass even the insanely low standards of the USDA for meat consumption, because the disease, the contamination, the microplastics, everything.
And plus, you know, again, I'm sorry that this is such a dark topic, but these days, half the people are spike protein factories.
Like, do you even want to get close to them, you know?
They're shedding spike protein all over the place, which the wild animals are not yet.
So...
I don't know.
I know the USDA is there to protect us.
There are protectors.
Right.
They only want the best for us to make sure we live clean, healthy lives.
Are they going to have a cannibalism standard coming out soon?
It's like USDA cannibalganic certified or something.
It passes our low standards for eating your neighbors.
People are probably freaking out hearing this, but these are conversations that are not going to be unusual in another...
Yeah, and look at that, the redundancy, too.
Medical gear, and we talked a bit before the show.
I roll with a pretty big med kit in my car because I'm on farm country.
I've been hurt on my own land where I needed stitches, and I didn't have the proper gear.
I've had somebody else out here cut themselves deeply that needed stitches.
I've rolled by some dudes who were chainsawing and had a severe accident out there.
And this thing, a part of the log fell on his foot, even though he had a boot, it scraped through the boot and ripped part of it, like the top layer of his skin off.
Like, luckily, I was driving by.
And then I saw another guy with an accident.
Some kids pulled out in front of this old-timer.
Cool guy.
He was in his 70s, you know, and his hand was all mangled up.
But I had stuff to, you know, to be able to offer right there to help another human.
But it got wet.
I had an emergency bottle of water in a glass bottle and during that super freeze it broke and I didn't even think about that and I came out and there was water on the bottom of the car and I thought, where?
What?
And my whole medical bag was completely saturated.
So, you know, Mike, this is a question for you.
I got the non-stick pads and these sort of things.
Those dried out really well.
And then I have large bandages and then I got transparent film dressing, the 4 inch by 4.75 inch.
Those dried out pretty well.
But I got a lot of band-aids too, like butterfly bandages and these types of things in a regular boo-boo kit, like that kind of band-aid.
What happens after they get wet and you put them in a food dehydrator like I did?
I let them dry for about six hours on 135 degrees Fahrenheit to try to dry my med kit out again.
The non-inherent non-stick pads for compresses, those all dried out pretty well.
Well, the bandages, as long as the packaging is still intact, they should still be sterile.
However, the adhesive...
It may have gone into the water solution and the adhesive may no longer be on the bandage.
It may be on the inside of the package.
So it might be useless if you need adhesive qualities.
So I just use tape, regular medical tape, to wrap it around and stick it on instead of the adhesive itself?
Yeah, you know, a lot of those bandages are not that great anyway.
It's good to have sterile gauze and then medical tape.
You know, stronger bandaging type of materials.
But I would suggest you replace that supply.
If it got soaked and you had to dry it out, you probably can't trust whether it's sterile.
The packaging is probably, you know, not trustworthy at this point.
But also...
You know, travel.
I carry extra water too, but I carry it in these large aluminum, like, one liter bottles.
They're aluminum.
So they can expand and contract and they don't shatter.
And that's been okay.
I also recommend, of course, having a small camping water filter in your vehicle with a pump, so you can pump some water and clean it as needed.
But it's interesting that you rolled up on some people who had some serious accidents and chainsaw accidents.
I was just talking about that the other day.
Let me ask you, David, have you ever run over yourself with a snowplow?
No, never.
Okay, that's good.
That's good because someone famous just did that recently and that did not go well.
Chest injuries, almost bled out, lost 40% of his blood, the whole deal.
Neighbors saved him by applying a tourniquet, got him into the ER, and he's, you know, fighting for survival there.
But...
In these rural situations, people injure themselves all the time with chainsaws and tractors and combines and dozers and whatever else.
I mean, injuries are incredibly common, even with just, like, hunting knives.
You know, people stab themselves in the hands all the time, like opening avocados and things like that.
Folks, be safety-minded about all this stuff.
This is not a time to end up in the emergency room.
All right, but David, I can't believe it's already been almost 50 minutes.
Yeah, can I ask you one last question about blood for a second?
Yeah, like if you were to come up on a person, you know, say the snowplow person, and they were bleeding out like that, and you just didn't have a chance to get to latex gloves.
I mean, what is the contamination risk factor there of actually going in and that barehanded just to get the tourniquet on to stabilize that and stop the bleeding compared to your own protection of somebody else's blood?
Well, me personally, I would go ahead and rush in and get my hands bloody if necessary to apply the tourniquet.
I wouldn't worry about it.
But that's only because, you know, I've got a lot of knowledge of how to detox and I've got a good immune system and so on.
But if you have open wounds or scrapes of any kind, obviously you could get contaminated, you know, quite badly.
But I... If I had latex gloves, yeah, I'd put them on.
But if I didn't have time, if the guy's femoral artery is pumping gushing blood, I'm not going to look for gloves.
I'm going to go in there, clamp down above the wound.
Basically, I'm going to be squeezing the guy's leg high up in the crotch area, strapping a belt on there, finding a stick, twisting that sucker, or anything I can do to make it crazy tight.
That's what I'm going to do.
I don't care if I get bloody.
Okay, that's valuable knowledge right there.
Take your shirt off, make a Make a linear bundle of cotton out of a t-shirt or something.
Wrap that around.
Put a stick in it.
Twist that up.
Remember, you've got to twist it until the person basically is screaming in pain.
It has to be so crazy tight that you think his leg is going to fall off.
But that's the only way to stop because the blood pressure through that artery, it's a big artery.
It's the biggest.
And the only way to stop the blood...
It's to make it insanely tight to where the person is probably screaming at you and begging you to stop.
But there you go.
Yeah, and I hope our medical facilities still continue to run because, you know, right now we have the blessed option of a first-world problem of, oh, you might have to wait in line when you get there, but at least you can get them to better medical care that can generally, I'm going to say generally, fix that.
But what happens if we're in a breakdown scenario where then you're there and you can't take them anywhere else, then what?
Yeah.
After you put tourniquet and everything on, then what?
I mean, we've done these battle injuries in like the Civil War and think, are they going to bite the belt and then you're going to shove an arrow through there with gunpowder on it or what?
No.
No, I'm not going to try that.
No.
You know what I mean.
Right.
But, yeah, if you lose 40% of your blood and there's no ER... You know, not a good outcome.
It's good not to cut your arteries open, pretty much is the answer there.
Be careful with chainsaws and blades and machinery and bullets, you know, firearms, the whole deal.
Don't shoot yourself or your friends.
Oh my gosh.
There's going to be way more injuries just from me working on the farm.
You can attest to this, Mike, as well.
How many hand-cut injuries do you get?
Unless you're wearing gloves all the time, things sticking in you, barbs coming through, sometimes different briars and things.
You just can get stuck by thorns and anything plus cuts.
Your hands get really cut and so does your face sometimes because things come slapping back at you, whipping back.
That is true.
Knee, shin cuts, all this kind of stuff.
You're going to get way more cut, way more injured working out on the farm tools and even planting a simple garden.
Well, yeah, that's true.
I get scraped, cut my skin open just walking by a fence opening where there was a piece of wire still sticking out from the original fence construction, right?
That could have been bent back into a rounded shape, but it was sticking out.
So...
That happens, and then you add animals to the mix, right?
Like you're trying to load horses or load donkeys or load cattle into a trailer.
Now you have real injury potential, getting stomped on, breaking hands, elbows, arms, all kinds of stuff like that.
So that's why the real cowboys are some tough dudes.
They are tough.
They can get it done and walk away.
Yeah, can you imagine?
Yeah, you just pop the whole visual in there trying to get animal loaded.
Oh, they're so heavy and so fast, you know?
Yep, strong.
Strong, motivated.
And in Texas, we have...
They're motivated to get away from you.
Like, how motivated are we to get away from the system?
Because those animals are motivated to get away.
We need to be that motivated to get away from the system and get off centralized delivery immediately.
Right, right.
While the world governments are trying to corral us into a Holocaust camp, basically.
So it's a race for survival.
But anyway, we've covered a fascinating array of subjects and even some pretty dark topics here.
Is there any way to summarize this or anything you want to add here before we wrap this up?
I do, because I'd written a note to myself when you and I were talking about geoengineering.
You know, if you were to orchestrate a heat wave like you're talking about with harp technologies, because I also saw this New story that just came out this week.
We're going to use the HAARP facility in Alaska to bombard or send signals to a passing asteroid and try to affect the perturbation of it or its orbit somehow using HAARP from Earth to actually target an object in space.
So if you think if they're at that potential where they're actually going outer atmosphere, literally leaving our ionosphere out into space to target an object, How difficult would it be to blast it to create a heat wave or a high pressure system around an area?
It's been so drought-ridden in the West for so long that it's affecting Mississippi River water levels now, where they couldn't even export the crop that we had this year.
At the end of the export season, they were stymied because the water levels weren't high enough.
They unloaded all that grain along the banks of the Mississippi River.
Now, how easy would it be to now create a huge, massive deluge and wash all those stored grains downstream during the season in spring?
Just saying.
It can go either direction, creating a rain or creating drought.
You created the drought artificially knowing that that would be the end result, that all the storage facilities up and down the Mississippi would get chock-a-block completely full, that these grain shuttles would unload on the banks and then they would cover them with temporary tarp.
But then if you knew that would be the full Mississippi up and down for 150, 200 miles of just grain stacked up on the cover by tarp, then obviously you send the biggest flood in 100 years down during the spring melt season and wash all that away.
And then, you know, that's just nasty right there.
And I, you know, I've been looking at the possibilities of that happening.
So that is actually one of my calls for 2023.
All that grain stored on the Mississippi because of low water levels.
We'll be washed away in a mega flood this spring.
And I never said anything about geoengineering, but I thought I would because you did.
Well, and of course, if that happens, the media will blame it on climate change, which is absurd.
And then they'll say, this is why we need to make sure there are no tractors that run on combustion engines.
So they'll use the crisis to further attack the food supply and impair farming crop yield potential.
So no matter what happens, the globalists are in a war against the food supply and food production.
So it's going to get interesting and people are going to get hungry.
And the good news is a lot of people are going to learn how to grow food because if they don't, they will die.
So it's like learn or die.
Well, it's a hopeful time for humanity to pull together to come through some of this darkness that is overshadowing us in this, you know, false authority which you speak to that, you know, we should not obey and they're going to tell us to do many things.
This white lung seems to be sweeping everywhere.
I don't think it's the same COVID animal.
I think it's a completely different animal, at least what I've been seeing out of China.
It's something way different.
It might be co-packaged as something COVID-ish, but it is definitely different in my opinion.
And that's another wild card to think about, too.
What if it takes so many people to deal with the dead that society stops?
That's what happened in the 1500s.
Remember when they moved from cattle to pig and sheep?
There was a dropout of any records kept in England for 10 years because they were so busy cleaning up the death that there was no records kept.
A full dropout of records for a full 10 years in England of all places.
That's insane.
Wow, a country that loves to keep records.
Yeah.
How can that happen?
Okay.
Well, I tell you what, David, let's keep in touch.
We'll bring you back on in a little while to give us updates of what's happening.
And I would say to our audience, you know, just stay alert, be prepared.
I want to make sure people can find you.
Your channel name is called Adapt2030.
And you're on brighttown.com and other platforms.
And you've also got the brighttown.tv broadcast every other Friday, 2 to 3 p.m.
Eastern.
What else do you want to mention, David?
Well, that's it.
And I've also started the Opportunity Report.
It's a subscription service for comparing pre and post eruptive data from the Hunga Tonga eruption and where that's cooling on our planet first, which crop zones are being affected most, and where you would expect the greatest losses In grains to be.
So if they're a major exporter, then you could anticipate problems to their, you know, export bound nations that rely on them for social unrest to start first in the poorer, 100% reliant import nations.
And then you can make a whole list of that.
So those two things, I'm starting to re-divert my energy into other bits of research right now.
All right.
Where did people get that report?
More helpful.
Well, the report right now is by request, or if I think that it might help your business or your firm help us move through these problems and find solutions together.
Because once you see where the problem areas are, solutions will come out.
Where there's a need for a solution, it will arise.
I really firmly believe that.
Maybe it's too optimistic.
So how can people contact you to request this report?
You can write an email, send it to podcast at oilseedcrops.org.
Okay.
And that's based off the Mini Ice Age Conversations podcast.
That's the email contact that I'm using for this platform right now.
Okay.
Starting on the website, getting all that all built out as we speak right now this week.
So for now...
I'm going to be using podcast at oilseacrops.org.
Okay.
But again, it's not just for, hey, send it to me.
I'm a casual reader.
If you have a business and a need for this information, that's who I'm targeting it towards.
Somebody who has the resources that can actuate on the resources to put solutions in play immediately to help us get through this.
Okay.
Thanks for letting me ramble.
Thank you, Mike.
No, it's all good, David.
Thank you for taking the time and staying late with us.
And, you know, I mean, thanks for being willing to talk about just about anything here because we did cover a lot of strange topics.
But nevertheless, it's a strange world.
So I would just say, folks, pay attention to this.
Stay informed.
Get prepared.
It's going to be an interesting, well, decade, I believe, in terms of food challenges.
So thank you all for listening.
Thank you, David, for joining.
And to everybody listening, you can also repost this, if you wish, on your own channels.
Just give credit to David Dubine and Adapt2030.
Of course, I'm Mike Adams, the founder of Brighteon.com.
So, thank you for listening.
God bless you all.
I'm Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, founder of Brighteon.com, and the publisher of NaturalNews.com.
Take care.
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