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March 21, 2024 - Health Ranger - Mike Adams
01:12:37
Food abundance secrets UNLEASHED with Jim Gale and Kevin Fretz
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Welcome, everybody, to this special episode here on Brighttown.com.
I'm Mike Adams, and we have two amazing guests right here with you.
And it's springtime in, well, in the Northern Hemisphere, and it's time to be growing food if you're not doing it already.
And let me introduce my two guests here.
We've got in studio Kevin Fretz from Patriot Green Products.
Welcome, Kevin.
Yes, thank you very much, Mike.
Good to be back.
Awesome to have you here, and I know you've got some show and tell.
You've got some new innovations from last year and a way to turn food scraps into sort of free soil.
We've got a lot to show you here as a show and tell and a food growth system you're going to talk about.
And then we've got Jim Gale joining us from Florida from foodforestabundance.com.
Welcome, Jim.
Thank you, Mike.
Good to see you, Kevin.
Yes, great to see you too, Jim.
It's awesome to connect with you again, Jim.
Everybody loves talking with you and loves your enthusiasm and what you're doing there.
You're a pioneer in the state of Florida, turning what was, I guess, just a sandy area into an abundant food forest.
So, awesome job you're doing there.
Thank you, brother.
We are two years in and we have way more food than our family can eat right now.
And I don't have to maintain it.
Nature does it.
Yeah, exactly.
Well, it's good you have so much food because you have so many visitors there.
We'll talk about that later, how people can come visit your, well, I don't know, what do you call it?
Ranch?
Campus?
Yeah, Freedom Farm Academy.
Freedom Farm Academy.
Okay, perfect.
We'll get into more details about that shortly.
Now, Kevin, thank you for coming in studio here.
It's always great to have you.
Last year we had you on.
There was a huge response because you have this really amazing compost product made from the shredded mulch of the Lost Pines trees.
Yes, the Bastrop fires.
And so you've been shipping that out to people ever since.
And give us just a quick background of patriotgreenproducts.com.
I've got the website up.
Guys, be sure to show the website.
Quick background of what you're doing.
So, Patriot Green Products is a fairly new company.
It's a couple years old now, but it was developed with over 32 years of intellectual property.
Which has pretty much been my career in the organics industry.
We love our veterans, we love our first responders, and we love folks that are disabled and we want to give back.
So we founded this company and we offer opportunities to veterans, first responders that may be retired that want to pursue a new career.
Of course, we feel that we're policing our farms now, and quality is a really, really important thing for us, especially when you're putting organic materials in the ground.
We want to know what's in it before it goes into the ground.
So the standards that we set are the highest standards in the United States.
We're protecting our communities and protecting our farms and growing healthy food.
So specifically, I remember you don't make compost out of yard or like government park clippings that have been sprayed with glyphosate and atrazine and pesticides and all that garbage.
You get true like wild crafted compost, you could say.
So, two types of compost we would make.
Of course, the materials we have here in Texas are probably the best material I've ever had in my career.
Very, very clean.
You tested it as well.
And so, but generally speaking, we never use curbside collected materials because they're contaminated.
People are spraying glyphosate on their lawns and, you know, insecticides.
And generally, it's a very salty material as well.
It's high in nitrogen, and it has phosphorus and potassium in it, but it has a lot of other things that we don't want.
So we don't allow that in any of our compost.
We do make compost from arborist materials, from tree trimmings.
Right.
Clean tree trimmings.
We even, you know, track them where they come from just to make sure that everything is nice and clean and good quality.
And then we're focusing on the biological aspects of things to find good biological diversity.
And that's how we make our products.
You have a special mix of microbes, I know, that you use in your compost.
We'll get back to that.
Let me go to Jim Gale.
And Jim, I know our audience is probably already familiar with you, but give us the quick background story of foodforestabundance.com and what you're doing.
So I learned what was going on about 17, 18 years ago, and I became obsessed with asking the question, how do we catalyze a shift that leads to mass adoption of permaculture, which is simply using our resources wisely, which is logical on every conceivable level.
And I'll give you a quick example.
This is, as I mentioned, a two-year-old food forest That has a ridiculous amount of excess food growing, and it's less maintenance than a lawn.
Like, that is so fun to convey that message.
We have done far less maintenance here than if this were a lawn.
So our job is to organize.
In fact, Martin Luther King said, those who love peace must learn to organize as well as those who love war.
And when we do, we will have peace.
So what I've been obsessed with is that sentiment.
How do we organize?
So we have now created a council of 12 of solution providers of the highest caliber.
People that have scalable solutions, like Kevin.
Like Patriot Greens, like Joe Salatin, and Theo Fleury, and Doc Chambers, and Pat Miletic, and all of these world changers, world champions, Olympic champions.
And we're bringing together all the solutions in such a way as to be accessible to the masses globally.
And I love that your timing is so wonderful, Jim, because we were just covering this story yesterday.
I was telling you about an off-camera where the state of Oregon is issuing cease and desist orders to small family farms to shut down.
They're making it a crime to irrigate your crops.
They're making it a crime to have backyard chickens.
If you put gravel down or if you put straw, then they...
They consider you to be a CAFO, even if you only have 10 hens.
And they shut you down.
There is an assault on food and farming, the entire food supply infrastructure.
So what you're doing, Jim, and what you're offering here, Kevin, this is critical for people to learn to grow their own food and be more self-reliant.
So God bless you, Jim.
Well, thank you.
And I'll just add this one layer.
We've now built 11 structures here.
And we did not ask, nor will we ever ask, the slave masters for permission.
Because that's what we gotta do.
We have to stand up, and we are doing this very strategically.
In fact, I've had some good friends say, you're gonna go to jail, you're gonna get whacked, all that blah blah blah.
It's all fear-based stuff.
We are standing in service to humanity, to God, to nature, in such a visible way.
In large part, thanks, Mike, to you and to these other influencers that get it.
And we are saying, no, we will not only not comply, but we will demonstrate a better way, and we will invite you to do the better way with us, but we're not going to do it your way.
Yeah.
Well, exactly.
I remember from previous interviews, Jim, you talked about how you're actually also producing and giving away food to the local community as you have it available, and that's only going to increase.
So, you know, you're showing the value of your philosophy to the local community.
And they would be insane to try to shut you down when you're producing the food that's the healthiest, most nutritious food in the world.
In fact, let's talk about that, Kevin.
So you've got a number of products available at PatriotGreenProducts.com.
Be sure to show his website.
Now, just for transparency, this is not a paid promotion.
We don't earn anything off the sales of your products.
No, we don't.
What you have done is you've given me some samples last year and this year's things to try out, and I very much appreciate that.
But this is not a paid promotion.
But I love your products.
My family uses your products, by the way, to grow food.
Here in Texas.
And you've got compost.
You've got worm castings.
You've also got a larger, I don't know what you call them.
Super sacs.
Super sacs, yeah.
On pallets.
So can you give us a rundown of sort of what you have available right now for springtime gardening?
People want to get started and take advantage of your products.
Sure, absolutely.
So springtime is here, so we should be conditioning our soils.
We should also be using compost teas.
So we have our compost tea brewer, the small one.
We also have larger ones that are on our website right now.
We're looking at two manufacturers right now for our compost tea brewers.
Oh, really?
Yeah, we're always trying to find the best value for our customers.
You know, some things are too expensive, and we know it.
So we're always looking for something that's going to give them what they need with quality and with price.
So as far as our products are concerned, we now have a raised bed garden mix, which is our thundersoil.
Thundersoil!
Yeah.
And then we have our new worm castings available to you.
Now, those are both available on our website.
You can go on there and buy them today.
And then we have some things that are coming soon.
Within two to four weeks, we're going to have food waste dehydration equipment.
This is going to show your viewers how you can make your own, I would call it micro mix.
I wouldn't call it compost.
A lot of manufacturers that manufacture these types of machines, they claim it makes compost.
It's not compost.
It's dehydrated ground food waste, but it's nutrient-dense materials that when you mix in with your compost, you can feed your microbes and ultimately close the loop.
Okay, so hold on.
Show us what's in that jar that you brought.
Is that food scraps?
These are food scraps, and this is exactly what I put in this last night.
So what is that?
There's orange peels in there.
There's some old muffins in there.
There's eggshells in there.
No meat, obviously.
You could put meat in it as well, believe it or not.
Yeah, you can put meat in it as well.
And so you just dump that into the machine.
Exactly.
And then what happens next?
I'll show you what happens.
You're going to give us a full demo?
I'm going to show you.
Check this out, Jim.
I love it.
We're making powdered food waste here.
Understand that this was completely filled with this material, right?
Okay.
So this is how much it comes out.
Whoa, whoa.
That's it.
Wait a minute.
Okay, let me show this on camera.
So there's a comparable.
I don't know how much we can show here.
So from that jar down to this, and it's dried?
It's dried.
Is there a grinder in there?
There's a grinder in there, yes.
There's a grinder.
So it grinds it up and dries it?
Dries it out and grinds it.
So you can use this for chicken feed.
You can supplement your chickens.
No way.
Yeah, absolutely.
Or you can put it in your compost.
Or you put it in your compost, or we can feed it to worms and make vermicompost, worm castings out of it.
Or you could throw it in a Vitamix and make a smoothie out of it.
You could.
I don't know.
Call it a probiotic smoothie.
Kind of a funny taste of smoothie, but yeah, you could do it.
You definitely could do it.
So these, we've been testing this particular model, and it works very, very well.
Wow.
But we're testing a couple others before we make a decision on which one we're going to bring to market.
That is so cool, but couldn't you also just put fresh tomatoes in there, like if you wanted to save them for later in the winter, you could make your own tomato powder?
Yes, that's the other thing I was going to mention about this.
You can put herbs in here, you know, if you want to dry down some herbs.
Yes, if you want to, you know, mix some herbs and spices, this will do that for you as well.
Wow!
Okay, so this is the first time I've seen this.
Jim, are you aware of this kind of machine?
Yes, I love those machines.
They're very functional in certain situations, and I love that kind of ingenuity.
What do you call this kind of machine?
It's a food waste dehydrator.
Food waste dehydrator.
We make them commercially, too, where you can put in up to two tons a day of food waste in them.
Wow.
So big food waste processors use them.
Wow.
Okay.
So what you're trying to do is bring the circle all the way around so that you're not throwing any food away off your property.
Anything that you're not eating, you're putting back into the gardens.
And I know, Jim, that's a philosophy that you teach and practice as well, right?
Yeah, for us it's so simple because we actually have a type of space where we simply, when we have anything left over, we just walk outside and throw it in the food forest.
Right.
But for people in apartments or people that have other situations, those systems are awesome.
Yeah.
And they reduce their waste, obviously.
But on a commercial level, this helps restaurants to reduce their waste disposal.
Oh, yeah.
And then we like to see closed-loop programs, like with Jim growing food for restaurants, local restaurants.
They could either bring it back if they're close enough, or they would have a dehydrator.
Yeah.
And then when Jim's delivering the food, they pick up the dehydrated materials and bring it back to the farm.
Wow.
Wow.
Close the loop.
Wow, fascinating.
I mean, I live on a ranch, so I'm kind of more like Jim.
I just take food scraps and kind of like chuck them around the trees.
Or the chickens.
Or if I'm feeding fresh eggs to my dogs, I just open the egg and put it in their dog food and then I chuck the eggshell because it's going to just go right back into the ground.
Right, yeah, yeah.
Don't worry about it.
But this is, like Jim said, this is great.
So is this something that Patriot Green Products is going to have?
We're going to be selling these, yes.
You're going to be selling these?
Yep, this is coming soon.
And what?
Within 30 days.
Within 30 days, yeah.
Alright, well that's interesting.
That's new.
And then you have something else, which we'll get to that in a second.
Your food, your raised food, raised bed garden.
That seems really interesting.
So Jim, let me ask you this.
You have a very fortunate climate there, very wonderful environment for growing food, which makes it so amazing that so many people don't take advantage of it who live in Florida.
They still go to the grocery store and buy processed food where they can grow it so easily.
But not everybody has such a good climate.
However, you've had a lot of success in many different areas across the country.
Can you give us kind of a rundown of some of the clients that you've helped who have been growing food successfully in more challenging climates?
Oh yes, we are now serving people in about 54 countries and 50 U.S. states.
We have customers in Alaska and Minnesota.
In fact, one of the most impressive food forests that I know of is actually in northern Minnesota, where it's really freaking cold.
In fact, this guy has like eight or nine different varieties of kiwi alone.
Probably a dozen different varieties of blueberry and raspberries and blackberries.
So this science of permaculture can be done everywhere in the world.
In fact, we are currently designing for the president of El Salvador because we can design from the top down, from the big pattern, right?
How do we change a country?
Well, you start with good leadership, and it seems like that fellow's doing it pretty good, and then you design in to serve the prisons, the schools, and the slums, the ghettos.
When we create food forests in these three things, we end the majority of crime, we end childhood disease, and we raise the value of these lands where people don't get healthy food.
And by doing so, everybody lifts.
Yeah, plus you reduce government spending on sick care and disease and disabilities, and people remain healthier and happier and more productive.
I mean, there are direct economic benefits beyond health.
Exponential, brother.
So I'll give you one number that I know.
In the state of Florida, the state budget is over $90 billion.
Five percent of that.
Equals $18 billion over four years.
So this message is to Governor DeSantis and his incredible Dr.
Joseph Latipo.
I really love this fella.
Oh yeah, he's great.
And guys, I want to invite you to come to Galt's Landing and we will design for you a strategy for the state of Florida.
Where 5% of that budget, reallocated, will create 18,000 $1 million food forest installations in the state of Florida over four years.
That's every school, every prison, every city park, every opportunity zone.
That investment will change the world because Florida will become the freest, healthiest state in the nation in four years.
Hmm.
Yeah, you're exactly right.
I'm so glad you brought that up because I've talked about this myself.
The prisons are fed the kind of food that creates mental disabilities and disorders that perpetuates the cycle of felons.
And the schools feed children food that doesn't...
Promote learning.
We're trapping people in this cycle of dead food, processed food, mineral depleted food.
And that's got to change, man.
There's no better time to change it than right now.
That's why I love what you're doing, Kevin, at Patriot Green Products.
Tell us about the worm castings.
It must be quite an operation in order to generate and harvest those.
Right.
We have partners that we're working with on that.
They actually feed the worms peat moss.
So it's a very, very, very clean feedstock that goes into feeding the worms.
Really?
I didn't know they would eat peat moss.
They eat peat moss, yeah.
They eat peat moss.
They like peat moss.
So they eat peat moss, and they produce a very, very consistent casting.
It's very, very clean.
It's probably the cleanest material I've seen in the marketplace.
So now we're working with them.
They're back east.
But they ship all over the United States, and they're working with us on Patriot Green Products' website.
So we're looking for somebody actively in Texas to help us as well.
Wow.
So if you know anybody, let me know.
Okay, absolutely.
Well, you just put the word out.
A lot of people watching this show may be interested.
And how can they contact you, by the way, if they are?
You can contact me at info at patriotgreenproducts.com.
Okay, perfect.
And Jim, what's the best way for people to contact you?
Two ways.
Foodforestabundance.com.
Foodforestabundance.com.
And then Galt's Landing.
If anybody would like to visit us here in Central Florida, we've got a private 430 acre lake and 51 acres of beautiful land.
And it's GALTSlanding.farm.
Oh,.farm.
Okay, great.
What kind of magical microphone do you have there that doesn't pick up any of the wind?
Because it looks like you're talking to us in a light hurricane or something.
Yeah, I'm surprised.
I actually have my hands cupped on both sides of the phone to help protect from the wind, so maybe that's it.
Oh, well, it's working.
We're not getting any wind noise at all.
It's almost unbelievable.
Good.
You have the best audio I've ever seen in wind.
Wow.
Well, good.
It's working.
Okay, Jim Gale, food, forest, abundance, and wind whisperer.
There we go.
My name is Gale, right?
I'm the wind.
You are the wind.
That's right.
That explains it.
You've mastered the wind.
Alright, now show us then, Kevin, if you would, this contraption here.
This is something new you've come up with.
Right, yes.
It's like a raised bed.
Yes, this is a raised bed that has been coated with NSF-approved material.
Alright, here, Mike.
Yeah, sure.
Carry the mic with you.
This is going to be challenging.
Approved NSF material.
So they spray this type of material on the inside of water tanks.
Yeah.
So the idea is, and this is just a demo model, of course, but the idea is that we want to be able to provide people with raised beds that are very light.
These are very light.
So husband and wife can pick these up very easily, moving them around.
Put biocomplete soil mix in there.
We have a wicking system in here so that you fill the bottom of the tank and it does what it's supposed to do, like in nature.
Here, angle it towards...
Yeah, there you go.
See the holes in there?
So you water it through the PVC pipe, and the water goes underneath to the roots.
It does.
You know, the thing with rolling food...
My dog might want to take a bite out of that, by the way.
No, Rhodey.
Sit, sit, sit.
He thinks it's playtime.
No, no.
Quiet, quiet, quiet, quiet.
Okay, let's not play with the raised bed.
Quiet.
Quiet, quiet.
No.
All right, keep talking.
So, you know, the thing with most people that are trying to garden, they fail often because they forget to water.
And if they don't have drip systems in place, they forget to water.
And if it doesn't rain, this makes it simple for them.
They fill the tank.
There will be a float indicator in here to let them know when the tank runs to the bottom.
But basically, you fill the bottom, and it has a wicking system.
So it wicks from the bottom up versus the top down.
That's great.
That's great.
Because that's where the moisture is needed.
So I imagine that would grow tomatoes really well.
Oh, absolutely.
Even potatoes.
You could grow potatoes in that box.
You surely can.
And I brought you some mix there that you're going to grow your potatoes in.
Yeah, I can't wait.
These are also custom made.
We can make them custom sizes.
Oh, really?
Yep, absolutely.
And as you remember, remember the war gardens?
The Victory Gardens of World War II. These are going to be officially the Patriot Green Gardens for today.
These are the new war gardens that we're going to be getting up to folks.
We also expect to be working with the U.S. Army very, very shortly.
Really?
These will be going on the fort here up in Killeen.
Yeah, the military should grow more of their own food, too.
Rody has a question.
How delicious is the container?
Do you want to eat the container, Rody?
No.
How resistant to dog chew activity is it?
Yeah, and I'm really excited to also bring up to speed about what we're doing with Jim Gale.
Yeah, talk to us about that.
Jim's showing us some of his cattle out there.
All right, Jim.
What are they doing, Jim?
They have escaped!
My dog!
My dog's chasing the goat!
Do you need to go?
Do you need to go?
No, no.
I've got a team.
I can hear them.
They're coming.
The cavalry is on its way.
I think your cattle guard forgot to guard.
I guess so.
Holy cow, I hope that wasn't me that left that gate open.
Yeah, that's the rule in Texas.
Always close the gate if you found it closed, right?
Yeah, exactly.
Let the cows out.
Yeah, so what do the cows like to eat from your garden there?
Everything.
Everything.
They love the sweet potatoes.
Actually, we had this one very freedom-loving cow a while back.
She's now in our freezer, but she would walk out into the lake and she would go chest deep and then go around the fence.
And then the first thing that she would eat is all of our sweet potatoes, which was interesting because I would be walking through and there'd be sweet potatoes laying in the pathway because she would eat all the leaves Oh, yeah.
And the stems.
So she harvested our sweet potatoes for us.
Wild.
Yeah.
So Joel Salatin was here about three, four weeks ago.
And him and his son Daniel.
And they looked at our cattle pasture and they laughed and they said, Jim, we could help you quite a bit.
And I love that because that's the thing is we are now surrounded by the people who have the proven solutions to all these problems.
So Joel and his team, they actually showed us how to better manage.
And my friends, if anybody out there has cows or wants to, Go to Joel Salatin and learn the methods because it's infinitely, it's the smartest investment you could ever make if you have cows and you want to do it right.
He showed me in 4 minutes and 30 seconds, which we videotaped, how to transform this cattle pasture into a system that provides exponentially more abundance.
Oh, yeah.
Well, he is very knowledgeable.
We need to have him on the show, too, by the way, because I've followed a lot of his work over the years as well.
So let's make a point to do that after this.
But, Jim, I hope you get your cows back and that they don't trample any of the food for us in the meantime.
Hopefully they poop.
As long as they poop and leave some nutrients for the food, I'm okay with it.
Yeah.
Yeah, well, I have banana plants here in Texas that are kind of a little bit cold-resistant, and when the cows get onto my property, they eat the banana leaves down.
They just strip them down.
They'll even eat the banana stalks, you know, the trunks.
Do you get any bananas in the summertime?
Not since the cows ate them down.
Oh, geez.
But the cows were very happy about that.
Alright, so...
Yeah.
Tell me...
Let's start with you, Kevin, and we'll go to you, Jim, about...
In the last year, we've seen more assaults on food freedom and farm freedom than ever before in this country.
Are you hearing this from your customers about a lot of new people getting into growing their own food because of the assaults on food freedom?
Absolutely.
People are afraid.
The people that are aware know what's happening.
They see what's happening in Europe with the farmers protesting and the farmers protesting.
Spraying manure on the government buildings.
Which seems appropriate.
It does.
It really does.
I mean, they are dirty to be doing this to our farmers.
So yes, absolutely.
And then, of course, they're looking for alternatives right now.
And so the one thing that we have to make sure of is that they're not seeking the wrong alternatives because you've also heard about what's happened recently with biosolids and what they've been doing to the farms.
Yeah.
And there's class action lawsuits happening right now with those folks.
Thank goodness, and thanks for sending me tips on that.
And yeah, folks, remember that every city in America turns its sewage sludge into, quote, free fertilizer for the farms, and then they take truckloads of human sewage and they dump it on farms, and it's full of everything that people flush down the toilets, which is...
More than just feces, but it's all their pharmaceuticals, it's all the hygiene products, it's all the cocaine that people dump in the toilet when the police raid shows up.
It's everything.
It's every crazy thing that you can imagine, and microplastics, and that's what people are dumping on their farms.
And it's legal to do that all across America.
It's crazy that your food is grown in a contaminated sewage that's also very high in bad microbes.
Absolutely.
Yeah, pathogens and PFAS.
I mean, that's what's been contaminating the farm.
chemicals, all of it.
So the government gives you permission to use it, and then the government comes in later and says, well, your land is contaminated with PFAS, and you're not allowed to grow food on it any longer.
Right.
So it's destroying our farms.
Yeah.
So, Jim, are you getting the same kind of feedback from people that are visiting you right now, or something has shifted in the last year?
Well, daily I hear about this.
In fact, a fun real quick story.
About 15 months ago we started construction and we decided we're not going to deal with asking for permission from the slave master.
And I've been waiting for the day when the government shows up and says, what are you doing?
You didn't ask for permission.
Well, this happened two weeks ago.
And I got a call from my guy on the field.
He goes, Jim, come here.
There's somebody with a badge talking about where's the owner.
I want to talk about permits.
So I walked up and I had my camera, my phone on.
And I said, I just want you to know I'm recording.
My name is Jim Gale.
What's your name?
And he gave me his name.
And then I asked him, who gave you permission to come on this property?
It's posted.
Implied consent is not granted.
And it cites case law right at the beginning of the property.
Anyway, he immediately kind of became more friendly.
And he said, I'll leave if you want me to.
And I said, well, maybe that's a good idea.
But first, I'd like to ask you a few questions.
And then I said, you know what your government will allow me to do here?
You'll allow me to kill everything.
You'll allow me to cut everything down.
You'll allow me to do a development like the one up the road here.
But what we're doing here is, according to you, not legal.
And I said, that's insane and we will not comply.
Instead, what we're going to do is we're going to take all the poisons out and we're going to create a demonstration site that serves the community.
And you know what he said after I got done chatting with him?
He had tears in his eyes.
He said, Jim, I'm a preacher on the weekends and I couldn't agree with you more.
He said, I'm aware that the food supply chain is a tool of war.
Wow.
And he said, I'm with you and I'm going to get everybody I can in the county to be with you as well.
And I almost got tears in my eyes.
I probably did.
So yes, the food supply chain is the ultimate tool.
Besides fear, of course.
The media is number one.
But the food supply chain is the physical tool of humanity's enslavement.
And so if that's the first domino to slavery, then the first domino to freedom, after awareness that we are slaves or were, is to create our own food supply chain.
So we are coming together rapidly to literally create a whole new food supply chain.
See, I'm so glad you mentioned that, Jim.
I mean, that's very powerful what you just said, because by growing your own food, it's about more than just eating.
You're actually growing your own freedom.
You're growing your future.
Exactly.
And we see right now, even in the Middle East, weaponization of restriction of food from certain groups of people.
Aid trucks not allowed to go into Gaza.
People starving to death right there.
Whatever the viewers believe about Israel versus Gaza, no human being should ever starve on this planet because there's so much abundance.
Sunlight, air, water, soil, it's all provided by God and Mother Nature for free.
How can any person go hungry on this planet?
The only way that people go hungry is by design.
Wouldn't you agree, Jim?
Oh, it's 100% war, and the strategy is to control the food, control the people.
There you go.
There you go.
And so what you're doing, Patriot Green Products, Kevin, you know, yeah, you have your patriotism, but you're also, by teaching people and giving people tools to grow more easily and more nutrient-rich foods, you're creating resilience, redundancy, and self-reliance across the country, which will really matter When the war starts in North America.
Yeah, I mean, as you know, Russia and China are holding back on nitrogen fertilizers because they want them for bombs, of course.
Well, but also the West did economic sanctions against Russia, so they're not even allowed to export nitrogen.
Exactly.
So, I mean, this is hurting our farmers.
And so we are the company and the groups that are coming together.
Jim, you know...
Thank you, Jim, to work with you and your team.
Thank you, brother.
We're all working together.
We're all coming together.
All these really, really smart people are coming together, and we're going to go out there and offer solutions to the American people.
We have to save our country.
This is really, really important that we do this.
Well, I would like to add, Jim, I don't know if, I mean, I'm sure you would agree with this, but I don't know if you guys have ever talked about this.
But you know what?
We need a nationwide, not just a law, ultimately we need a constitutional amendment.
We need the right to grow food.
In your front yard, in your backyard, any piece of land, there should never be an HOA or a city or a county that comes along and says, oh, you're not allowed to grow food there.
You're absolutely right.
Don't you agree with that, Jim?
We obey the ethics of permaculture.
Earth care, people care, and voluntary share.
I also call them God's laws.
So I would say we go above having this be a right and just claim it, own it, be it.
So yes, I agree completely, Mike.
But you know, you think about...
When the Constitution was written, and then the Bill of Rights, 1791, it was unthinkable that there would be restrictions on growing food, because everybody was growing some food.
Absolutely.
I mean, you grew a little bit of something just to get through the winter.
Yeah, exactly.
And I mean, that's what I learned.
My mom was a permaculturalist when I was a kid.
We had a small farm.
We grew all of our own food, and she canned vegetables.
We had a freezer.
We had two freezers.
We dried food.
We did all of those things.
I mean, she made butter.
We had a cow.
We had a calf.
We had chickens.
We had goats.
We had pigs.
Different seasons, we'd have different animals.
One year, we'd have pigs, and then the next year, we'd have chickens.
Yeah.
Sometimes all together, sometimes not.
But we survived on our own, and it was self-reliance.
Mom said, you know, we will always be fed and we'll be safe.
Whereas in the cities, they'll be in trouble.
Absolutely.
Because when those shipping stop coming in, they're going to have issues.
Well, yeah, the cities are going to be in real trouble.
Jim, let me ask you this, water usage, because Oregon is shutting down many farms by limiting the water usage, and yet all these states, they promote the kind of monoculture that wastes water like crazy instead of permaculture that retains water.
Talk to us about water usage and how what you're teaching actually reduces water consumption.
Massively.
So in water, permaculture principle is catch and store water.
Sink it, slow it, and spread it.
So you could take an area like the deserts of Jordan, which has been done, and by creating swales, which are basically ditches on contour and pond systems, you catch and store water and you actually use your land as a water battery or a water bank.
So you have your water stored in the soil.
Well, and that's exactly what I do now.
In Texas, you don't need government permission in most areas to build those berms or to build a tank, as it's called, a pond or a water catchment system.
But, you know, in Oregon, they've criminalized water catchment off your own land.
You know that?
They threw a guy in jail.
Terrible.
Just absolutely absurd.
I mean, it was runoff from his own land.
And the other thing that we're doing, in conjunction with Jim in Florida, we have other partners in Florida.
We have 15 locations in Florida right now.
Do you?
Yeah.
And Jim, you've met our other partners, Levin, right?
Yeah, awesome.
In Florida, terrific guy, good Christian man.
We've created mixes that allow our cities to reduce their water use by upwards of 50% in all their green space.
Wow.
So that and new maintenance protocols.
So the products that Patriot Green makes from a larger scale, doing larger projects, they will go back into the cities and we're teaching the cities how to reduce the amount of water they use and providing them with budget surpluses.
So what is it that's in your mix that retains water better?
Is it the microbiology or the material or both?
Well, it's chemistry, physics, and biology.
So the physics are soil is sand, silt, clay, organic matter, generally.
And because we manage it with chemicals, we burn out all of the organic matter, generally, that's in the soil.
So we end up with sand and clay, generally, which make great brick.
When you're putting water on it, more chemicals, and then pounding on top of it like schoolyards, things like that, football fields.
So it becomes compacted.
So when you water, your percolation doesn't work properly anymore because the water can't infiltrate and it doesn't absorb.
The organic matter is part of it.
It acts like a sponge.
The biology is part of it.
They have to have liquid in their bodies.
You're talking about the microbes.
The microbes, yes.
And then we have biochar in all of our products.
I wanted to ask you about biochar.
Anyway, the biochar really helps retain water.
It really does, yeah.
And then it releases it back into the soil when the soil gets drier.
So that's what Jim was talking about.
Your soil becomes a water battery.
Exactly.
We're replicating nature, which is what Jim's doing.
And what we're trying to do in these areas where, you know, grasses, they're kind of like monocrops for the schools in our parks.
But we still want to try to mimic nature because we also stop all the runoff.
So because you're creating a biofilter, and so when you irrigate, although there's nutrients and the nitrates are not running off into the rivers anymore, we're retaining them in the roots where they're supposed to be.
It cools things down, too.
And then with the biochar, it's a great home space for biology, and it's also permanent.
It doesn't decompose.
So you have permanent structure in the soil.
Wow, and you offer biochar products, too, that people can spread out on their land.
Okay, Jim, next question for you.
Since I've lived on a ranch in Texas for, I don't know, 15 years or whatever it's been, I have not done big, aggressive permaculture food forest programs, but I've noticed that just by allowing the land to grow back, the food has become pretty abundant by itself.
I mean, I've got acorns, I've got dewberries, I've got wild onions, I've got food everywhere without even trying just because I stopped poisoning the land.
You know what I mean?
I sure do.
Mike, if all we did were take out the poisons and let nature do her thing, we would have radical abundance everywhere.
True.
Because like this system, the birds are going to come in and eat one of these Jamaican cherries and they're going to go to the other side of the lake and they're going to plant a Jamaican cherry tree.
Right?
So, literally, the Garden of Eden ideal is how it should be.
There's some kind of major separation of just logic and awareness.
And I call it evil, the opposite of live.
And so that's what we're doing, is we're ascending past this evil...
And how do we do that even faster?
Well, by coming together.
And I want to highlight what Kevin's done here.
And the reason I'm so happy that he's on the council is he thinks big.
And now with 15 locations in the state of Florida, with the biochar and the soil things, and then I want to highlight, too, two other fellas that are on our council, like, you know, Pat Miletic, the five-time UFC world champ and soil savior, and Doc Will Spencer.
Now, these guys have a soil fertility program that combines a thousand different microbes and biodynamics, and it creates this compost tea that can be used, and I introduced them to Kevin.
They can then introduce that living system to Kevin's system, and it's infinitely more scalable.
So that's why collaborating is so exciting.
Wow.
Yeah, you're exactly right.
And, you know, it just brings back this whole idea that I think most of our viewers would agree that we are living in the last chapter of this once great empire.
The United States of America, you know, it's departed from its original founding vision.
It's collapsing as a nation.
The currency is collapsing.
The rule of law is collapsing.
The global dominance is collapsing.
We are going to have to rebuild our nation, whatever we call it, which means we have to rebuild the entire food infrastructure because the system that we have been living on has been killing us.
Yes, you're absolutely right, Mike.
And that's where we are going to be able to help and scale these things nationally, which I'm glad that I was able to work, first of all, in waste management and understanding how the waste systems work and how they move things around, what's considered clean material, what are considered hazardous materials or toxic materials, how to manage all of it so it doesn't go back on our farms, doesn't go back in the environment.
But think about this.
this every city in the United States they trim trees and they have tree waste a lot of it goes to landfills a lot of it goes to mismanaged compost sites and gets blended with sewage sludge and other things there's just no standards so we are the standard we're creating a standard we and this is where I'm working with Jim as well and our partners in Florida is that we are building facilities new facilities on farms so that the farm will have all the fertilizer it needs to
That will include biochar.
We're also putting pyrolysis reactors on the farms.
So we'll be bringing in clean greens to be going into composting, and we'll be bringing in woody carbonaceous materials to go into a pyrolysis reactor to produce biochar.
So when you have both, now you put both together along with the biology.
Now we can take care of that farm's, all of his needs.
Oh, yeah.
And now we're exporting products from his farm back to farmers and to the cities.
And let me ask you both to react to this.
What you just described there, Kevin, it sounds like then your farm does not need all of these, the typical chemical external inputs that are typically, you know, put in.
you know the the the synthetic fertilizer i guess you could say right which you know typical farming is heavily reliant upon in fact jim tell us about your approach the permaculture you know uh restorative agriculture approach how much less external fertilizer do you have to use if any we don't bring in anything
We release beneficial insects and we use the systems that are all around us.
Everything that we need to thrive and create radical health and wellness and beauty and abundance is all around us when we use the permaculture design principles and we design these systems into our land.
It's so simple that people just don't get it until they do.
And then when they do, it's like this explosion of awareness and excitement and inspiration, right?
Again, I can walk outside my house anytime I want now, and within 10 minutes, I can have a basket of food to feed the whole family, and I don't have to farm anything.
It's just everywhere.
Right.
So you're just harvesting a salad.
When you want to have a salad, you're harvesting the core ingredients for a meal, to make a meal.
And so you don't have, you know, nutrient loss.
You don't have rotted, moldy produce like you sometimes find at the store, right?
It's all fresh.
It's like eating sunlight.
It's as fresh as it gets.
Yesterday we were out in this new sweet potato patch and I was there with Joel and he goes, aren't those annuals?
I go, uh-uh, they're perennials.
They just keep growing and spreading everywhere.
And we just dug a hole just to see if there's anything there and we got a half a five gallon bucket of sweet potatoes in like five minutes.
That's great.
That's awesome.
Now, so then, does Jim's Farm use some of your product there in Florida?
Yep.
In fact, I just sent you a compost tea brewer, didn't I? Yes, I love the brewer.
The little team brewer, yeah.
Yeah, we stack it.
The biochar, I'm a massive fan of biochar.
And we actually wanted to become a demonstration site for Kevin, but his systems are like two to five acres, and we've got everything stacked up here.
So what we're going to do is collaborate with Kevin's place that's not too far from us.
Okay.
All right.
That sounds great.
All right.
Then, Jim, I know you might want to check on your cows pretty soon, so I don't want to keep you, but give people a reminder again of foodforestabundance.com, and then how can they come tour your Galt's Landing?
Yes, check us out at galtzlanding.farm and also our Council of Twelve.
We have a 508, a non-profit that we are coming together to be the stewards of the fiat systems around the world.
So we are inspiring major entities to tithe in a way and then we are opening our books And what we're doing with this money is we're putting food forests in schools, in prisons, and in community centers.
And then we're putting cameras on it.
We just got a TV show funded that is going to change the world.
It's going to be one of the elements of marketing for the vision that frees humanity.
And so if anybody out there is interested in participating, we are going to compost the fiat in a way that turns it to life.
I love that idea, compost the fiat.
That's great.
All right, well, thank you so much, Jim.
It's always an honor to have you on, and thanks for taking the time with us today.
Love you guys.
Thank you.
Thanks, Jim.
All right, you too.
Take care now.
Take care.
Bye-bye.
Bye.
All right, that was great to have Jim on there.
Yeah, he's awesome.
I'm so glad that you're part of that board, too.
Yeah, I'm very honored to be on that board.
This is kind of a dream come true for me, and it's been my whole life's career.
To solve these problems and protect our communities and protect our farms and protect our water and, you know, grow food.
We have to have food.
The other thing I want to mention real quick is that as a customer, if you go to our website and you buy products from us, if you have a quarter acre or an acre or more, you can become a distributor for us as well.
So we help you to get the products you need to help grow food on your own farm, but then you can become a Patriot Green distributor as well.
Okay, alright, that's great.
And again, what's the email address where people can contact you?
Info at patriotgreenproducts.com.
Okay, perfect.
Alright, so Kevin, anyway, thank you for inviting Jim Gale on.
Yeah, he's great.
I love his energy too.
I want to do something here since you brought your new fertilizer mix.
Sure, yeah.
What do you call this?
Thunder mix?
Yeah, thundersoil.
Where's the thunder come from?
Well, because it grows so well, you can hear the thunder.
Seriously.
No, it's all natural.
So it has our garden humus in it.
It's got minerals in it.
It's got special sands in it.
It's designed for raised bed gardens.
Oh!
And you can grow your potatoes in that.
Definitely.
Well, do you mind if I open this bag?
Yeah, please do.
Let's take a look at it right here.
All right.
Absolutely.
Let me just...
Man, that's a heavy bag.
About 30 pounds.
Okay.
Yeah.
Let's just see.
Let me just...
I won't tear the whole thing open, but I do want to take a look here at what we have.
Oh, man.
Holy moly.
Nice dark rich.
Oh, it is dark and rich.
Wow.
Yep.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, it smells really rich.
I don't know if anybody can see it.
Yeah, we'll put it in this.
There we go.
Yeah, it's very dark and rich.
You see that?
Yeah, your plants are going to love it.
We don't really have a close-up shot of it, but it's definitely really, really nutrient-dense, I can tell.
Yeah.
Very rich.
So you said there's biochar in this as well?
Yes, there's biochar in it as well.
And what's the main material in here?
The main material is the tree.
The tree is from Bastrop, Texas.
The pine forest.
The lost pines, yeah.
That's one of the main ingredients, yeah.
So then we'll add some minerals and we add some sands because you want good drainage.
And I believe we have some beets in there as well for nitrogen.
Give it a little nitrogen.
But yeah, it's all organic, no chemicals.
So you don't need to spike it with another fertilizer to start growing?
You just use it as it is and you can plant right into it.
Oh, that's amazing.
Okay, I'm going to do that.
Yeah, please do.
I think you'll really like it.
It takes pictures, too, when you're growing stuff.
Yeah.
So we can see it.
Well, I'm kind of wondering, since I don't want to build raised gardens, can I just dig a ditch, a little shallow ditch, and throw this in the ditch and put potatoes in it?
You could.
Yeah, absolutely.
Would that work?
Yeah, sure.
Yep.
That would work.
I like that.
You just made your own bed.
Yeah.
In the ground.
Because I have a little excavator, so it's really easy.
Yeah, that would be a good idea.
Just take five minutes instead of five hours, you know.
But...
See, I've talked about compost like this as being black gold.
So, you know, we talk about assets that actually can outlast the accelerating collapse of our nation.
You know, gold, gold is gold, you know, and gold and silver, precious metals, and then there's water.
You could call that blue gold.
Compost is black gold.
You can actually stockpile this in a sense because this is food potential.
You know how Jim Gale was saying that your soil can be a battery for water?
This is kind of like a battery for food potential.
It really is.
And water, too.
So the beauty is that we have these raw materials all around us.
We're just being very specific about what we're going to use when we make these things.
But our communities have everything we need to grow food.
And currently, a lot of those good materials are going in the landfills.
Yeah.
So, you know...
While people are growing in humans.
Yeah, while people are growing in human feces.
I mean, it's just absurd.
So there's no human feces?
Oh, no.
No, there won't be any human feces in there.
You know, in Texas, that's called dillo dirt.
Oh, my God.
That's the sewage sludge.
Yeah, that's pretty nasty stuff.
They market it as dillo dirt.
Yeah, I remember seeing your documentary you did, Bile Sludge.
That was amazing.
Yeah.
Yeah, I mean, they've been kind of my nemesis in the marketplace.
When I was growing my business, my R&D company in California, it was those companies that were pushing me out of the marketplace because they were coming in with predatory pricing, because they could, because they were subsidized.
They're getting free sewage from the city.
Yeah.
So they would literally sell it for almost just the transportation costs, and then, you know, landscapers and farmers are coming to me and saying, well, why would I pay you X dollars when I can buy this for so much less?
And I said, yeah, but you know what's in there?
And they said, well, I mean, the EPA says it's okay.
Right, right.
So how can you argue with them?
Don't mind all the flies and germs and everything that come out of that.
And that biosludge, it kills everything around it.
It's terrible stuff.
I mean, we can't control what goes into the sewers from one day to the next.
And I mean, I just heard recently, you probably heard about this one, in Colorado, Colorado where they're messing with growing food right now, some nurses and doctors were recently injected with live Ebola.
Are you aware of that?
Yeah, it's part of a test.
Okay, so you tell me what happens when you get injected with a vaccination, where the waste goes and where is it shed?
Yeah, right.
You get viral shedding in the sewers, exactly.
They monitor sewers for...
For outbreaks.
Right.
That's how they were following COVID. Right.
In the sewers.
Right.
So if somebody is injected with Ebola virus, you would think they'd be shedding into the sewers, right?
And then they'd take the sewage and spread it on the farms.
You got it.
You're going to have like Ebola corn.
Exactly.
Ebola.
Leave it up to the government.
They're taking good care of all of us.
Well, when I interviewed the scientist, Dr.
David Lewis, who was the whistleblower for the EPA, as you know, his book, Science for Sale, that was the basis of that documentary.
The bio-sludge documentary.
He said that the current bio-sludge distribution system is the perfect system for spreading biological weapons.
By design.
Scary.
Just like what you said.
They can inject a few people with Ebola.
Yep.
Boom.
The trucks will spread it out into the entire food ecosystem.
Exactly.
In fact, that's why we are pushing for right now that all biosolids must be destroyed with pyrolysis.
And then we'll test the char to see the heavy metals and what else is in there.
But we want to be able to volatilize off anything that could be harmful to human health or the environment so we can control that.
And it makes better economic sense for the water districts to be approaching it this way than versus what they've been doing right now, which is land application.
So we want to stop that.
Without fighting with those industries, you've got to come up with solutions for them that make economic sense so they can turn the corner.
That's tough.
Yeah, I know.
Because dumping sewage with government permission is a very strong economic incentive because basically they're dumping toxic waste for free instead of having to pay for it to be burned.
One city in particular in California, I presented to them what we had and how we could help the city, and they were using biosolids.
And I said, if you continue to do this practice, you could be very well committing a federal offense.
And they said, how is that possible?
It meets EPA standards.
And I said, well, let me enlighten you about something.
When the materials come in, they have heavy metals in them.
And if you use EPA's guidelines with those heavy metals, every time you apply, you're applying, at a minimum, those metals.
So if you're doing double applications, you're doubling the metals.
So essentially what you're doing is you're creating brownfield sites in your parks.
Right, because the metals don't disappear.
They don't disappear.
They just keep accumulating.
Some of them would, like cadmium and zinc, can be taken up in the clippings when you cut it, but the leads and chromiums and all that stuff, it's there.
You're just going to create a toxic waste dump for the kids to play in.
Right.
Yeah, so it's insane.
Which sounds, yeah, it is insane, but that's our policy now.
This is one of the reasons why our nation is collapsing.
Frankly, why our civilization is collapsing, because it's a cycle of poison.
Yes.
It's like they poison the crops, they poison the food, they poison the minds through the media and all the brainwashing.
They poison the bodies through vaccines and pharmaceuticals.
And then they wonder, well, why is everybody so sick?
Have you looked at the poison cycle?
Right.
Yeah, exactly.
Look, terrorists couldn't do any worse than what our own governments are allowing to happen with our food supply.
Well, they're opening up opportunities for those people to do harm to us.
Yeah.
You know, they're creating soft targets.
Easy.
Because these people could do anything.
They could dump anything in a sewer.
Well, I mean, think about it.
If I take some colonies of really harmful bacteria and viruses and chemicals, and if I go to a city park and throw that on the city park, I could be arrested as a bioterrorist.
You could.
But if I do it by the truckload from the sewage plant, then suddenly it's all okay.
Yeah, it's just, it's absurd.
It's absurd.
I mean, the laws, the EPA regulations, known as the 503 regulations, were written and approved in 1995.
So it's been that long.
And how many other chemicals and other things and diseases are going into the public sewers today versus 1995?
A lot.
Oh, yeah.
And they're only testing for a handful of heavy metals.
That's right.
I remember that.
They're even only testing for two or three pathogens.
They're not even doing a spectrum of pathogen testing.
Exactly.
They don't even know exactly what type of pathogens are, and there are allowable limits, which is absurd.
How can you have allowable limits?
And there's class A and class B. Sludge.
What's the lawsuit that's happening right now about the PFAS in the biosludge?
Several farmers have found that their land, which they were applying biosolids to, has been contaminated with PFAS. So there's a class action suit.
What state is that in, do you recall?
It's in Texas.
That's in Texas?
It's here in Texas, yep.
Wow.
I expect this is going to probably grow across the entire country, too, because there will be thousands of farms that have been contaminated.
Oh, yeah.
I mean, it's absurd to think that our own government said you could do it, so they went out and they spread it.
So you can't really fault the farmers.
They spread it, and now they're telling them they can't grow food because their land is contaminated with PFAS. Well, I know the chemical marker for biosolids application on farms.
You know, in our food science lab, we run multiple mass spec instruments, and I learned years ago that if you want to test a farm for whether they've had biosolids, you test for Benadryl.
Really?
Yes, because Benadryl, the over-the-counter drug, it's the number one most easily located mass spec marker in human sewage.
Wow.
Benadryl.
It's in the sewers.
Because people eat that stuff like crazy.
They're always taking Benadryl.
Wow, that's interesting.
Yeah.
I know that Dr.
Ingham, who's also working with us, and you interviewed Dr.
Ingham, she's working on trying to biodegrade PFAS right now.
That's going to be very difficult.
You're going to have to have some really special microbes.
I don't know how we're going to do it, but we have to come up with a way to clean these farms up, too.
Yeah, but it's like trying to eat dioxins.
Some of these molecules are so resistant to any kind of...
Breakdown process.
Even microbes can't deal with them.
Like glyphosate, microbes will break it down eventually.
It becomes AMPA and some other derivatives.
But the PFAS chemicals, I mean, they're called forever chemicals for a reason.
You can't even break them down with UV light from normal sunlight.
Yeah, it's quite a shame.
It seems ironic that they're shutting down the food supply all over the world and they've gone out and contaminated all these farms which now cannot provide food.
You realize after the collapse of this civilization and sometime in the future when some future civilization rises up and starts to sample the soils, there's going to be this layer, which is this toxic layer.
That's the layer we're living in right now.
They're like, oh, my God, this was the great extinction event.
And they'll find this layer of sediment that's filled with plastics and dioxins and PFAS and everything and heavy metals.
And they'll be like, wow, a whole civilization committed suicide.
Yeah.
Yeah, they really are.
Yeah.
The civilization that were not very intelligent people.
No, that's why most of them died, by the way.
Yeah, exactly.
They killed themselves off.
But the ones who survived grew their own food.
Exactly.
Yeah, we all need to become self-reliant.
Absolutely.
And the sooner you do this, the sooner you're going to be able to protect your families.
From the onslaught of what is coming.
And I know, you know, we were mentioning about the gentleman that was at Galt's Landing.
He was a pastor.
And I want to mention this because it's kind of important.
We're encouraging all churches and folks encourage your churches to contact Jim Gale at Galt's Landing and build food forests at your churches.
And so we're encouraging at our church in Belton that we want them to set up a CSA program so that not only can we grow food for the church, but it can be used in the ministry to teach the younger kids and the members how to grow food.
But beyond that, we want to work with local farmers and get a CSA program set up so that folks can get their food right through the church.
That's awesome.
I love that.
And that's how we get to the masses as quickly as possible, and I really hope it will make a difference.
It'd be great if more churches were teaching people how to grow food.
I know some do, and there's a lot of homeschooling organizations that do as well.
Can I ask you something kind of personal?
Of course.
Can you speak with an Irish accent?
Because you have kind of a Liam Neeson vibe going on.
Elizabeth, for now your accent you want to hear, do you?
Can you say I have a particular set of skills?
I have a particular set of skills.
That nails it!
Don't you think, folks?
Can you zoom in on Kevin here?
Can you do it again?
That's really good.
I have a particular set of skills if you'd like to hear them.
You're going to be taken.
Or if you'd like to hear my Scottish accent, I could do that one.
Oh yeah, it's more Scottish.
I'm sorry, yeah, his is more Scottish.
My grandfather, actually my grandfather was from Edinburgh, or pardon me, Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
So there is a...
There is, yeah.
See, but you do have kind of a Liam Neeson vibe.
Oh, do I? Yeah, you do.
Oh, sorry, everybody's giving us a hard time here.
It's okay, right?
Thanks for playing along with me.
I like to mix it up a little bit.
Sure, it's all good, yeah.
That's really great.
Yeah, it's fine.
That's awesome.
Yeah, I've had some fun with that over the years, especially with the Scottish accent, you know, before I was married and I was out, you know, meeting people.
And I remember sitting at a bar one time with a friend, and he was from South Africa.
And I said, hey, these two girls, let's go over and talk to them.
And I said, I'm going to let them think I'm from Scotland, and you can use your accent, right?
Yeah.
And then so I pull up to the bar and I said to the bartender, Larry, have you got some scotch up there?
Can you show me what you've got?
And they went there like this.
Oh, they heard something, right?
And I go, hey, Lassie, how are you doing today?
And I spoke to these girls for like 10 minutes, and then before we left, I said, now before I leave, you know, because I'm living over here in the United States, I want to try my American accent.
So I want your opinion of what you think.
And they said, okay, and I said, hi, my name's Kevin.
It's been a pleasure to meet you.
Have a nice night, right?
And they just went...
What?
It was fun.
Oh, that is great.
Yeah, it was good fun.
Oh, well, even Rhodey likes it, too.
He's really impressed.
Oh, Rhodey.
All right, so thanks for playing with me there.
That's all good, yeah, for sure.
You're a man of many talents, I will say that.
You have a lot of experience, you're willing to have a little fun here in the studio, plus you're offering real solutions for people to grow their own food, be more self-reliant, live in a healthier, more pro-survival type of fashion.
And I just want to say, to all those listening out there, I know we have a lot of people who are in government, actually, that watch this show, and who mostly agree with us.
I just want to say, What we're talking about here, this makes your community stronger.
If you're listening, if you work for the county, if you work for the city or a state or the federal government, this is what will keep America strong, is food redundancy.
Decentralize local food.
When we get into the next war, folks, whatever that's going to be, who knows what, invasion, nuclear war, grid down, cyber attack, EMP, whatever.
Believe me, it's going to be food grown in small local gardens that keeps America alive and strong.
And you're the man that's helping thousands of people do that.
My pleasure and my honor to help our country.
You're doing a great job with it.
Thank you very much.
I appreciate that.
And your company is appropriately named.
Yes, we are patriots.
Absolutely, we are patriots.
We are the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine, and Space Force, and we're all coming together to help save our nation, save our farms, save our communities.
With a particular set of skills.
With a particular set of skills, yeah.
Exactly.
Okay, patriotgreenproducts.com is the website, folks.
Be sure to check it out.
And you are shipping now?
Yes.
Because it's springtime.
What do you have?
Spring fling 15%.
What is that?
Yep, we've got 15% off.
We've got discounts right now.
And I just wanted to mention that we are also working on a program that I think you'll appreciate because it involves goldbacks.
Oh, really?
Because you're involving goldbacks.
So we're working on a program where we're going to be able to give folks discounts in gold.
So when they buy our products, we will give them gold back.
Wait a minute.
They're going to get goldbacks with the compost?
Yes.
Yes, they're going to get gold.
So in other words, this is a 15% discount.
So if we were offering a discount, you would pay your full price, but we'd give you 15% back in gold.
I've got some goldbacks right here.
I actually keep some here.
Here we go.
There.
Oh, they're beautiful, aren't they?
There's some goldbacks.
There's a whole set right there.
Yeah.
They're gorgeous.
Yeah, so we're working through that right now.
What about then also, can people buy in goldbacks?
Yes.
They can?
Yes, they can buy in goldbacks.
We're set up with The same organization.
I love that.
All right, so if I want to purchase compost, I can arrange to send you goldbacks.
Yes, absolutely.
We'd prefer that, too.
Yeah, no kidding.
Who doesn't want gold?
Get rid of the fiat currencies.
Oh, man, that's awesome.
That's great news.
Okay, well, you heard it here first, folks.
You can use your goldbacks.
You can either get goldbacks as kind of like loyalty points or I don't know what...
Yeah, it's a rebate.
Or you can use goldbacks to buy compost, which is grow food, which is better than gold.
Absolutely.
That's awesome.
That's what we're doing, yeah.
It's exciting times.
I wish we had Jim Gala on here right now, because he would be super excited to hear this.
He has some goldbacks as well.
So that's part of our program.
I bet you that if you go, I think he charges a little bit to tour the Galt's Landing, I bet you he would accept goldbacks for a pay.
Oh, absolutely he will.
I know he accepts crypto.
Yeah.
No, he will.
He'll accept gold.
Yeah.
He's carrying them around in his wallet right now.
I talked to him about this.
I said, look, let's do this.
Let's give our customers gold back.
Again, who doesn't want gold?
Yeah, exactly.
All right.
Well, then I guess we'll have to talk after the show because I might want to spend some gold backs and get a truckload of compost or something from you.
Always happy to work with you.
Anything you need.
I've got gold backs, but not enough compost.
Okay.
Maybe we can help each other out.
Sounds good.
I'll turn compost into gold, no problem.
Okay, awesome.
And I'll turn compost into food.
Exactly.
Okay, everybody wins.
How is this not awesome, folks?
I mean, God and Mother Nature provide the sunlight, the air, the water, the soil, the microbes, the seeds.
And if it wasn't for governments getting in the way, we would all be abundant, frankly, and healthier.
Yeah, you're absolutely right.
And remember, we the people are the government.
We are, and we need to start becoming the government again.
Those officials are working for us.
They should be.
They are public servants.
We're not the servants.
And plus, we know how to grow better food and more nutritious food and raise children better.
Exactly.
Look, the people are smarter than any organization, any one organization.
The people know what to do.
It's the decentralization of knowledge and power and resources that actually makes society strong.
Absolutely, it is.
All right.
Well, Kevin, it's been a pleasure.
Thank you for coming today.
Thank you.
Always enjoy.
Thanks for having fun with me here.
Yeah, no, it's fun.
Scottish accent and all that.
The website, folks, PatriotGreenProducts.com.
And what do they have to use for coupon codes?
Spring15?
Yep.
You get 15% off any one product.
That's Spring15.com.
Any products that we have right now.
Okay, there you go.
PatriotGreenProducts.com.
All right.
Well, thank you for watching today, everybody, and thank you for joining me, Kevin.
Thank you.
Thank you, folks.
Appreciate you.
All right.
Well, get busy, folks.
Growing food, and this is the way to do it.
And thank you for watching today.
I'm Mike Adams, the founder of Brighteon.com, and now I just want to get to my ranch and start growing.
Actually, it's getting me all motivated.
Good.
Thanks for watching today, and join me again.
More interviews, podcasts, and special reports at Brighteon.com.
Take care, everybody.
Thank you.
Springtime is here and we have special spring detox bundles now for you to help you save a bundle at healthrangerstore.com.
And the first bundle that's in stock available right now, I've got it on my desk here.
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So we test for lead, arsenic, cadmium, mercury, and other toxic elements as well, making sure that you get the cleanest and most nutritive foods, superfoods, and supplements that are available anywhere in the world.
So thank you for your support at HealthRangerStore.com.
Take advantage of these spring detox bundles.
They're good only while supplies last or through the end of March 2024.
And right now we've got supply of all of these.
I don't know how long it will last.
The supply chain is always a little dicey from time to time.
At the moment, we're looking pretty good.
So hopefully you can get your hands on these or as much as you need.
Thank you for your support.
HealthRangerStore.com.
Take care.
A global reset is coming.
And that's why I've recorded a new nine-hour audiobook.
It's called The Global Reset Survival Guide.
You can download it for free by subscribing to the naturalnews.com email newsletter, which is also free.
I'll describe how the monetary system fails.
I also cover emergency medicine and first aid and what to buy to help you avoid infections.
So download this guide.
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