Health Ranger - Mike Adams - The Most Important Chart in the World Reveals Why BILLIONS May Starve Aired: 2026-03-20 Duration: 01:02:22 === Four Forces Shaping Global Food Security (09:07) === [00:00:03] All right, welcome to this special report that focuses on what I believe to be the most important chart in the world right now. [00:00:11] And I'm going to show you this chart here. [00:00:12] Let's put it up on the screen. [00:00:13] It's called Four Forces Shaping Global Food Security. [00:00:18] I'm Mike Adams, the health ranger. [00:00:20] Welcome to this special analysis. [00:00:22] And these are sobering times for human civilization because we're on the verge of a collapse of potentially half the world's current population. [00:00:32] And we're going to cover why that is. [00:00:35] And this chart encapsulates it. [00:00:37] So I put this chart together myself. [00:00:40] I wanted to overlay the history of human population growth with the history of nitrogenous fertilizers, as well as the history of the Haber-Bosch process that uses natural gas to produce nitrogen-based fertilizers. [00:00:57] And then also overlaid with the global LNG capacity as that infrastructure was built out over the last several decades. [00:01:07] So bringing your attention to this chart, let's take a look at it here. [00:01:10] The blue line is the world population currently at about 8 billion. [00:01:15] And as you can see, the y-axis for the world population is on the right-hand side. [00:01:22] And you can see that roughly half the current population, about 4 billion people, existed in 1974. [00:01:32] And then before that, 2 billion people was, I don't know, right around 1915 or somewhere in that area. [00:01:41] So we have doubled and then doubled again in a little over one century. [00:01:49] And what made that possible? [00:01:52] And it's very clear that what made it possible is nitrogen-based fertilizers. [00:01:57] And so that's the green line showing you the use of nitrogen fertilizers, really beginning in the 1920s, but not taking off until the 1960s. [00:02:07] And it's just really exploding, as you can see. [00:02:09] Ammonia output from the Haber-Bosch process, yes, we're going to cover just a little bit of chemistry today. [00:02:15] That's the purple dotted line, and you can see where that began. [00:02:19] It was mostly just sort of mad science research for many decades. [00:02:23] It didn't really get widely used until the 1970s is when it really started taking off. [00:02:31] And that is what allowed natural gas to be effectively converted into nitrogen fertilizer. [00:02:37] And then, of course, the global LNG supply, because of the demand for fertilizers and other things, also, you know, gas turbines for generating electricity, etc. [00:02:48] LNG capacity really took off in the 1970s. [00:02:54] And then there was a massive burst, as you can see, in the late 1990s. [00:02:58] And that's mostly Qatar. [00:03:00] You know, Qatari LNG capacity was built out beginning in the 1990s. [00:03:07] And that's continuing to expand dramatically today. [00:03:10] So at the upper right-hand corner of this chart, you can see that we're at about 8 billion people right now. [00:03:17] We are at the peak that we've ever seen of nitrogen fertilizer production. [00:03:23] We're at the peak of, well, almost the peak of ammonia output, Haber-Bosch. [00:03:29] There was a dip over the last few years. [00:03:31] And I think that some of that dip is because of, well, the destruction of the Nord Stream pipeline, or pipelines plural, that took BASIF offline in Germany, which was one of the primary world producers of, well, urea and other products. [00:03:50] But that's why that dip is there. [00:03:52] And then the LNG capacity, as you can see, is continuing to grow. [00:03:59] And it would have grown except for the fact that Trump started a war with Iran. [00:04:07] And then Israel bombed Iran's, what's it called, the South Pars gas field. [00:04:12] And then Iran bombed Qatar Energy, which took 17% of Qatar Energy's gas production offline for five years, or three to five years, technically. [00:04:24] And remember, as I've covered separately, Qatar Energy has 14 gas trains. [00:04:31] And don't confuse that with choo choo trains. [00:04:34] That's not what they are. [00:04:35] It's a sequential process of liquefaction of natural gas. [00:04:39] They're called trains. [00:04:41] Qatar Energy has 14. [00:04:42] Like I said, two of them are now destroyed. [00:04:45] And they will take three to five years to replace. [00:04:48] That leaves 12. [00:04:50] The world can still survive on 12, even though Qatar Energy is responsible for 20 to 22 percent of the total exports of natural gas on the planet. [00:05:01] But the world can't survive the destruction of all 14. [00:05:07] So let's get back to some basic science here. [00:05:11] Your body is made of carbon, but also nitrogen. [00:05:15] You have a lot of nitrogen atoms in your body. [00:05:20] About 50% of the nitrogen that's in your body was created in a form through the Haber-Bosch process. [00:05:31] Half of the people on Earth today are only alive because of the abundant food crop yields that were enabled by the Haber-Bosch process. [00:05:43] Without this process, and thus without nitrogen-based fertilizers, the world, through pre-Haberbosch farming techniques, could only support a maximum of 4 billion people, not the current 8 billion people. [00:06:01] So it doesn't matter how much farm land you have. [00:06:04] You can have all the land in the world, but if you don't have nitrogen fertilizers through the Haber-Bosch process, which uses natural gas as the feedstock, then you can't support 8 billion people. [00:06:18] And the key takeaway from all of this is that the only reason we have 8 billion people is because of this process and because crop yields were dramatically increased through these fertilizers. [00:06:32] If you then take away the natural gas infrastructure of our world, which is exactly what's happening in the Middle East, it has begun. [00:06:41] If you take it away, then you revert the world to 1974 population levels as an estimate, let's say, which is only 4 billion people. [00:06:55] So what happens to the other 4 billion people who are currently alive and eating? [00:07:01] Oh, yeah, they starve and die because there's not enough food for them. [00:07:07] And actually, even the other 4 billion people have a very rough time of it because it's not like all the food goes to just half of the people. [00:07:17] Everybody is starving to some degree. [00:07:21] And then the question is just, you know, who survives and who dies? [00:07:27] And the odds of survival are about, you know, 50% if we have a worst case scenario of LNG destruction. [00:07:37] So let's look at population growth again here. [00:07:42] Despite widespread famines over the last century in Africa and in parts of Asia, etc., and the so-called 1918 influenza pandemic, despite all of that, the human population has exploded over the last hundred years. [00:07:59] And we'll say that right before 1930, the population was about 2 billion. [00:08:04] It could be like 1915, or I'm sorry, 1920, 25, 1930, somewhere around there, it was about 2 billion people. [00:08:14] And then, like I said, 1974, it doubled to 4 billion people. [00:08:19] And then from there, it doubled 8 billion people in 2022. [00:08:24] And today, it's actually over 8 billion people, but I tend to round it off. [00:08:29] So every year, right now, the global population growth is a little under 1% right now, but it has been over 1% in previous years. [00:08:42] The world is very hungry for energy to produce the food. [00:08:48] And when food is affordable and abundant, then people, they make babies. [00:08:54] Especially when food is very affordable, then they make more babies because, you know, having kids is expensive because of food and other things. [00:09:02] And so expensive food causes people to have fewer children, and cheap food causes people to have more children overall. === Haber-Bosch and Population Growth (15:44) === [00:09:11] Now, the top two countries in the world with the highest population are, guess what? [00:09:17] China and India. [00:09:18] China and India, each around, let's say, 1.4 billion people. [00:09:24] The way they got there is that through the 19, let's say 60s and 70s and 80s, they were among the first in the world to really embrace aggressive use of nitrogen-based fertilizers. [00:09:39] And as a result, their populations exploded. [00:09:42] And they continue to maintain very high populations today. [00:09:47] And that's despite China's previous controls that, you know, it's one China policy. [00:09:51] The population still grew anyway. [00:09:54] Now, when it comes to growing food, you might wonder why is nitrogen so important? [00:09:58] It's the limiting molecule. [00:10:01] Well, I mean, nitrogen is an element by itself, but in its fertilizer form, it's a more complex molecule. [00:10:08] And that's the limiting factor in soils. [00:10:11] And everything, every plant, every crop needs nitrogen. [00:10:15] It's a fundamental building block of proteins and DNA, amino acids, everything. [00:10:23] But you might wonder, well, wait a second, isn't the air mostly nitrogen? [00:10:28] You know, the air we breathe. [00:10:29] And the answer is yes. [00:10:31] It's about 78%, 79% nitrogen. [00:10:36] However, that's in the form of nitrogen gas or N2, which is not accessible to plants. [00:10:44] Because if you know anything about chemistry, the N and the other N, that is N2, they are bound together by a triple bond, you know, a chemical bond or triple bond in chemistry. [00:10:57] That bond is very hard to break, and that's why plants can't just pull nitrogen out of the air. [00:11:02] So plants have to have nitrogen in a fixed form, which would be nitrate, which combines nitrogen with oxygen, or ammonium, which combines nitrogen with hydrogen, right, NH4. [00:11:18] So that's why you had throughout history biological forms of nitrogen, such as manure or bat guano, which don't laugh because bat guano fed the world for a long time until they ran out of bat guano. [00:11:33] And also, you know, composts and things like that. [00:11:37] So by about the late 19th century, the world was running out of bat guano. [00:11:44] There's islands off of Peru called the Chincha Islands. [00:11:50] And they are bat islands and they were filled with bat guano. [00:11:54] And then all that guano got harvested and spread on crops all over the world and basically exhausted all the bat guano from the islands. [00:12:06] And again, this is like 1890, 1895. [00:12:12] And at that time, scientists realized that they were going to have to come up with some other way, a synthetic way, or an artificially controllable way to create nitrogen in forms that plants could use. [00:12:28] And so research began on what then became the Haber-Bosch process. [00:12:35] Now, what's interesting is that in the early 1900s, the Haber-Bosch process created synthetic ammonia, and most of it was used for the military industrial complex. [00:12:48] Yeah, not for crops. [00:12:50] So it was used to create munitions because, you know, it can explode, right, under the right conditions. [00:12:57] It can explode. [00:12:57] You know, you mix it with saltpeter, etc., and you get explosions. [00:13:02] Only after World War II was the Haber-Bosch process actually used predominantly for crops. [00:13:10] And only after World War II did the percentage of the world's population that was fed by synthetic fertilizer begin to really expand. [00:13:22] So whereas in 1920, only about 10% of the world relied on the Haber-Bosch process for the nitrogen in order to eat, that number had grown to about 40% of the world's population by 1980. [00:13:38] And today, it's about 50% of the world's population. [00:13:42] So again, without the Haber-Bosch process, you would lose about half of the current population of roughly 8 billion people. [00:13:51] So what's important to understand, and I hope I've been clear about this, is that the Haber-Bosch process allows the same amount of land to produce a lot more food. [00:14:00] So for example, in India, the yields of wheat tripled over a 20-year period between 1965 and 1985 because they simply use aggressive nitrogen fertilizers on the wheat crops. [00:14:15] And in China, their fertilizer use increased 800% between the years 1961 and 2019. [00:14:25] That's what allowed their population to grow from about 660 million to 1.4 billion, which is roughly the population of China today. [00:14:34] So, again, nearly 50% of the nitrogen found in your body right now comes from the Haber-Bosch process. [00:14:43] Now, just a little bit of chemistry. [00:14:45] The Haber-Bosch process, and I know you're going to get sick of me saying that name because we have to say it 5,000 times in this report. [00:14:54] But this process is clearly the single most important chemical reaction that has ever been discovered and commercialized in the history of human civilization. [00:15:06] That's unquestionable. [00:15:09] And the way it works, it's pretty simple. [00:15:11] It pulls nitrogen out of the air. [00:15:13] I mean, actually, that's done with, you know, pumps, just air compressors and just permeable membranes. [00:15:21] And then you combine that with hydrogen or H2 under high pressure. [00:15:26] It takes about 200 to 300 atmospheres of pressure and very high temperatures. [00:15:30] You got to go to something like 500 degrees Celsius, very hot. [00:15:36] And then you introduce an iron catalyst in this process. [00:15:39] And guess what? [00:15:40] You get ammonia, NH3. [00:15:43] NH3. [00:15:45] NH3, then now we're in business. [00:15:48] Now we can use ammonia to make all kinds of other secondary and tertiary products that become fertilizer. [00:15:57] But you have to have, again, high heat, high pressure, and a source of nitrogen, which is just the atmosphere. [00:16:04] But then you have to have hydrogen also. [00:16:07] So where do you get the hydrogen? [00:16:09] Well, of course, hydrocarbons, hydrocarbons. [00:16:13] So hence, natural gas is the easiest form of this. [00:16:16] And that's why the Haber-Bosch process consumes anywhere from 3 to 5% of the world's entire natural gas production right now. [00:16:25] And so, oh, by the way, it's named after Fritz Haber, who was a Nazi scientist, okay, just in case you're curious. [00:16:34] And then Karl Bosch, decades later, is the one who created the high-pressure industrial chemistry that made it all feasible. [00:16:43] But it was Fritz Haber, you know, who demonstrated the ammonia synthesis in the first place. [00:16:50] And then he got a patent on it, and that was purchased by BASIF, B-A-S-F, which, of course, is one of the corporations that was ultimately tied to Adolf Hitler and the Third Reich, etc. [00:17:06] Although that's kind of a tangential point here. [00:17:10] Karl Bosch was awarded the Nobel Prize, by the way, in 1931. [00:17:15] And then after World War II, agricultural deployment of this really took off. [00:17:20] And from the 1960s, it was called the Green Revolution. [00:17:24] And that doesn't mean the same thing as we talk about today, like green energy. [00:17:29] It wasn't a climate change cult back then. [00:17:32] The Green Revolution just meant they knew how to grow more food and how to avoid mass famine. [00:17:38] And that's how, you know, by 1974, we had 4 billion people on the planet. [00:17:45] All because of that. [00:17:46] Well, half because of that, let's say. [00:17:49] Now, an interesting piece of history is that China figured out how to do this with coal rather than natural gas. [00:17:54] So you can get H2 from coal and then use that in the Haber-Bosch process. [00:18:00] So you can have different inputs. [00:18:01] They can be natural gas or they can be coal. [00:18:03] Natural gas is more efficient and it's cleaner. [00:18:06] So by 2018, you had 230 million tons of ammonia per year produced by the Haber-Bosch process. [00:18:18] About 99% or more of the global ammonia became synthetic. [00:18:26] And then by 2021, you have a process then that feeds about 4 billion people around the world. [00:18:33] And now, more recently, there are experiments in using electrolysis-based H2 combined with the nitrogen, the atmospheric nitrogen, to produce ammonia through renewable energy. [00:18:47] However, that is not commercially viable yet because it's too expensive. [00:18:51] But I just want you to be aware there are alternatives to natural gas. [00:18:56] It's just that your food would cost 400% more. [00:19:00] Oh boy, right? [00:19:01] If you thought beef was expensive now, just wait until the fertilizer is created with solar panels. [00:19:09] Then it's $100 a pound, you know? [00:19:12] That's where this could go. [00:19:14] So some interesting tidbits. [00:19:16] I mentioned the triple bond of nitrogen for N2. [00:19:19] That triple bond is very difficult to break. [00:19:21] That's why you have to have so much energy put into it at such high pressures and also high temperature. [00:19:27] And that's where you use the natural gas. [00:19:32] You put that energy into the process to break that bond. [00:19:35] And it turns out that every ton of ammonia that you get out of this requires about 35 gigajoules of energy. [00:19:43] Gigajoules. [00:19:45] So anyway, yeah, it's a very energy-intensive process. [00:19:48] So good luck solarizing that, right? [00:19:51] So of course, natural gas is the most efficient way to produce ammonia synthetically. [00:19:56] And as a result, every time that we've had destruction of natural gas infrastructure, such as, for example, the destruction of the Nord Stream pipelines, what year was that? [00:20:09] Was that 2022, I think? [00:20:12] You saw, of course, fertilizer prices skyrocket right after that because gas prices skyrocket, especially in Europe. [00:20:20] And then right now, because of the, well, the destruction of two of the gas trains at the Ras Lafan gas facility in Qatar, you're already seeing prices of urea and ammonia drastically, sharply increase. [00:20:37] We also saw price increases after the 1973 OPEC oil embargo, by the way. [00:20:42] So there's a strong history of this. [00:20:45] When gas is cut off, fertilizer prices skyrocket. [00:20:50] Now, let's shift to Qatar. [00:20:52] Qatar is just to the southwest of part of the Persian Gulf, and underneath the Persian Gulf is this massive gas reservoir that Qatar calls the Northfield. [00:21:09] It's thought to be the largest gas reservoir on Earth, and it's said to contain 51 trillion cubic meters of gas, 51 trillion. [00:21:20] So at current levels of consumption, there's enough gas there for about 50 years. [00:21:26] That's not forever, but it's still a long ways off. [00:21:30] And maybe by that time, we would have cold fusion or hot fusion or something else. [00:21:36] Until then, we've got 50 years of gas, except for the fact that, of course, Trump started this war with Iran, and then Israel attacked Iran, and then Iran reciprocated by attacking Qatar Energy, and now it's forced major every day. [00:21:52] And so there are different trains of LNG that were constructed by Qatar. [00:21:57] Train 1 was built in 1996. [00:22:00] And if you go back to the chart that I'm showing here, you'll see that right around 96, gas production starts to really increase. [00:22:07] And that's because of Qatar. [00:22:09] Trains 2 and 3 were built in 97 and 98, but they're very small trains, by the way. [00:22:15] They're only 3.3 MTPA, which is million tons per annum, per year, million tons per year. [00:22:23] So those are 3.3 million tons per year, which is, it's not tiny, but it's nothing like what they've been building more recently. [00:22:30] In 2004, they started building trains 4 and 5. [00:22:35] And then, let's see, 2010, train 6, which could produce 15.6 million tons a year. [00:22:43] So these are big-ass trains. [00:22:45] And then, let's see, train 7, 2011, it goes on. [00:22:52] And now they're expanding the trains, the Northfield East expansion. [00:22:57] They're trying to expand trains 1 and 4 to be able to produce 32 million tons per year instead of just 3.3. [00:23:05] So that's a 10x expansion if they're able to complete that. [00:23:09] That's supposed to be completed by the year 2030. [00:23:12] But that's going to be impossible if Iran is launching missiles at them the whole time for obvious reasons. [00:23:20] So Qatar Energy also, they have a fertilizer company called Qatar Fertilizer Company. [00:23:26] Not shocking that that's the name. [00:23:29] It's also known as QAFCO or Kafco, okay, Kafco. [00:23:37] That produces about 3.8 million tons of ammonia per year and about 5.8 million tons of urea per year. [00:23:46] It's exported to over 20 different countries to be used as fertilizer, of course. [00:23:53] Saudi Arabia has its company called Sabic Agri-Nutrients. [00:23:58] They also export ammonia and urea because it's an obvious way to add value to the gas that you're able to tap into relatively inexpensively in that region of the world. [00:24:08] So right now, Iran supplies about 10 or 11% of global urea exports. [00:24:16] That's Iran. [00:24:18] And the UAE, they have a company called Fertiglobe, like Fertile Globe. [00:24:24] They produce about 5 million tons per year of urea. [00:24:30] And they export that to countries as well. [00:24:33] And there's other production in Egypt and Algeria as well. [00:24:36] So you get the picture here, right? [00:24:39] So these countries, whether it's Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Iran, Egypt, even UAE, they don't just produce gas, they don't just produce oil. [00:24:48] They also produce urea and ammonia that are used in fertilizers. === Exporting Fertilizers to the World (02:01) === [00:24:55] So here's what you need to understand about all of this. [00:24:57] Let's look at the supply chain. [00:24:59] And, you know, I'm sorry to get into the weeds on this, but we all need to understand this. [00:25:03] So first you have natural gas that's extracted from the so-called North Field, which is the same field that's under the Persian Gulf, the same field that Iran taps into. [00:25:13] So that's the gas field upon which Western civilization depends, upon which essentially half the current population also depends. [00:25:22] Then you have the LNG trains at Ras Lafan in Qatar that liquefy the gas to export it to other countries. [00:25:32] So that's just revenue from, you know, revenue from shipping gas out that that gas is then used in other countries like Taiwan and South Korea, Japan, or Italy, Greece, whatever, in order to either generate electricity with gas turbines or to be used by industry. [00:25:50] At the same time, these co-located fertilizer plants such as CAFCO and SABIC and Fertiglobe, they use the same natural gas as a feedstock for producing hydrogen for the Haberbosch synthesis process. [00:26:06] And that results in production of ammonia and then eventually urea, that's shipped all over the world to put on crops, you know, for the rice in India, for the corn in Iowa, for the soybean farms in Brazil, right? [00:26:22] It's shipped all over the world. [00:26:24] And then as a result, the crop yields rise, and then that supports cheaper food so that people have more babies, which increases the world's population. [00:26:34] That's how we got to 8 billion people. [00:26:36] And then as those people demand more food, because everybody wants all-you-can-eat buffets all day long, then the demand for food creates more demand for more fertilizer and more gas and more LNG infrastructure to be built up in Qatar and Iran, etc. === War Threatens Energy Infrastructure (07:29) === [00:26:56] And it's all just jolly and great until there's a war from the Zionists who have decided to burn down the whole world because they think that God's going to save them if they just kill enough people or something or explode enough temples. [00:27:15] They're insane. [00:27:17] So they've decided just by themselves, the insane lunatic and end-of-days Zionists, they've decided they want to burn down the world. [00:27:25] And the easiest way for them to do that, in their minds, is to destroy this gas field. [00:27:33] Or destroy, you know, Iran's capabilities and infrastructure, knowing that Iran would retaliate by destroying Qatar, and then knowing that Trump would retaliate by blowing up the whole damn thing, which is exactly what Trump has threatened to do in his own post. [00:27:47] He said he's going to nuke the gas field. [00:27:50] Now, he didn't use the word nuke. [00:27:51] I just want to be clear. [00:27:54] He referred to some big, horrible weapon. [00:27:56] I forgot the exact words that he used, but in my mind, it seemed like he's indicating a nuke. [00:28:01] And it would take a nuke. [00:28:03] It would take a deep nuke because the gas field is under the Persian Gulf. [00:28:09] And I would imagine that if you nuke the Northfield gas field, aren't you also nuking every ship in the Persian Gulf? [00:28:18] Aren't you nuking the entire freaking Gulf and you're destroying, what is it, 3,000 ships or whatever the number is that's stranded there right now? [00:28:26] Or maybe it's not 3,000. [00:28:29] Maybe it's 1,600, whatever. [00:28:31] But those ships can't just be rebuilt overnight. [00:28:34] And they also have crews on those ships. [00:28:37] Is Trump just going to nuke the Persian Gulf and just spread radiation everywhere? [00:28:45] Kill all the people on all the ships, destroy all the ships, all the carriers, which, again, take years to build, and nuke the field, destroy all the gas in some kind of giant, you know, Earth-gaping explosion, I guess, that could be seen, you know, from Saturn. [00:29:04] It's like, what happened to Earth? [00:29:06] Oh, some dumbass nuked the Northfield. [00:29:10] Oh, man, that explosion reached all the way, like halfway to the moon. [00:29:14] That's, whoo. [00:29:16] Well, you know, not really, it wouldn't reach that far, but it would destroy human civilization as we know it. [00:29:23] That's not an exaggeration. [00:29:25] It would destroy human civilization as we know it. [00:29:27] And Trump is threatening to do it. [00:29:30] And it's clear that Israel is telling him to do it. [00:29:34] And I guess the question is, how far will Trump go in this delusional obedience to an end times fanatical cult known as Zionism that literally wants to see the end of the world? [00:29:50] See? [00:29:50] You understand the problem now? [00:29:53] Because they have the means to do it. [00:29:55] Because Western civilization, well, not just Western, I mean modern civilization, the whole world, has been built on this house of cards. [00:30:08] You could call it like the Haber-Bosch house of cards, which is dependent on just a couple of key companies in the Middle East, largely, that themselves depend on just a few key components, such as the cryogenic heat exchangers, which have a three to four year lead time to build back just one of them. [00:30:29] And Qatar Energy says that two have been destroyed so far out of 14. [00:30:35] So you see why this chart that I'm showing you here is so important. [00:30:40] Because if Israel succeeds in its goal to burn down the world by destroying, you know, destroying the hydrocarbon infrastructure, and this might be Trump's goal as well. [00:30:53] I mean, he ran Operation Warp Speed, which was also a depopulation agenda. [00:30:57] But if Trump is on board with the Zionist agenda to cull the human population and kill off half of the currently living humans, roughly, this is by far the most highly leveraged way to achieve that. [00:31:15] You don't even have to have a nuclear war. [00:31:18] You just nuke the natural gas that feeds 50% of the world. [00:31:25] And then, and then, notice that 50% of the people in the world don't just keel over dead the next day, do they? [00:31:34] No, it's not an instant thing. [00:31:37] They die from starvation, from social upheaval, from civil war, from revolt, from economic collapse, from chaos, anarchy. [00:31:48] They die from, yeah, starvation, but also mass violence. [00:31:53] Because the world crumbles. [00:31:55] The world goes into Mad Max mode at that point, with possibly a few exceptions. [00:32:01] Might be a good time to live on, you know, Papua New Guinea, let's say, where they still grow some of their food, or maybe the high-altitude mountains in the Andes, where I visited the Indians there who grow papas, you know, potatoes with wooden plows pulled by oxen. [00:32:24] And, you know, it's not a fancy life. [00:32:26] Don't get me wrong. [00:32:27] They don't have internet, but they don't need fossil fuels either. [00:32:31] So, you know, there are a few populations, like, you know, the Amazonian tribes, whatever. [00:32:36] There are a few populations around the world that can survive without fossil fuels and without Haberbosh, et cetera. [00:32:42] But for most of what you think of as human civilization, the big cities, the modern countries, everything from China, United States, to, you know, India, Turkey, Australia, Canada. [00:32:56] Canada uses a lot of energy just for heating, obviously. [00:32:59] Same thing with most of Western Europe. [00:33:02] And these big cities, London, New York, whatever, Auckland, I mean, Tokyo, these cities are going to fall if this scenario becomes reality. [00:33:14] And we're already two out of 14 of the way there. [00:33:18] So this isn't some doomsday, what-if scenario of, you know, no, it's crazy. [00:33:27] It could never happen. [00:33:28] It's happening. [00:33:30] It's happening. [00:33:32] It's already happening. [00:33:34] I'm not even talking about, oh, maybe someday, what if someone lost their minds and started destroying this infrastructure? [00:33:40] No, it happened yesterday. [00:33:44] That's in the past. [00:33:46] I'm talking about the repercussions of this. [00:33:49] And I'm trying to help you understand that without all these things that we just talked about, again, I'm going to say Haberbosh again, without that, without natural gas that's cheap and abundant, without the infrastructure, without the cryogenic heat exchangers. [00:34:06] Literally, our world collapses to half its current population. [00:34:11] And the key takeaway from this is that I believe that's their goal. [00:34:17] And so does Michael Jan. [00:34:18] He agrees with me on this point because I just interviewed him about this. [00:34:22] He says that's the goal. [00:34:23] It's obvious, he says. [00:34:25] Yeah, it is obvious. === The Goal of Reducing Humanity (06:14) === [00:34:26] That's the goal. [00:34:29] This war is not an accident. [00:34:31] The destruction of energy infrastructure is not an accident. [00:34:34] This is all being deliberately done using the cover story of a war. [00:34:40] But the real goal is to achieve global human depopulation on a rapid scale to try to kill one out of every two people. [00:34:49] Or maybe if they're not as successful, they might kill one out of every four people. [00:34:54] But that's still 2 billion people. [00:34:57] And I've estimated, with the help of AI agents, that this could kill from 2 to 4 billion people. [00:35:05] So anywhere from 25% to 50% of the world's population, roughly speaking. [00:35:10] Now, if we lose 2 billion people, then we go back to 1999 population levels. [00:35:16] Do you remember 1999? [00:35:18] There was more parking available in 1999. [00:35:21] The freeways in LA were not as bad. [00:35:25] And, you know, you could still get around some cities in India that are now incomprehensible. [00:35:34] Or even Manila in the Philippines, for example, right? [00:35:37] That was 1999. [00:35:39] And if you go back to 1974 with only 4 billion people, hey, life was actually pretty good in the 1970s. [00:35:47] A guy could afford a house, could raise a family on a single income, and have a house and a yard and a career and a nine-to-five job. [00:35:57] You didn't even have to work extra hours. [00:36:00] Because food was affordable. [00:36:02] The money had, of course, a lot more value at that time. [00:36:06] Prices of everything you needed to buy were dirt cheap. [00:36:08] Even inflation adjusted, everything was dirt cheap. [00:36:12] You could buy a car. [00:36:14] You could buy a giant, like a station wagon that had so much room, it's practically, today it would be called an RV. [00:36:23] But in the 70s, it was just called a station wagon. [00:36:27] Like, you could have sleepovers in the back of that thing. [00:36:32] And there were no seatbelts and no airbags and no anti-lock brakes, man. [00:36:39] If you were going down the highway and something went wrong, your whole family just died on impact. [00:36:43] That's the 1970s. [00:36:46] But living was cheap. [00:36:48] Food was cheap. [00:36:48] You go to the grocery store, oh my God. [00:36:51] They had everything. [00:36:54] Dirt cheap. [00:36:56] Those days are gone. [00:36:59] The currency has lost its value. [00:37:01] Food prices are skyrocketing. [00:37:03] People can't afford to live. [00:37:05] They can't afford a house. [00:37:07] You know, a typical young person can't afford a house. [00:37:10] The jobs are being lost. [00:37:13] And the powers that be are actually engineering mass death of billions of human beings because they don't need us anymore. [00:37:24] And why don't they need us anymore? [00:37:26] Because of the rise of AI and then soon AI robots. [00:37:32] That's why. [00:37:34] Because humans were exploited by governments and corporations for all these decades to basically pillage human cognition and labor and to pay those workers the least amount possible to get their cognition and labor for the benefit of usually large, evil globalist corporations or large, evil genocidal governments. [00:38:02] Now those same evil governments and corporations have come to realize that they just don't need as many humans anymore. [00:38:09] And if you ask them, well, how many humans do you think you need? [00:38:13] The answer is only about half. [00:38:15] Only about half because massive layoffs at Amazon, at Meta, at, I don't know. [00:38:23] Just look at the layoff news. [00:38:24] Every day, it's another 10,000, 20,000 people being laid off from major corporations. [00:38:29] They're cutting humans like crazy and replacing them with what? [00:38:34] With AI. [00:38:37] And then those unemployed humans are sitting out there unable to get jobs because their skill sets are no longer better than the AI software systems. [00:38:46] I mean, I know I'm an AI developer. [00:38:48] I work with AI every day. [00:38:51] And it's absolutely smarter than most humans. [00:38:53] No question about it. [00:38:55] People say, well, you know, it's not AGI yet. [00:38:58] It can't do everything a human can do. [00:39:01] I guarantee you it can do everything a human can do in a desk job because humans don't do that much in desk jobs, it turns out. [00:39:10] Yes, it can write code. [00:39:11] It can do spreadsheets. [00:39:11] It can do all this stuff. [00:39:12] It can make decisions. [00:39:14] It can read emails and whatever. [00:39:16] It can make presentations. [00:39:17] Heck, this chart I've been showing you during this podcast, this was created by my AI agents. [00:39:23] And they also did the research, etc., right? [00:39:25] So that would have taken me days. [00:39:27] Now, you know, it took 20 minutes or whatever to put that together. [00:39:30] So yes, AI is replacing humans. [00:39:33] Soon, AI robots will replace human labor. [00:39:37] And all these displaced humans, they're sitting out there, you know, increasing in number, collecting. [00:39:47] maybe welfare, food stamps, unemployment benefits, whatever. [00:39:51] And the governments of the world are looking at this phenomenon here and realizing that, hey, there's no way that we can afford to keep these people around because we can't just pay them all universal basic incomes. [00:40:05] We can't just have a giant welfare society where we pay people who don't pay taxes because they're not working. [00:40:11] We can't just pay them to just eat and just buy stuff all day because they don't work. [00:40:22] They don't produce anything. [00:40:23] You can't have a whole society based on just printing money and handing it out to consumers who just consume and consume and consume. [00:40:31] And their only output is like bowel movements. [00:40:34] That is not a sustainable economy. [00:40:37] So what have the governments already figured out? === Engineered Famine and Robot Rise (04:46) === [00:40:40] Oh, kill them off. [00:40:44] Kill off 4 billion people. [00:40:46] How do you do that? [00:40:48] You start a war. [00:40:50] And then you make sure that during the war, you destroy the energy infrastructure that feeds half the planet. [00:40:57] Boom. [00:40:58] There you go. [00:40:59] And that's exactly what's happening. [00:41:02] And then that makes way for the rise of the robots. [00:41:06] You see? [00:41:08] It all makes sense, doesn't it? [00:41:10] I mean, once you understand how evil the globalists are and the governments and so on, and why Trump is just a puppet playing along with this whole thing, that even the conflict between Israel and Iran isn't entirely honest. [00:41:26] It's also part of the global theater that's designed to achieve the result of mass human culling, global depopulation. [00:41:37] And during all of this, by the way, I'm sure they'll find ways to kill off more than just 4 billion people. [00:41:42] You know, they can have cyber attacks on the power grid. [00:41:46] Or they can just shut down the power grid and say it was a cyber attack. [00:41:49] Oh, I mean, Trump just managed to shut off the whole power grid of Cuba. [00:41:55] If they can do it in Cuba, they can do it in New York City. [00:41:58] They can do it in Chicago. [00:41:59] They can just shut down the power grids and just let everybody die. [00:42:05] And if they do that in enough cities with a long enough duration, you get what? [00:42:10] You get 90% die-off rate, don't you? [00:42:14] Before very long, just a few months. [00:42:16] So through those methods, you know, engineered famine, engineered destruction of the natural gas infrastructure that feeds the fertilizer process, and engineered wars and engineered revolts and engineered uprisings and violence, etc., they can probably kill off maybe, I'm just guessing, 7 billion out of 8 billion people, leaving only 1 billion remaining, roughly, give or take. [00:42:46] And that's probably the plan. [00:42:48] I don't think they'll succeed at that level, but they'll try. [00:42:54] Heck, they probably thought that COVID would kill a lot more people than it did, and they were very disappointed. [00:42:59] And that may be why we're enduring all this right now. [00:43:01] Maybe they thought that COVID would kill a few billion, and they're like, dang it. [00:43:05] You know, Bill Gates is up there. [00:43:07] Depopulation didn't work. [00:43:10] Let's try bombing, you know, let's try destroying the food infrastructure. [00:43:15] I'm not saying that he's involved in this particular process. [00:43:20] I was mocking a voice of a different globalist right there. [00:43:23] But Bill Gates definitely wants depopulation. [00:43:27] He's advocated it for a long time. [00:43:30] I mean, he's invested in depopulation technologies, like birth control for men, where they blast your scrotum with ultrasound to kill your balls. [00:43:43] That's an actual Bill and Melinda Gates-funded technology that they experimented on with African men. [00:43:50] Like, here, put your balls in this thing. [00:43:53] What does it do? [00:43:54] Oh, you'll find out. [00:43:59] What? [00:44:00] My balls. [00:44:01] Oh, my balls, which is a line from idiocracy, right? [00:44:04] So that was a Bill Gates technology. [00:44:07] So don't tell me that Bill Gates doesn't want to push depopulation, okay? [00:44:12] Of course he does. [00:44:14] But this is how they can get to somewhere between a population of maybe on the high side, if they're not very successful, maybe they'll have 6 billion people left. [00:44:24] And if they are very successful, maybe they'll have 1 billion people left. [00:44:27] But some of you, some of you, you know about the stones, right? [00:44:33] You know, the hedge stones or whatever they're called, that are calling for a global population of only half a billion people. [00:44:40] That 500 million is the correct sustainable number, you know, according to these stones, whatever they are. [00:44:47] So maybe that's the goal. [00:44:49] How will they get there? [00:44:51] Well, they would have to add in like Terminator drones or something, you know? [00:44:56] Or just mass chemical poisoning, VX nerve gas for every bus station or whatever they plan to do. [00:45:04] But maybe that's their plan to get the world down to 500 million people. [00:45:09] If that happens, there's going to be, you know, you're going to walk around the world and you're going to say, wow, what civilization used to be here? [00:45:22] And why did they produce so much plastic? [00:45:25] You know, that's going to be the number one question. === Surviving the Big Die-Off (02:10) === [00:45:27] Look at these landfill sites. [00:45:29] My God. [00:45:31] You're going to find, you know, concrete overpasses, you know, concrete structures. [00:45:38] The wood frame houses won't last very long. [00:45:40] They'll all collapse within a few decades. [00:45:42] But concrete structures will be around for a long time and whatever concrete homes are out there, they will withstand the test of time. [00:45:50] But it's going to look like Earth was hit by a giant meteor or something if we only have 500 million people left. [00:46:02] Because we built an infrastructure on this planet for 8 billion people with all the roads, and all the houses and all the highways and whatever. [00:46:14] The parks, the parking lots, the golf courses, whatever. [00:46:21] I wouldn't mind nature taking back the golf courses, just to be clear. [00:46:26] If you're a golfer, you might not like that comment, but those things are so toxic with all the weed killer. [00:46:31] I'm like, come on. [00:46:32] Oh, my God. [00:46:33] You're walking around in toxic cancer chemicals all day long. [00:46:37] They call it a manicured green. [00:46:40] Yeah, it's a cancer-cured green is actually what that is. [00:46:45] So bottom line, now you know. [00:46:48] Now you know. [00:46:50] And of course, you know, food storage can help you get through a small part of this, but not the whole thing. [00:46:57] You're going to need to learn to grow food if you don't already know how to do it in order to survive this. [00:47:02] I should mention that my company, HealthRangerStore.com, we sell heirloom garden seeds, non-GMO heirloom garden seeds, and we actually have a customer appreciation sale going on right now. [00:47:17] We also have long-term storable food. [00:47:20] Not enough to get you through 10 years, probably, but enough to get you by through the big die-off, if that's what happens. [00:47:27] You can find all of it at healthrangerstore.com/slash appreciate healthrangerstore.com forward slash appreciate. === Preparing with Seeds and Food (04:48) === [00:47:37] And there you'll see some of what we have available right now. [00:47:41] A lot of ranger buckets, mega buckets, mini buckets, number 10 cans with freeze-dried food, all of it subjected to laboratory testing for glyphosate and heavy metals and microbiology and salmonella, etc. [00:47:56] We do extensive lab testing, as you probably already know. [00:47:58] So, if you want storable food, if you want iodine, if you want survival supplies, if you want garden seeds, etc. [00:48:05] Yeah, you can get them from our store while supplies last. [00:48:09] And I will tell you that sales are basically right now tripling from what they would normally be pre-war. [00:48:18] They're just about triple right now. [00:48:20] So, that means we're going to, you know, our supplies are not going to last forever. [00:48:26] But we have it for right now, you know, until people buy everything we have. [00:48:31] And we're not raising the prices, just to be clear. [00:48:33] You know, we don't do profiteering. [00:48:36] We're keeping our prices the same, but we will have to raise them with the next production lot because, of course, our input prices are going up. [00:48:45] But for the current lots that we have sitting literally on pallets, on pallet racks in the warehouse, I should probably shoot a video and show you that. [00:48:54] But those are at the current price, which is really 2025 pricing. [00:49:01] But what you're about to see later on this year is crazy pricing because that's what's going to happen to the global food supply. [00:49:08] Everything's going to get very, very expensive and eventually scarce. [00:49:13] So that's the big picture, folks. [00:49:18] I hope you found this educational, maybe a little bit entertaining or frightening. [00:49:23] I don't know. [00:49:24] I'm not here to scare you. [00:49:25] That's not my goal. [00:49:26] I'm here to educate you and to explain what's happening so that you can survive it. [00:49:32] Because remember this, remember this. [00:49:35] Let's suppose the globalists do kill seven out of eight billion people. [00:49:39] Now, obviously, that would be global genocide at a scale that has never been seen before that we know of, at least not on this planet. [00:49:51] But it's probably not that hard to be in the remaining 1 billion people. [00:49:57] And I don't mean to oversimplify this, but if you're listening to this podcast, you're already more informed than at least 999 out of 1,000 people, considering just mainstream people, right? [00:50:13] So you're already in the top sliver of the top 1%. [00:50:19] You're easily going to make it through this if you've got some brains and some knowledge and some extra supplies and you know how to grow some food, etc. [00:50:28] You can make it through this. [00:50:30] It's not that hard for people who are informed and adaptable. [00:50:34] And by definition, that's you. [00:50:36] If you weren't informed and adaptable, you wouldn't be listening to this. [00:50:40] So you're actually going to be okay. [00:50:42] But the world's not going to be okay. [00:50:45] Because most people have no idea that this is coming. [00:50:49] They have no idea. [00:50:50] And you just say hobber bosh to people and they're like, oh, what is this? [00:50:54] Freaking chemistry class. [00:50:56] Nitrogen bonds. [00:50:58] Please, God, no. [00:51:01] You just try to talk about this. [00:51:03] The average person is oblivious to the events of the world and how those events will impact them. [00:51:11] They are oblivious. [00:51:12] So they don't know that two LNG trains have been destroyed. [00:51:19] They're like, what are LNG trains? [00:51:20] What are you talking about? [00:51:22] Are those little choo-choo trains we ride at the zoo with our kids? [00:51:26] What are those things? [00:51:27] No. [00:51:28] No. [00:51:29] The whole world. depends on these trains. [00:51:33] Oh, okay. [00:51:35] See, people don't even know that, right? [00:51:37] People have no idea where their food comes from, where energy comes from. [00:51:42] They have no idea what's happening in the Middle East. [00:51:44] The mainstream media isn't telling them. [00:51:47] So they're the ones that are going to be the most susceptible to the culling because they have no information. [00:51:57] They have no supplies. [00:51:58] They have no skills. [00:52:00] They have no knowledge. [00:52:02] And for people in that group, yeah, they're not going to do well. [00:52:06] But for you, you're not in that group by definition. [00:52:09] So I'm not here to scare you. [00:52:12] I'm here to help you understand what's about to happen and to understand that you are surrounded by people who do not know what's going to happen. [00:52:22] And when you try to tell them, they don't want to hear it. [00:52:25] They don't. === Save Lives With Knowledge (09:55) === [00:52:26] I mean, try it. [00:52:28] You'll see. [00:52:29] They have no interest because, you know, they think the future is going to be just like the past. [00:52:36] Food's always appeared on the shelf magically at the grocery store. [00:52:39] They're like, oh, it's going to work that way forever. [00:52:42] What if that's not true? [00:52:44] What if the food you used to get came from an industrial process that has just been partially bombed and destroyed with a three to five year repair time? [00:52:56] What then? [00:52:59] Well, they don't want to talk about that. [00:53:02] Like, why are you being so negative? [00:53:05] You know, you're trying to blackpill me. [00:53:07] No, trying to make sure you don't starve to death, but I guess you don't care. [00:53:11] So have fun eating Soylent green burgers or, you know, your cricket McNuggets. [00:53:18] Because those might be the top two sources of protein that are available as the global famine continues to expand. [00:53:26] And, you know, you can combine those. [00:53:29] So you have Soylent Green Burger with like a cricket leg magic sauce on top, you know? [00:53:40] Like a Big Mac. [00:53:44] Just remember to bring some dental floss to get the cricket legs out of your teeth after you're done chewing on that. [00:53:51] You smile like, what is that? [00:53:54] You got cricket legs in your teeth. [00:53:56] Oh, yeah, that's the government. [00:53:57] The government food stamp program only gives you cricket legs and soylent green. [00:54:04] You don't even get the cricket torsos. [00:54:06] That's the high-end stuff. [00:54:07] That's for the paying customers. [00:54:10] The free welfare people on the CBDCs, they get the cricket legs. [00:54:15] You know, the legs that are left over in the bottom of the cricket, the grow farm, you know, when they scrape all the crickets out after they dried them in a giant cricket dehydrator, you know, the legs at the bottom, that's what you get. [00:54:30] It's not quite like, you know, chicken legs. [00:54:34] Not as much meat on them. [00:54:35] But can't be choosy. [00:54:37] You didn't prepare, so have fun with the cricket legs. [00:54:42] Oh, and before I wrap this up, one more thing. [00:54:44] This should have been obvious, but I'll point it out just in case it didn't occur to any of you listening. [00:54:52] Possibly, do you realize that also the animal feed is produced with nitrogenous fertilizers? [00:55:00] So, if you think, well, no, I don't care about corn and soy and alfalfa and all this stuff. [00:55:06] I'm just going to eat beef. [00:55:08] Well, where do you think the beef comes from? [00:55:10] You know, the cows are fed the corn, and the corn's grown with nitrogen. [00:55:16] Those are haberbosch cows. [00:55:17] Yeah, that's see. [00:55:18] I managed to fit that term in one more time. [00:55:21] Haberbosch cows. [00:55:24] You thought they were black Angus? [00:55:25] No, they're Haberbosch cows. [00:55:28] See? [00:55:29] So, all the animal feed is subject to the same conditions that we're talking about here. [00:55:34] It all traces back to the same natural gas. [00:55:37] So, bottom line, if this infrastructure is destroyed, then maybe roughly half the planet dies over the next few years. [00:55:49] And those are going to be the most difficult years imaginable because when people start starving, they get desperate and crazy things happen. [00:56:00] So, that's why you need not just food, but the ability to defend it. [00:56:05] And also, you know, you need to live far from the cities if you can. [00:56:09] So, there you go. [00:56:10] That's my take. [00:56:11] All right, you can follow my work at naturalnews.com, and you can hear more of my analysis and interviews at brightvideos.com. [00:56:20] I'm going to create a book based off this presentation. [00:56:23] I don't yet know the title of the book because I'm going to let AI choose it. [00:56:27] But you'll be able to find that at books.brightlearn.ai. [00:56:31] And I'm also going to force an audio book generation of that book so that there'll be an audio book version freely downloadable within less than a day, even maybe less than 12 hours, whatever. [00:56:46] But you'll be able to find it again. [00:56:47] Go to books.brightlearn.ai, and you'll be able to find that book based on this presentation. [00:56:54] All right, so and also, again, one more reminder: healthrangerstore.com slash appreciate if you want to get some food. [00:57:03] And at this point, you know, if you have a one-year supply of food, that's not enough, probably. [00:57:11] I used to think that that's a pretty good, you know, target for people. [00:57:14] Have a year's supply. [00:57:16] And now I'm thinking, you know, according to Qatar Energy, it's a five-year build time for these things. [00:57:24] And Iran has promised to destroy more of them. [00:57:27] So maybe a year's supply is not enough. [00:57:31] But a year would help you, you know, give you time to start growing some food. [00:57:34] But can you realistically grow everything that you need to eat? [00:57:39] I'm not sure I can. [00:57:40] I've grown as much as 70% of my diet in the past, but that was in a different climate in Ecuador where you could grow food year-round. [00:57:50] I've never tried that in North America, and I'm not sure that I could. [00:57:56] I mean, I think I'd be hard-pressed to grow even 70% of my diet today. [00:58:01] But we shall see. [00:58:05] In any case, thank you for listening. [00:58:07] Again, I'm Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, and I'm wishing you the best. [00:58:11] I'm wishing humanity the best. [00:58:12] And I hope that you share this with other people so that they can also be informed. [00:58:17] And this is not a time to be timid or politically correct. [00:58:20] This is a time to save lives with knowledge. [00:58:23] And the more people know about this, you know, the better off they're going to be. [00:58:27] And maybe they'll go out and buy things other than toilet paper this time. [00:58:31] You know, during the COVID panic, it was a toilet paper? [00:58:35] Everyone's loading up on toilet paper. [00:58:38] Why? [00:58:42] Okay. [00:58:46] There might be better. [00:58:48] Why not bacon? [00:58:49] You know, load up on bacon. [00:58:52] If you love bacon, I'm just saying. [00:58:55] Load up on something that you could eat, maybe. [00:58:58] Just saying, but that's up to you. [00:59:02] If you eat too much bacon, you're going to need more toilet paper. [00:59:05] So maybe you should get both. [00:59:06] Okay, that's enough. [00:59:07] All right. [00:59:08] Thanks for listening. [00:59:09] Take care. [00:59:11] Yes, the world is getting crazy. [00:59:13] But here at the Health Ranger store, we're putting together a survival. supply assortment for you. [00:59:21] If you go to healthrangerstore.com slash survival, you'll see what we put together for you, including iodine and iosat. [00:59:29] That's a specific brand name of potassium iodide that's FDA approved. [00:59:34] Or we have the nascent iodine here, which is less expensive in terms of the iodine that you get. [00:59:41] These are available in case things go nuclear. [00:59:44] It's clear that you will not be able to find any of this for sale anywhere. [00:59:49] All the inventories will be wiped out like what happened after Fukushima in 2011. [00:59:54] So if you want to get your hands on some iodine, this is a chance to get it right now. [00:59:58] HealthRangerStore.com slash survival. [01:00:01] In addition, we have many other survival items for you here, including some silver solutions, some spirulina available in bulk and at a discount, and then a large assortment of storable organic food that's laboratory tested, including our Ranger bucket sets. [01:00:19] Here's a 195-day supply. [01:00:21] We've got the mini buckets, and we've also got number 10 cans available of freeze-dried fruits and vegetables and other things like miso soup powder. [01:00:30] Here's some of the buckets. [01:00:31] There's a big variety available. [01:00:34] Here are some of the number 10 cans right here. [01:00:36] Remember, a lot of people are missing fruit. [01:00:39] They don't have enough vitamin C in their storable food. [01:00:42] So, you know, getting bananas and pineapples and strawberries, especially, again, certified organic, freeze-dried. [01:00:49] That is the highest quality with the highest nutrient preservation that you can get in any kind of storable food format. [01:00:57] All of this is available right now and so much more. [01:01:00] Just go to healthrangerstore.com slash survival. [01:01:04] And because the freeze-dried foods last for so long, you know, even if you don't eat them this year or next year, just keep them on the shelf. [01:01:12] They're going to last a very long time with good preservation, a long shelf life, and they will have value no matter what happens in the world. [01:01:19] Now, of course, I'm praying for peace. [01:01:21] I'm praying for de-escalation. [01:01:23] I don't want to see World War III break out, and I certainly don't want it to go nuclear. [01:01:28] But we're dealing with insane times and insane leaders and insane situations. [01:01:33] Who knows what could happen tomorrow or next week? [01:01:36] Disruptions could happen here in the United States. [01:01:38] There could be, you know, domestic attacks that disrupt supply chains here in the U.S. [01:01:45] So stock up early, stock up now, get your emergency food, emergency medicine, iodine, anything else that you think that you might need. [01:01:53] Get it now. [01:01:54] And by doing so, by shopping with us, you'll be supporting our platforms and our AI engines that we offer for free. [01:02:01] That's funded in part by sales from our store. [01:02:04] So shop with us at healthrangerstore.com slash survival and help yourself get prepared and also help us bring you more free tools and platforms that can keep you informed no matter what happens in the world. [01:02:18] I'm Mike Adams, the Health Ranger. [01:02:19] Thank you for your support. [01:02:21] God bless you all. [01:02:22] Take care.