Summary
âž¡ The text discusses the importance of mindset, skills, and resources in surviving difficult situations, such as extreme cold. It also touches on the topic of weather manipulation and its effects, such as unusual snow and increased dryness. The speakers express concern for those unprepared for harsh weather conditions and emphasize the need for emergency preparedness. They also speculate on the potential harmful effects of fog and its possible connection to weather manipulation.
âž¡ The text discusses the importance of being prepared for emergencies, with a focus on skills like camping and food storage. It emphasizes learning from each other and sharing ideas, and mentions the value of past episodes of their show as a resource. The text also talks about the current state of society, suggesting that many people are distracted from important issues. Finally, it expresses hope for the future, despite acknowledging that challenging times may lie ahead.
âž¡ The podcast hosts appreciate their guest, Marjorie, for sharing her knowledge and insights. They value her willingness to help others and her belief in collective success. They also discuss the importance of preparation for unexpected weather conditions, emphasizing that fear doesn’t help in survival situations. They encourage listeners to stay informed and prepared to reduce stress during challenging times.
âž¡ When in cold conditions, it’s important to keep warm by using techniques such as sharing body heat, especially with children who naturally emit a lot of heat. Wearing a beanie, a neck balaclava, and wrapping a scarf around your upper torso can also help retain heat. If you’re indoors and the power’s out, setting up a tent in your living room can help conserve heat. Lastly, insulating yourself from the ground is crucial as it can quickly drain your body heat.
âž¡ A man shares his experiences and tips on how to keep livestock warm during cold weather. He emphasizes that wind is the biggest threat to animals, so providing a wind-free shelter is crucial. He also discusses the importance of consuming warm foods and drinks, like tea, to keep warm from the inside. Lastly, he advises on stocking up on practical food items for emergencies, such as peanut butter and canned beans, and highlights the need for high-calorie foods in cold climates.
âž¡ The text discusses the importance of listening to your body’s cravings and eating instinctively, as it knows what it needs. It also emphasizes the need for survival skills, like having camping gear and being able to warm food. The text warns against consuming sugar, as it can weaken your immune system and make you more susceptible to diseases. Lastly, it highlights the benefits of an alkaline diet, which is primarily plant-based, and shares an anecdote about how the Inuit people avoid scurvy by consuming the adrenal gland of animals, which is rich in vitamin C.
âž¡ The text discusses various survival techniques for cold conditions, emphasizing the importance of staying calm and thinking creatively. It suggests using heated bricks or stones to warm up beds and highlights the value of wool clothing for warmth, even when wet. The text also warns against the dangers of cotton in cold conditions and encourages the use of items like wool blankets for insulation. Lastly, it shares a historical fact about the use of kilts in medieval Scotland for warmth.
âž¡ The text discusses the practicality and versatility of kilts, particularly for those who had to travel long distances on foot in the past. Kilts, made from wool, were easy to dry and could be used for warmth, camouflage, and even as a makeshift bed. The text also highlights the importance of having a piece of cloth, like a kilt or a large scarf, as part of a travel kit due to its multiple uses. Lastly, the text emphasizes the value of communication tools, such as radios and Wi-Fi devices, for gathering information and maintaining morale during challenging situations.
âž¡ The text discusses the importance of being prepared for power outages, especially at night. It suggests having various sources of light such as candles, lanterns, and battery-operated lights. The text also emphasizes the need for activities to keep everyone occupied during these times. Lastly, it highlights the emotional impact of power outages and the need to adapt to such situations.
âž¡ The text discusses the importance of being prepared for emergencies, particularly in cold weather. It suggests keeping quality gear, like headlamps and flashlights, and preparing for potential situations like power outages. The text also emphasizes the need for water purification methods, such as the LifeStraw or Berkey filter system, and suggests keeping these items in your home and vehicles. Lastly, it warns that we are in a period of global instability, and it’s crucial to be prepared for long-term changes.
âž¡ The speaker discusses the concept of predictive programming in media, particularly in apocalyptic TV shows and movies like “The Walking Dead” and “The Mist”. They suggest these shows might be subtly preparing us for real-life disasters. They also discuss a mysterious fog and its potential health effects, hinting at possible conspiracy theories. They express a desire to take action against these perceived threats, but feel unsure about what can be done.
Transcript
Means I got to go out and plow snow tonight, so. Welcome, Marjorie. How you doing? I am. I’m really doing well. I’m. I. I think I got involved in that fog. I mean, I’m okay. I’m always great. Right. Like, I’m. I’m. I’m never gonna be having a hard time. I mean, you know, I’m just choosing never to be unhappy in this lifetime from now on out. Yeah. But I saw that fog the other morning, and I thought, oh, how pretty and it was. I thought, wow, that’s kind of strange. It’s. First of all, we never have that here.
And then it was also, like, really low to the ground, and it looked kind of heavy, and I thought, oh, well, you know, I mean, you know what I’m. You know, and then. But I was really sick. I woke up all congested and. And. Which is extraordinarily for. I, like, haven’t eaten anything. I haven’t been drinking. I know there was New Year’s, but that’s not my jive. And. Yeah. You know, I was like, wow, I wonder what that’s. Maybe I ate too many cornbread. It wasn’t the corporate. No, no, I don’t think so. Yeah. And then I was talking to some farmer friends of mine that live.
They’re leave inland in the jungle, and they were like, yeah, we saw the fog, and we also, for the first time ever, saw chemtrails in the sky. And I said, what fog? And then I’m like, oh, God. I start looking at the headlines and like, oh, that looks wicked. It’s all over the United States and over the uk and. And everybody’s saying weather modification for, like, to really make sure this polar vortex is freaking freezing. Right. I don’t know. It sounds logical. Yeah. Well, I’m glad you brought up the fog. And, you know, say hi to Outkast, Outcast, hi to Ty to Ms.
Marjorie there. The. The fog stuff, as you said, weather modification. Yeah. In the beginning, in the opening, I played a video. You have to go back and take a look at it. But I played a video talking about the fog and getting people sick. And it was in San Francisco and it was done many, many, many years ago. Alan Dulles, remember that? Dulles airport, Dulles, CIA. That. The Dulles brothers. He’s one of them. Well, he was part of all that stuff where they were injecting stuff into this fog and they were spraying it in San Francisco to see what would happen.
Well, they got a bunch of people sick, and the doctors sort of figured it out, but of course, that was CIA and nobody knew about it at the time. And until, you know, not until decades later did that stuff come out. All you guys got to do is look up stuff like Operations Seafoam and the CC Mist, I believe is one of them. There’s so many of these things that we always talk about here on the show, but it’s all part of, you know, why they’re. Modification, geoengineering, making us sick, depopulation, all of it. It all goes in the same basket, Marjorie, and I’m glad you brought it up.
I am going to play a video of some. I want to call it predictive programming, but I want to hear you guys take on some more of this stuff. So, yeah, come on, Marjorie, bring some more and I’ll get this video ready to go. Well, well, Outcast, I really, first of all, I want to say I really appreciated that prayer at the start of it. And I also, I’m going to be rerunning this video on my channel. Channel. So for everybody who’s on substack and YouTube with Marjorie Wildcraft, I want you to meet Jesse James, an outcast of the D Dangerous Info podcast and two awesome guys just really riffing on, like, what’s really going on.
So I’m, I come on once a month as a guest and I just want to encourage you to go visit their podcast and hang out with them. Really good info and the real deal, the straight. The real deal, you know. Well, thank you. Thank you so much, Marjorie. And, and we’re happy to. To be there in the. In your spotlight. Thank you for inviting us there and hi to everybody. And we’re live here every Monday night. I’ll put up on the screen live Monday night, 7 to 9pm Eastern. So welcome all the new people that are going to see this.
So we appreciate you guys so much and thank you, Marjorie, for being a truth seeker like us, people like you. That makes us just. It’s know that we’re like part of a family and that we’re not crazy just because the normies don’t know anything that’s going on. It can get to you sometimes. So having this type of extended family friend type thing that we have here, it means a lot. So the fact that you see us in the same light that we see you is, is really great. So appreciate those kind words. Yeah, no, thank you.
I mean this is really a time to pull together and I heard the urgency in your opening and I’m like, he’s right. Like we’ve been seeing it ramp up and ramp up and ramp up and. But it’s, it’s like we do not have much time left now. This polar thing is going to happen and there’s going to be all kinds of catastrophe around it and things are going to get better. The grid’s not going to be completely gone, but boy, this is really got to be a wake up call to everybody. Like this is happening. We’re having major infrastructure.
I love David Dubine’s channel. I watch his stuff. But they’re like major infrastructure all over the planet is, is either being destroyed through man made stuff. You know, like they got the harp and all the other stuff. But also we’re in these natural cycles where, which I, I like his, his viewpoint on that. Those rains and stuff, they’re just destroying bridges and volcanoes are going off and I mean it’s like, we’re really like, you need to be paying attention. Yeah. And you know, thank you for sending that video to me. Was that yesterday or this morning? I, I can’t remember.
You sent me some video. You texted to me and you know, I, I watched it and David de, he’s been on, on our show. Yeah, I know, but last year or something he was on our show. We got to get him back. But he’s adapt 20, 30 or mini ice age. So he’s a good guy about all that stuff. He’s, he, that’s his, that’s his wheelhouse is what’s going on here. And you’re here tonight to talk about the polar vortex and all these things. And we’re going to get into that and how people can prepare theirself.
I mean it’s cold here right now, Marjorie. I mean we wake up to single digits right now with a bunch of snow outside. So we’re used to it. It just makes it a pain when the power goes out because then I got to run out here and you know, and, and start up the generator and all that stuff. But, you know, it’s for some people who aren’t prepared for these kind of things. They’re just going to freeze during the night. Look what happened in Texas a couple years ago in the springtime when that cold thing came down there and destroyed all the pipes.
You know, it’s. So we’re trying to avoid that stuff is what we’re saying, you guys, and we’re trying to show you things are. You guys are definitely prepared. And I love that write up you sent earlier on your get home bag. Yeah. For when you’re in the cold. And I’m like, whoa, that is. This guy has been living in this and he has dialed it in. He’s gonna get home. Yeah. You want to riff on that? Just for a minute, and then we’ll. We’ll get into. I. I think the biggest danger for a lot of people is they’re living in houses or apartments or whatever, and they’re just utterly dependent on that grid.
I don’t think they can imagine that grid being gone. And when it gets cold, it’s going to be cold for a long time, like days and days, Right? Yeah. We’re going to have power lines out. You know, trucks aren’t going to be able to get where they get. You know, food’s not, you know, everything’s going to be clogged up and it is going to come back to somewhat normal eventually. But, man, you know, we could be talking a week, two weeks, three weeks of some severe hardship and cold can kill you. Oh, yeah, for sure. Yep.
You know, we’re all. We listen, the more, you know, it’s all about mindset, Right. Mindset is about 90 of all this stuff. Then you have what, what besides mindset, Marjorie, we have stuff and skills. Right? Stuff, skills and mindset. Oh, it’s funny. You. I just did a video on that this morning, talking to people about, look, yeah, stuff will get you through a transition. Like, we’re in a transition right now, and stuff will help. But if you don’t have skills and you don’t have mindset, you’re gonna. You’re just as good as dead. Yeah. And stuff can get stolen.
There’s things that can happen to it. It gets used up. It’s not a solution. Skills definitely are better than stuff because, you know, you’ve got something that’s valuable to trade, that you can do. Right. And if you have skills and stuff, you’re, you know, you’re in a really good position. But mindset, Trump. I hate to say the word trumps, but mindset is the. The number one most important thing. And I, as you two know, I’ve done a lot with wilderness survival. Yeah. And the number one determinant of whether somebody who goes out on that day hike and then they got lost, whether they come back or not.
And there are a lot. A surprising amount of people who just die on day hikes. It’s like, really? But it’s attitude, mindset and attitude, you know. Yeah. Well, before we get too far down this. This rabbit hole that we’re going to get into, let’s finish off with this fog thing. Outcast. Do you want to add in on this fog? I know that we talked about it and, you know, give your. Give us your thoughts on the fog that we’ve been seeing. Well, my first initial thought on the fog stuff was that, you know, because I have a cold right now, and.
And technically I have a lot of the. The telltale earmarks of what people are experiencing from the frog, which would be, you know, scratchy throat, lethargy, you know, being very tired, you know, coughing, all kinds of things. I think I have a cold. I don’t. I don’t think I’ve been experiencing fog, but I could be because it has been. We get chemtrails here constantly, and we’ve got, you know, a lot of artificial weather. Another thing I was gonna. I was gonna touch on a second. But anyways, so. So there’s that. That component of the fog, and I thought the fog was meant to make us sick, was meant to pandemic 2.0 or something.
Now, but Marjorie mentioned the polar vortex, and I think it’s entirely possible that what we’re seeing here, too, is in a. A very heavy effort to. To. To create this polar vortex, to create this scenario. And where that. That weighs in with me was just the other day, I’m on a text with some gals that I’m friends with who think just like us, and they were commenting how they don’t see snowflakes anymore. You know, not the typical beautiful snowflakes that we used to grow up looking at on our. On our glove. When it snows right now, we get these pellets.
They’re little ice balls. Yeah. And I can’t remember the last time I saw a beautiful Snowflake. It was 1979, the last time I noticed one, probably. So. So. So the snow feels artificial. And let me just say this, too. There’s something dry going on. Like, it’s not. Winter is always dry, but this is extra dry. I Cannot drink enough water without. And I still feel parched no matter what I do. Yeah. And. And other people are saying the same thing. There’s something artificial in the atmosphere right now that’s making things dry. The snow doesn’t look real.
We’ve got this fog that I think is probably Marjorie’s kickstarting my brain into thinking that that was what it was about. Maybe not about making us sick so much as it. About affecting the weather, but regardless, I mean, we knew that these people weren’t going to go quietly. And as we. They watch everybody reject them in. In the ballot box and other places and their. Their ratings, and they’re all abandoning DEI and they’re abandoning all their other efforts through the. Through, you know, the. The marketing, through their stores at Target, everything else. They’re. They’re on the run, but they’re not the types to go, oh, you win.
And I guess we got to readjust our thinking. No, they’re gonna. They’re gonna punish us on the way out. And I want to say one last thing, too. You know, we. Jesse and I grew up in the north. Here, we’re used to cold weather. We know what to expect. We know we have the right gear. But I will say this. When I think about being outside in the elements, like these people in Asheville who are still living in tents in a polar vortex, this is absolutely deadly. And. And we can’t be surprised at the. The body count that could.
That could be affected in this. I mean, I don’t. You know, we. We’re not flipping about it. I’m not sitting here going, oh, we’re used to the cold weather. You should be, too. No, no. If you’re not used to this, I mean, it is brutal. And. And like, somebody’s made in the comments, Jack Pine or somebody. Pray, pray, pray hard for these people in Asheville who are displaced in their homes because they. They’re not prepared for this whatsoever. I don’t know how they’re supposed to get through something like that. Yeah, so much, you guys. I went on a tirade.
I had a lot. No, that. That’s good. It fills in a lot of spots. You know, it’s good. You know, the. The. We have the dry stuff here, too. Outcast. I mean, I’ve been. I was drinking water the other day because my body was craving it. You know, like, even right now, I can tell it’s. My body’s craving water. I need it. My. My mouth feels dry. It’s been like that. Even though we’ve got so much snow. The humidity seems like it’s way up as far as on, on our, on our gauge, you know, our meter, but I still can’t get enough to drink.
And that ice or that snow, you’re talking about, those crazy looking pellets, that’s all chemical ice, nucleation, it’s all weather manipulation, right? That’s been going on for decades. We already know this stuff. Okay? We’re not, we’re beyond all that stuff. So I’m hoping most of these people understand, you know, not, not the regular viewers, you guys understand what we’re getting at. But, you know, there’s, there’s new people that this always reaches, Marjorie. So for the new people, you got to do some more digging to make sure that, you know, to, to realize what we’re talking about here.
This stuff goes way back, this weather manipulation and all that too. So we’re all thirsty, it’s cold. And I’m going to be up all night tonight, Marjorie, because I got to go plow snow after this. So I’m not going to get any sleep until tomorrow evening, which is that, that’s just the way I do. But my bag that you were talking about, it’s in the truck. Outcast has one too. Most of our friends, we all have these get home bags, as we call them, because we’re trying to get back home. Wherever we’re at, we just want to get back home.
And all the stuff that’s in that bag that we’ve put together years ago, that we always update, we try to get, you know, that that’s what that bag is there for emergency use situations, get us back home to our home base where it’s safe and we can do what we have to do, right? So that’s, that’s where we at on our preparations for the cold. Obviously it’s a little different in the summer because. Different, different stuff that you’re going to need, but that’s where we’re at. And I think we’re all up to date on this fog stuff.
I don’t think it’s gonna, it’s gonna stop. They’re gonna keep pushing stuff at us, whether it’s scamdemics, weather, those are the two big things. Mental manipulation through the media. They’re never going to stop doing that stuff. It’s up to us to get beyond that stuff and start thinking on a higher plane than they do, or at least a different plane that they’re not on with us. So again, sorry for all the tirade. Go ahead, Margie. I’m talking too much. Well, I’ll just go through some of my experience. And I’ve lived in the northern climates a few times.
But one of the things that my daughter and I used to do every year would be we would go from Texas to Idaho in like late September for a big primitive skills gathering. And it would be pretty cold in Idaho for us. We’re coming from 100 degree, 105 degree days and maybe it cools off to like 90 at night kind of environment. And then we go to Idaho where it’s, you know, definitely below freezing. It’s not too bad. I mean, maybe in the 20s, right? So in the grand scheme of things, that’s not really cold, but compared to where we were coming from, it’s drastic.
And we flew in. So I had two duffel bags that we had under the plane and we had our two little day packs. So we had like this really thin tent, you know, super small sleeping bags. And we had. I had to figure out how for both of us to keep warm in that kind of condition. And I learned a lot about the cold. And one thing I found out, which is my secret weapon was my daughter. Like, little kids throw off a lot of heat. And so if you’re finding yourself in the cold and you’ve got kids, make it the family bed that night or whatever nights you got to deal with, because they really do throw off an incredible amount of heat.
The other thing is, and I’ve seen you mention it before, keeping the head, you know, putting a beanie on. I should get. Maybe not the next break. I’ll get my beanie out and then one of those neck baklavas. And then the other thing is around your, around your upper torso, we call it a kidney wrap. And you can take just like a long scarf and just wrap it around and think of Kubla Khan or the Japanese. They’ve actually, they’ve used this technique almost everywhere in the world that gets cold. And you want to keep your kidneys dark and snug and warm.
And wrapping, you know, a scarf around it is the equivalent of wearing like a second jacket. And I have found that to be so immensely helpful. I mean, you think about those images you’ve seen of the Japanese. They have that thing around their, you know, upper torso. It really helps to keep warm. The other thing, when you’re sleeping together in the bed or when you’re, you’re, you know, you’re huddling together, you’re not going to want to have. I mean, ideally, if somebody’s Got frostbite and thermal, you know, and they’re dying from thermo, then you need to be naked with them because skin to skin contact is going to be the best.
I’m going to tell you, for you, being the healthy person is going to be for reason. And, you know, we’re not. We don’t need to do that right now. But you do not want to have everybody all bulked up in their stuff. You want to. You want to be sharing as much body heat as possible, you know, and, and covering the feet, of course. And, you know, if this, I’m talking about, things are going to get. If this is like a really dire situation. Right. You know, and what are you going to do if your average person living in an apartment building and the.
And the power’s out for, you know, a couple of days and it just gets colder and colder and colder. Right. So another thing is, you know, put up a tent inside your living room and get in that and hang out together in there, you know, and, and attitude, you know, the attitude with that, especially if you got kids, is like, we’re not like, hey, kids, we’re gonna survive. We’re gonna all get in this. No, it’s like, hey, kids, guess what? We’re gonna try camping in the living room. It’s not gonna be fun, you know, like. So another.
Oh, I got one right here. I didn’t. Hold on, hold on, hold on. That’s a good one. I don’t want to let that one get by. Did you hear that Outcast? She’s talking about putting up a tent in the living room or somewhere in a room. That’s a, That’s a very important. What’s it called? Not a skill. It’s a very important tactic to, to keep yourself warm. Because think about the, the. If you lose your furnace, right? If the cold is gone, well, then you, you. That the whole house has. You’re trying to keep the whole house warm to create, you know, you can go into a room or a bathroom or, or like you said, a tent.
I like that idea better because you can get in and out of there. It holds the heat relatively really well. And you can get a bunch of people laying down in there, you know, wife and kids and whoever, whoever animals and pets, you know, so that’s a really good idea. But you have to be careful what you’re burning in here to get yourself warm. I mean, you’re not going to build a fire in there, obviously, but. Okay. Yeah. Outcast, what’s your thoughts on the, the Tenting in the house, I mean, that’s perfect. I never thought about it, but it makes sense to me.
It, I like it. It’s something that’s new, new to my thinking. And I know my wife, she’d probably get a bang out of it. She’d really enjoy it. But, but I mean, I think, I do think I can see how that would work. I mean, you’re kind of, you’re, you’re taking your heat and you’re making it even more compartmentalized and conserve conserving it, you know, I think that that makes a lot of sense. Yeah. Throw a few blankets on the top to just make it kind of like your indoor igloo. This is actually a pretty standard practice in like Afghanistan or places like that where they live way out and they don’t actually have a lot of heat period.
But it gets really, really cold in desert, desert regions. The other thing that I have learned from, from live, being out in wilderness situations is make sure you have good insulation from the ground. The ground will suck the heat right out of you. So. Yeah, I mean, and be comfortable. You got pillows and blankets. Make a nest, you know. Yeah, for sure. Yeah. I, I talking about the ground sucking the, the heat from you. Um, I’ve been in situations, Marjorie, where I’ve had to get Underneath the truck 3am In a snowstorm to mess with some plow lines or, or you know, a jacked up transmission or something.
And I’ve had to lay on that ground. Think about that, you guys. There’s nobody else around. It’s freaky. It’s like you’re, you’re a cowboy out there in the Wild west. And if you don’t have the proper tools or hoses or repair stuff in your truck, well, you’re sitting there until daylight or until somebody happens to drive by and you can flag them down. Usually it’s another plow driver or a police. So I’ve been in those situations on the ground like that, in that concrete, pavement, whatever you want to call it, it will turn you, it saps your body heat so fast.
So one thing that I throw in the back of my truck is those, you know, those little foam mats, those workout mat things, those little squares that you can put together and make up. I keep one of those in there and I keep a big beach blanket, you know, one of the old ones that we, she doesn’t want in the house anymore. So I throw that down there because just a little barrier and, you know, will keep you from, keep you from getting sapped by the. By the ground. So that’s very important. What we used to do with the wilderness survival stuff, we’d take a lot of the teenagers and we’d say, okay, we were out in the desert outside of Phoenix, way outside of Phoenix, in a wilderness area.
And in February, you know, it’s kind of warm during the day, but the desert, there’s no heat at all. At night, it’s getting really cold. And so we take a group of kids and we’d say, don’t bring anything, you know, not just your light jacket that you were wearing at dinner. Nobody’s, you know, if you’re bringing knives or tools. This is primrose skills gathering. So everybody has knives. We’re not going to use them. Know, no water bottles, no chapstick, nothing. We’re just going to walk out into the desert tonight. And we’d walk not that far, I mean, mile away from camp, so nobody’s really in danger.
But we were far enough away that this was a real challenge. And we’d say, okay, we’re going to survive this night out in the cold with nothing. And you learn a lot. And, you know, for us, even if you don’t have that pad or you don’t have that blanket and you’re stuck outside, even just brush, you know, we would take the. The chaparral bushes and, you know, lay them down on the ground to give us some kind of barrier from the ground. And the other thing is, is overhead. Stuff I’ve really learned from, from the wilderness skills is that’s part of the reason why that tent is so effective.
Even if it’s in your living room, having stuff overhead, like if you go to sleep and go to camp outside under the stars and it’s a clear night, I’m promising you’re gonna freeze. You know, use much, much of a roof as you can get over you as possible. So actually sleeping under the car kind of makes sense for. For what you were doing. Yeah. I have another thing, and you mentioned the pets and. Absolutely. If you’re used to sleeping with your animals and you have your pets, you know, that’s a whole nother thing of like, if you’ve got livestock, and I’m not recommending this, but I will tell you some stories of.
Of what I know people have done. I used to have a friend who was a goat herd, and they had 50 acres, but he hadn’t built anything yet. And he had an old VW van and a couple of dogs that would help him herd the goats. And when he Got. And this is Central Texas, which can get really pretty freaking cold sometimes. And he. Every night, he and all the goats and the dogs would go into the VW van and just sleep together, you know, just so everybody stayed warm. And in, you know, a few hundred years ago, like, that was the livestock.
You know, they lived. Either the house was raised a little bit and the livestock were underneath the house, or they let the livestock into the house. Now, that’s not something that most of us can deal with at this point in time, but, you know. Yeah, you talk about, you know, you bring up a good point for the pets and all that, you know, like, people always ask me about the chickens. And, you know, I’ve had, you know, I’m a chicken herder since, what, 30 years pretty much now, Marjorie. And every year it’s the same. I always get the same questions from people.
It’s like, well, it’s so cold out there. Don’t you have to turn the heat on for the chickens? It’s like, no, I never. Never. I don’t put heat in there. First of all, they’re feathers. They’re way warmer than. Than you think. Also, it’s the wind. If you. If there’s a blockade now, you guys can figure this out walking around town or whatever you go by, you know, in next to a building, a big wall, that wind goes away, and you have a nice little warm microclimate right there. You know, it might not be warm, but the wind’s not hitting you while.
The wind is the biggest thing that takes these animals out. So if they have something that they can get away from, you know, get out of direct wind, like the chicken coop, they’re fine in there. You know, I check on them every night in the dark or just before dark, before, you know, I close them up. And they’re all in their spots and they’re all together, and they’re all just. They’re doing fine. They’re. They’re doing great. You can tell when there’s a cold one because that cold one is not going to be with them, or they’re going to be out somewhere.
They didn’t get in at the time, and they get all. You see birds out, you know, just wild birds do it, too. They’ll bring one leg up and they get all puffy, and, you know, they. You can tell when they’re cold. So if I do find one, which is very rarely out somewhere because it didn’t get in, you know, I’ll pick it up and toss it in there, and it’s fine. But that wind is a killer for animals and for us. So you guys got to keep that in mind, too. If you get in some sort of a traffic situation, whatever, get out of the wind, even if you have to go down in a ditch behind a building, behind a big truck, something behind a big tree, some rocks, some shrubbery that will extend, you know, your mindset, get behind something that blocks that wind.
All right, Marjorie, talking too much again. Well, that’s. No, no, you’re doing great. And that’s also really why fireplaces are not really effective or good for heating is because house causes too much of a draw in the house. So, yeah, we had a. We had a wood burning stove in Texas, and I love that thing. We had one of the glass windows. It was kind of like entertainment. They’re great. Yeah, those are great. My, My in laws, they heat their house with one. We just love. It blows you right out of the house. Things that you can eat that are naturally warming.
So grand Marsala or curry or ginger, garlic. You know, coffee is a stimulant, but it also is a very warming, you know, drink. And I just really recommend lots and lots of hot teas. You know, there’s a. There’s a saying in the, in the wilderness survival community that if you can make a cup of tea, then you can survive anything. And they’re partly talking about if you have the skills to make a fire, if you have the skills to recognize what plants are a good tea and the skills to, you know, make a bowl or whatever, you know, which is all things we learned.
But, but, but the fundamental principle of a warm drink, it just warms your insides and, yeah, nourishes you that way, you know. Outkast. Talking about warm drinks again. I sent a picture of some tea. I found some Mullen tea and I sent it to Outkast and you and J.C. j.C. Hall the other day, because we were going back and forth on text and you guys at the time, because you were really sick at the, at that day, you were really pounding the tea, weren’t you? I mean, you were. Tell us what the tea was doing for you.
Because Marjorie, obviously, you know, it’s a comforting thing to get some tea, warm tea in you. Well, she just hit the, you know, hit the nail on the head when she said it’s very warming from the interior. My wife and I were drinking tea last night. Next, you know, I’m peeling off a layer. I got so hot. I mean, I know it goes without saying, but I don’t Drink tea all the time. So when I do, it’s just like. It’s remarkable how a warm drink will really change your entire feeling of how your. Your sense of being is and how warm you are.
When I was sick, I had this thing where my hands and feet, I couldn’t get warm, and. And the tea definitely helped with that, too. Not. Not to mention that there’s medicinal value to tea, I think, as well. But just warming you from the inside out is huge, especially when you feel inexplicable. What’s the word? Inescapably cold. When it’s really dry and cold outside, it can be very. I feel like you can’t escape it in the house. So that makes a lot of sense to me. Yeah. So hopefully everybody’s stocked up on the basic. You got a little Bunsen burner.
Not a Bunsen burner, but, you know, one of those little Coleman camp stoves or. Or something. Right. I’ve got all the. Unfortunately, yeah. Right. You know, and I think it’s too late for a lot of people now. I. I’m watching some of these videos, and shelves are already empty, and people are already not able to get stuff at grocery stores and things like that. But you know that having, having, just even having a little camp stove where you could boil some water and make tea makes a huge difference. And then your. Your food. I, I saw some people, I saw some video, and they were stocking up on microwave oven meals.
I’m like, these people are not going to survive long. It’s just like, this is the dumbest thing ever. Right? Because you’re. Microwave oven. Yeah. Like you said, it’s mindset. Mindset, you know, is a big thing. You know, while you’re trying to prepare for stuff, you got to get stuff that makes sense, you guys. You can’t be getting the silly stuff like, like you just mentioned there, Marjorie, get stuff that you’re going to eat every day, but in a situation, it makes sense to have that. Okay. So don’t waste your money on silly stuff that you can just use on a regular day.
Like. Like right now. But, you know, on those. On those emergency days, make sure you have the right stuff. There. Come on now. And heavier stuff, you know, fats, you know, So, I mean, the simplest thing is like, peanut butter. Right. You know, and the other stuff that’s easy that you could heat up or you could just eat cold, like tuna fish or, you know, I’m trying to think of all the, you know, canned beans. Right. They. You could eat those either Way. Right. And you want something that’s got some, some, some solidity to it. Now I notice when I live in the north, I eat huge amounts of fat and I eat huge amounts of red meat.
And that’s what I really want. A lot of living here in the tropics now I’m really more into vegetables and fruit and fish and, you know, the lighter stuff, like the, the heavy meats don’t work for me. And I’ve read, read stories of people that lived in the north that like, would have to work out in the cold all day. Sometimes they would just get a whole cup, a whole mug full of like, liquid fat and just drink it. Because you need that much y calories, you’re going to be burning some calories. A story of a guy who went to go spend some time with the Inuit and he was trying to live off the fish.
And if you can’t do it, there’s just not enough in the fish. They, you know, they were eating whatever it was, the caribou or the moose or whatever, and you, because you’ve got to have that. So, yeah, they know what’s, they know what to eat. Yeah. I mean, think about it, you know, I’m glad you brought that up. Outcast, the Eskimos, they’re up there with nothing to eat other than whale fat and just me that they’re not eating anything that grows from the ground. Whale blubber. Perfect. They know what to do. Nobody, the news didn’t come up there and say, hey, you guys should eat whale blubber.
They already knew. That’s what I’m saying. Well, well. And Marjorie taps into another thing that’s really important too, is to eat instinctively based on your, what you’re, what you’re craving. Your body’s not going to lie to you. So while I was sick, I was craving Thai food. Spicy hot Thai food. Yes. So, so it’s important to listen when your body says, hey, I want this, and if it says, I’m not into that right now, don’t eat it, don’t. Your body doesn’t need it. And, and there is no. It’s hard to quantify. But when your body does burn an immense amount of calories in the cold, trying to keep itself warm, definitely you burn more calories.
So this, this whole topic makes 100 sense to me for sure. But, but you know, Marjorie, you brought up another great point too. I love is having little, you know, propane stoves. I’ve got little travel versions. I’ve got bigger, you know, I’ve got multiple different sizes of them. Some camping gear in my garage. I know right where it’s at, in a big tub that I have for camping. You know, I’ve got a charcoal stove, I’ve got a propane stove. I mean, but anything that you can warm some food on. And we’re talking a can of soup like you said, a can of beans, some Spam.
Doesn’t have to be fancy. You just need to survive, you know, stop thinking that you need to. Well, and here’s another thing. I got to say this for the record too, because I live with a sweet tooth woman. Sugar decimates your immune system. I saw Dr. Artists today say that within 40 minutes of consuming sugar, it goes right to your bone marrow and disrupts your bone marrow’s ability to create white blood cells to fight off colds and flus. So I don’t know what to do. I don’t. I mean, I don’t mean to pass judgment, anybody who’s got a sweet tooth, but really think about that.
If you’re in a grid down situation, try to avoid that kind of stuff. I think you’re going to sabotage yourself. And it’s not the nutrients or the calories your body needs. Like you said, I think you’d be better off to have some beef tallow on hand, you know, in a jar that you could even dip in and take a spoonful of in some honey and basic things like that. Before you’d eat some, you know, ice cream or something, some cookies or chocolate or something like that. Be very careful. I think anyways, you should be very careful of those sugars.
It not only does the white blood cell count affect your ability to fight off a cold and a flu, but it’s also those white blood cells are cancer fighters. So you’re also leaving yourself susceptible to other diseases as well. I don’t know if that’s relevant to the conversation, but this is just thinking out loud. No, it is, because I agree. I like it. I met a. Go ahead. There was this one wonderful gentleman that I would get to see maybe once a year at these. He would show up at the Idaho primitive skills gathering. And he lived somewhere in the Yukon or something like that is so far north I don’t even know.
But he lived way out in the wilderness most of the time in Canada. Like really severe cold stuff. And he was telling a story of how normally insects never bothered him. He was not the kind of person that ever got bothered by mosquitoes or anything. And he was coming into civilization for something or Another and he’s waiting for the bus. You know how when you’re in these way rural areas, the bus schedules are never, never what you think they are. And often you’re waiting around for hours. And he goes into this little, you know, this little wayside place and he gets like a thing of tea and he puts some sugar in it and he’s, you know, just, you know, I’m out of the woods now, I’m gonna do this.
And he said it was astonishing within minutes how he started to be bothered by insects. You know, like he could, he could tell when he had. And I’ve, I’ve noticed that when I’m at different picnics or different things, like I, I generally pretty clean. I definitely have love my sweets from time to time. But I’m not the kind of person that gets bothered a lot by insects. And you know, I look at other people that eat a lot and I’m like, yeah, they’re swatting and spraying their whatever, doing their thing. So that’s a matter of your body being acidic or alkaline too.
Yeah, yeah. All right. You know, I mean if you, if you can switch it over to alkaline, I think I, I, I’m not doctor, but I think it’s probably preferable to being acidic. And acidic is going to be a sugar based diet and alkaline is going to be a plant based diet. Not entirely plant based of course, but I mean having enough greens, wheatgrass and that kind of stuff in your system and that’s, yeah. And then you’re going to behave differently in the sun. Even when, when you do get sun, you’re not going to burn as easily because your body is going to behave like a plant.
It’s feed off the sun if you go alkaline. So just thinking out loud, sorry, throwing that fix. I wanted to riff on one thing which is not necessarily totally where we’re at here, but Dr. Weston Price was a dentist. He was actually the president of the equivalent of the American Dental association back in like the 1930s. Was a specialist on infection and disease in the mouth. And he started to ask the question of, instead of why am I trying to figure out more and more about disease, why don’t we look at who are the healthy people and why are they healthy and the you know what, and, and other people not.
And at that time it was very, very well known that primitive people eating primitive diets did not have dental problems. And he lived at a time and had the resources where he could travel. I think he traveled to like, 13 different groups of humans that were still living by their traditional ways. And I. The book is called Nutrition and Physical Degeneration, and it is a complete gold. Like any good research, it’s incredibly boring. But one of the. One of the real gems that I got, and I’ve read it several times, was he was with the Inuit, and he’s describing scurvy to them.
And he says, do the Indians here ever get scurvy? Because that’s a lack of vitamin C. And when they have a diet that’s just mostly blubber and meat you like, how do they get their vitamin C? And the. And he’s talking. He managed to get into the good graces with the. With the tribal doctor type guy, which in itself was a feat. But he worked his way in. And. And the guy goes, no, we don’t. We don’t ever get that. And he said, well, could you. And he said, oh, yeah, we could. And he says, what do you do to not get it? And he said, well, you know that little tiny gland on top of the kidneys, which is the adrenal gland? He says, we take that and we cut that up into as many pieces as there are Indians and we give everybody.
And it’s just a little tiny thing. And sure enough, it turns out, you know, eventually modern science figures out the adrenal gland is loaded with vitamin C. You talk about the adrenal gland from. From the whale, from whatever animals they were eating. The seals or the whales or. Yeah, yeah, all of it. Okay. Yeah, it makes sense. The adrenal. Adrenal. Adrenal gland. Outcast the adrenaline. Yeah, that’s where it comes from. Oh, gosh, no. Yeah, the adrenal glands. Right. And. Yeah. Oh, yeah, for sure. That’s where that’s where it all comes from. Wow. Yeah. Okay, so now.
Now we now harvest. Why the house? I want to get back. I finally have. I have my show and tell thing, so people don’t have these much anymore, but those are awesome. Water bladder. Yes. I love those. You know, heat. Fill that thing up with hot water and put it by your feet or put it by your belly or. You know, when I was in Colorado, I used to go to sleep with one of these all the time, and it was wonderful. If you have a sick kitten, even when it’s not freezing to death, you know, you just put that little kitten, but, you know, wrap that thing up in a towel, of course, and then.
And. And, you know, it’s just such a. Those medicine bottles are just so useful. So if you don’t have some in your prep, and then of course you can use them for enemas and, and you know, for women, for, for the vaginal flushes and things. So just infinitely useful little device if, if you do have a wood burning stove or something going on, you know, heating up bricks and wrapping them in something was always a traditional way of, you know, put that at the foot of the bed and that way you can keep your feet warm.
That’s a really good idea. I’m glad you brought that up. And that’s an old school idea, that Outkast. You know it too. They used to, I haven’t heard it in a long time. It’s. Yeah, it’s brilliant that it was brought back up again because I, my parents were, were born in the middle of the Great Depression, so I heard a lot of stories like that, but I’ve forgotten them. So that’s, that’s great. I think it’s, that’s why we’re talking tonight, you know. I know, yeah, we got to bring these things up because, you know, putting like, like they used to do back in the day.
And you can think about this. If you’re out somewhere, whether it’s camping, you’re tenting, whatever it is, and you have, you know, you want to warm that bed up, you can take the stones, you know, the rocks that are around the fire camp, the campfire, put them inside, you know, get them warm, put them inside your sleeping bag, whatever, and then take them out and jump in bed. You can same thing in, in your bed in the house. I mean, they used to make those, those heater things that, you know, those metal with a. Iron steel with a handle on there.
And you could put it next to the fireplace inside and then slide it into your, into the bed, get your, get it warm. So you got to kind of think outside the box here a bit because there are so many different ways. If you just sat and calm yourself down and think, think, think. That’s, that’s the hardest part is when you get in a situation where it’s dire or extreme, a lot of people tend to stop thinking and they go to panic mode. So that’s where you gotta, you gotta calm yourself, calm yourself. Think. Count, you know, count to three or four, whatever it is, and then assess your situation, start thinking, okay, what can I use? Instead of freaking out and panicking, you have to get the mindset of, okay, let’s look around, let’s think.
What do we need? What can we use? What out here is an asset that I can use right now other than panicking, because that’s not going to do you or anybody with you any good. You have to calm yourself, get the, you know, get to the right proper mindset. Marjorie. To survive these cold, extreme conditions. Right. Yeah. So we’re talking about somebody who’s, you know, like I said, we’re. They’re in a condo or a house or something, and the grid’s been out for a while and it’s really starting to get cold. I mean, they’re. My God, when Russia.
There’s stories of the Russians, like, burned all of the molding and all of the libraries and stuff at points in time in their winters to, To. To survive the winter when they didn’t even have any fuel to, to, to. To build fires. Let’s also talk about your, Your clothing. There’s a saying in the survival is cotton kills. And cotton is really meant to be a warm. And you think about it, cotton grows in hot climates. Right. It’s not meant to be something that keeps you warm. Wool is fantastic. You know, I just love wool. So, you know, if you’ve got the choice on those socks, don’t wear the cotton socks, wear the wool socks.
Yeah, I’m, you know that, the synthetic stuff, I didn’t use it a lot because we were often outside by fires a lot, and you don’t want to wear synthetic stuff out by fires. Yeah. It can burn, right? Yeah, for sure. Oh, my God. Yeah. But, you know, those fleeces that they make are. They’re really, really effective at keeping you warm, and they’re super lightweight, and, you know, they’re definitely a good layer. You know, I think that a lot of people who are, are avid outdoors people like you, whether you’re skiing or ice skating or doing stuff outside.
I, I like to ice fish, and I’m out there doing stuff outside, even in the winter. So you, you, you kind of, you know, the things that keep you warm when you’re in those, you know, extreme conditions. Right. So knowing that kind of stuff, that should help keep you calm. And it’ll also help know that you need to have some of that stuff in your vehicle pack to try to get home, because if you don’t, obviously you’re going to. You could get cold. But the wool. I’m glad you said that about the wool. That is so, so important, because when I wear wool, I get too hot.
I got to take it off. Yeah. So I keep wool in them bags, in my truck bag, my go bag and all that stuff. Yeah. Okay, let’s go ahead. I’m fortunate that I inherited a couple of them from my father, who was in the Navy in Korea. I’m. I’m optimistic that you should be able to find them from an rv Navy surplus. But we have the thickest wool blankets you’ve ever seen in your life from the. From the Navy at our house. And whether you’re talking about putting an insulation down on the ground, I mean, you could fold this thing in half, and it’s going to be like, not only a cushion, but it’s gonna.
It’s gonna insulate. But these blankets are incredible. When we’re really cold, we bust out those blankets. It’s the best thing ever. And we’ve actually had them by the fire and had hots land on them. And surprisingly, the wool does not like. It doesn’t immediately burn a whole wall like you think it might. It does. It just doesn’t. But this wool is. It’s. It’s like a wool felt. It’s thick. So, you know, for your. For your supply bag, I mean, maybe hop online somewhere, look up some army Navy surplus stores. But those Navy blankets are no joke.
They are. Yep. Sometimes I get the wool that makes me itch, that drives me nuts. So, yeah, I might throw some socks on underneath those and then pull the wool over. But not, not. Not all wool makes me itch, though. I have a blanket over there. If I get up here in a second, I might bring it back and show you guys. But that the wool blanket does not make me itch at all. But some of those socks that I have, they’ll make me itch like crazy, and I can’t. I can’t handle it. So, all right, just wear something thin in there to give you a.
Give you a buffer for between the wool. So, yeah, I. Ultimately, what I used to love wearing when we were doing the primitive skills stuff is you’d have an inner layer of, like, merino wool, which is a softer wool wool. It’s not a scratchy one. And then an outer layer of buckskin. So I don’t think that’s going to be too possible for most people, but buckskin is an unbelievably great thing. The other. The other thing about wool is. Right, it doesn’t, because, again, we’re always out. I was out by fires a lot, and it doesn’t catch fire.
The other thing is, is it will keep you warm even when you’re wet, which is a hugely important thing. If you’re getting into some snow and whatever and that’s why they say cotton kills, because cotton will free using your butt off if you. If it gets wet. So. So, Marjorie, for the fun of it, a little historical fact for you. Ready? So in. In medieval Scotland, the. The. The kilt that you see nowadays is. Is akin to a. A skirt. Essentially, it’s. It’s something you strap on. But the Original kilt was 8 yards of fabric that was artfully folded and pleated and wrapped around.
But it could be wrapped over your. Put over your head. It could be. You know, it had multiple uses, but in the extreme temperatures, what the Highlanders did was they would take the. The entire eight yards and they would submerge it in water and wrap themselves up like a mummy bag. And it would have a wetsuit effect to it, and steam would just roll off of them. They would literally get it wet to make it more to make it warmer. Huh. Wow. So. Oh, that is a really fun factoid. Yeah, I love that. Wow. I gotta get a.
I gotta get a kilt. Dang it. I got one. I know I need to have one. My family killed. I need one of those, you know. Thank you. That explains a lot because I’ve. I’ve read some books about the Highlanders and. And they. They talk about how they just had the kilt and then maybe a, you know, another piece. But they. That’s all they had. They didn’t carry sleeping bags or bed rolls or, you know, anything like that. That’s all they had. That makes a ton of sense because it was all. It was an all in one thing.
And then in. You know, the reason they wore the kilt too, is people don’t realize this is. They were. They walked most of the time and they would walk up to 25 miles a day. Not everybody had a pony or a horse. Only the chief would. So the. The regular gillies would. Would march and. And they were in and out of streams. So if you’re wearing. If you were wearing trues or britches and they were made of wool and you’re in and out of streams, you might chafe. But with. With a kilt, you would just. You could.
You could wait up to your knees, and if it got up higher than that, when you get out, you just ring the kilt out and you’re good to go just dry as you walk, because wool is so resilient. But like I said, you get that thing completely wet and they would wrap themselves in it and steam would just roll off and it would be. It worked like a wetsuit. Nothing. I was going to tell you about the kill too. And it wasn’t two pieces, it was one. It’s one big piece. It’s called the felida bag in Gaelic and it means.
It’s the great kilt. And it’s very, very, very versatile. Lots of purposes. And they would actually wrap themselves in their kilt for camouflage too. Because a lot of them was. They’re the, the dyes that were used to make the check was. Was from local plant life. So they could actually just like drop down to the ground on their kilt and they would disappear to the camel as well. Very good. I like that. Just like Sasquatch. Yep. That’s a good idea. That’s a good idea. Now music lover here, she says, oh, the great kilts are awesome. So she knows what those are too out here.
So, yeah, those great kilts, I didn’t even think about that. I need one of those in my bag. You know, even, even without a kilt. So what I carry all the time when I’m traveling, you know, even if I’m going to be in warm climates and all that, if you’re going in and out of airplanes or whatever. So I always have the, the beanie. I always have the neck thing. I always have the, the thing around my waist for, for, for that. And then I carry. And it’s surprisingly, even if it’s just thin, sometimes I would have silk like a beautiful, you know, four foot by six foot cloth.
Right. Sometimes women would make it and turn. You can make it and use it as a sarong or something like that. What astonished me about that was how. And I often got silk. I really like that kind of rough hewn silk was how warm just that one thin layer could make me in, you know, the craziest place. You know, airplanes can be incredibly cold or wherever. So I don’t. It wasn’t quite as. It wasn’t quite a wool kilt, but I totally get the concept of how a cloth like that can just be so useful to have in, in your bag.
And it’s, it’s a part of my, you know, my travel. My travel kit is always to have one. So yeah, super useful. Yeah, I like it. Well, man, do what do you have any more on your list of preparing for the cold, Marjorie, or what? You know what? If not we can get into some more polar vortex stuff, some more weather stuff if you want. I was gonna mention. I was gonna mention some communications gear, you know, I have found from the. We. We live through the backdrop complex. Complex fires in Texas and Then of course, I’ve lived through a lot of hurricanes both here and in Florida.
And I gotta say, having information, it’s, it’s almost as valuable as food, honestly. Yeah. Because if you don’t know what’s going on and you’re worried about it and you know, or you don’t even know what time it is, you know, I mean, that can really mess with your mind. But if, even if it’s just an AM radio and you can, can listen to something or, or better yet, you know, like a CB or if you’re a ham, you know, a ham thing or. But having, you know, you know, an FM radio, there’s a lot of those hand crank ones that are available or USB chargeable.
But having, and, and especially if you can do two way, that’s wonderful. And of course maybe your phone will work, maybe it won’t, but communications or some way to have some sense of what’s going on in the outside world. Yeah. I have found so reassuring. Even if the information is wrong, which it often is, but just, just kind of knowing what’s going on is super important. Yeah. And, and you know, that’s a, brings up a good point, Marjorie, because like you said, there’s, you have to know some, you need information. Okay. In certain situations you got to have information.
You can also take those communication skills or the equipment for morale. You know, if you’re sitting around with, you know, in a spot, you can get depressed, right. I mean you can get, your mind can wander and you can get into a bad place and you don’t want that. So it is very important to, to have something like that. Now I have multiple different radios in my bag. In my bag or in my pouch that I carry with me every day. There’s always a HAM radio on me too. Right. So my everyday carry stuff is pretty, pretty vast for morale.
Outcast, think about this. For morale, even if you have an old transistor radio with the little dial on it with a 9 volt battery, which I have an old one from the 60s, still works great. You guys turn that on, you will get some FM or some AM information. There’s some really good information. I am. And you know what? I love that old school sound. Every now and then like, like that radio right now that I’m talking about, the little handheld one, it’s in my shop when I’m working on stuff over there and I have my Coleman lantern going or I have the fireplace going over there, the wood stove, I’ll crank that thing on just to listen to that, that old school sound that crackle while, while the, you know, announcer is talking.
Yeah, there’s something about that that gives me all the, the warm and fuzzies. Right. So you know that it’s, it’s a morale booster too. Not just learning information, picking up information. But I was looking on my desk here for I, I recently just purchased this thing and it’s called a. It’s going to sound terrible. It’s a love pod. L O V E pod. Yeah, it’s a love pod. And what it is is a little portable WI fi device and it operates off of satellites and it also operates off of the 4G network and especially the 4G emergency bands with, if there’s any cellular bands that are going to be left that work, the emergency services bands are the, will be always.
If there’s any of them possibly up, those will be up. And plus you got the satellite stuff and I’ve got one of those that I’m, I’m testing out and using. The other cool thing about it is if you, if someone else not too far away, I think like within whatever, a mile or so, you can create a mesh network with your neighbors with these love pods. And, and I, I said, why do you guys call them love pods? I mean, this is kind of sounding a little kinky here. You know, this is like for survival gear.
And they’re like, no, we just wanted to spread more love in the world. That’s all. I’m like, okay, I get that. I’m totally good with that. But it was made by an indigenous tribe, I think in Minnesota or something. Like on the reservation there’s just not much Internet available. And so they created these devices basically for use among the tribes. And it’s becoming so useful and popular among preppers. It’s a thing. So it’s a, it’s a, the device is 200, I think it’s like 48amonth for the, for the data service. But, you know, living here in Puerto Rico, we’re all up on that.
We’re all up on the preparedness stuff. I always want to have a couple of options. Yeah, you guys, your power is always going out down there and stuff. I mean, the infrastructure is not that strong. It never has been really. But, you know, you get by. And that stuff makes you resilient, right? Makes you more prepped up and more resilient for, for things to happen. So kind of like the Amish, they already know what’s going on and they don’t get sick because they don’t have TVs. It’s crazy. There’s a lot of things they don’t do that that keeps them healthy.
Yeah, for sure. The kids play in the dirt. They eat real food. Yeah. You know. Yeah. I, I think some other things you might want we will get to the polar vortex because that’s interesting. But you know, some activities and something to be light hearted and make it fun. Especially if you have kids or children or, or adults that are behaving like children and we all have some of those in our family. You know, try trying to come even just a deck of cards or checkers or you know, just, just having something to keep everybody occupied because you know, a, a little bit of lighting also helps.
You know, there’s nothing like the power being out and, and, and having to get. I, I, I did a video about, I talked to you guys about this on like getting ready to prepare. Like right now I’m operating on, on battery lights because this house at night the, the guy’s, it’s a solar. The whole house is off grid but his battery bank is shot. So every night this house goes off grid. So I’ve just adapted and I just have battery operated lights everywhere and this computer’s on my backup battery system. But it’s an emotional shock for some people to not have the lights on.
Like it really freaks them out. So. But, and not having any light at all would be even worse. You know what? Yeah, we, you brought up a good point here with lighting. Think about this for lighting you guys. Candles, Old school candles. I’ve got so many candles. Look right up above my head. You see though, there’s two candles right there. But I have candle packs all around me here. I have candle, you know, emergency candle packs here in the house in, in all these shops. So just in case. And I also have lanterns. I’m a big Coleman guy.
Old school Coleman guy. I’ve got, Look Marjorie, I’ve got Coleman camp stoves. Two burner, three burner. I have the old, the lanterns. I’ve got, I rebuild them. That’s what I’m saying. They’re American made. I’ve got a bunch of them and I love it and they’re fun and they will last a lifetime. I’ve got my, my two oldest ones are from 1951 and 1952 and they run great on the white gas, the white fuel. So you know, options what I’m saying. We do have some of the brand new battery operated ones with the little solar panel on the top.
You just put it in the window. And when the, you know, it picks up the. The light and it charges the battery all the time. So when you have a outage, just go push the button on that little lantern and carry it around. So you have to have options. Candles, you know, landscape lights with the same thing with the little. That’s the least expensive. That’s the cheapest way to get a bunch of lighting is just go to Home Depot. They’re like a dollar a piece. Perfect. Some of them are great. Some of them breaking like immediately and.
But some of them really last a long time. So you might want to play with that. Yeah, I’m growing up in Florida. Hurricane lamps, and you’re reminding me I ought to buy a couple of more. They were always fun to play with when I was a kid. You know, the. They have that glass chimney and then. And the oil lasts forever. I mean, you can just store that oil in a, you know, a couple of bottles of that under the sink and. Yeah. And yeah, Ms. Melody, she brought up another good one here on. On Rumble.
She says Dollar Tree has some Mason jar type tea light lanterns. Yeah, those are great too. Just drop some of those little tea lights into a Mason jar and hold it, see as long. See how long you can hold it before you burn your hands. But it’ll give you light. You know, it’ll give you some light there too. Yeah. And Stephanie, she says they will also raise the temps a few degrees in a room. Actually, that’s what I was going to bring up for inside the tent is some candles. But listen, you got to be smart.
Don’t knock the candle over and set the whole place on fire. Right. You have to, you know, before you do that stuff, have the right thing inside a Mason jar. It works great. You know, the bigger Mason jars put, put a, put a little tea light candle in there. That, that’ll bring up some light and some heat. So there’s so many different ways, you guys. All right, what’s some more light lighting that you have, Marjorie? I. I think we covered a pretty good bit of it. I mean, you know. Yeah, the little solar things. I love that Lucy light because it, it’s yellow light and it’s not the blue light that’s messing with your vision.
Lucy, lights are great. They’re pretty rugged. Yeah, just. And I agree with you, lots of different things. Candles, hurricane lamps, you know, even your cell phone. Making sure you’ve maybe got a solar panel so you can do some USB charging for different things. Yeah. Having a radio, having some games and. But the Main thing is, is keeping yourself warm. There you go. I used to, at the primitive skills Gathering, Cody Lundin used to always show up there a lot. And he, he wrote a book I really liked and it was like 98.6 the art of keeping your ass alive.
And I was like, he’s got it. Like, I like it, you know? That’s it. Yeah, that’s it. One title, you know, that’s good. The did. You know, I’ve joked to outkast about this too. It’s like when it comes to Outkast, when it comes to flashlights and knives, if we’re in a store. And Bible’s the same thing too. When I walk by something, it’s like, oh, man, I don’t have that one. I don’t have that one yet. That would look great in my collection. So look at, look at Outcast. He’s got one too. What is that? What light is that? That’s one of those high beams, led.
It’s hard for me to walk into a supply store and not buy the latest flashlight or something. All right, what is that? Outcast? It’s not a, not, not an affiliate of ours, but it’s ready hour. It, it’s a huge battery cell. Yeah. That can also. You can charge other equipment on it. But it’s also a giant flashlight too. It’s. It’s got. Oh, different modes. Yeah, I like that. Great. Yeah. Yeah, that’s right. That’s good. You know, again, these things are quiet. They’re not going to attract things. They don’t take fuel. The only drawback is they take, you know, you got to recharge them.
So if they have a cell on the back, I think that one probably does. Right? Yeah, it’s got a cell right on the back. So put that in the window during the day. Oh, yes. Yeah, it does. It has, it’s solar powered on the, on the one side. Yeah. This is the solar panel here. Yep. Excellent. The light. And then it’s got a bunch of ports for different types of charging. The reason I thought it was relevant is because I also have the headlamps. Really small, nice little LED headlamps that. Yeah. That you can recharge. Now I know that in a grid down situation, it’s not perfect, but I always make sure that all my batteries, which I have a lot of them are always charged.
Yeah. So I’ve got lots of hours of, of recharging if necessary too. Yeah, I have several of those big. I don’t know how many thousands of amp hours are on the thing and. Or milliamp hours rather. And I always have a couple of them. I call them bricks. Just available. They are bricks too. Yeah. You know, when we were living out in Texas and on the homestead, we, we. Those headlamps are just so useful for, you know, going out and checking something out at night or whatever it was. It’s really funny because we were talking, I was talking to, well at the time, my brother in law and, and he says, oh man, those headlamps, we never, we always buy them, we never use them for anything.
And I’m like, that’s because you live in the city, if you lived out here. We used to buy them like by the dozens and somehow we’d lose them all. You know, we’d have had lamps all. Yeah, there you go. Yeah, yeah, yeah. That’s Bruce the cat. He’s a giant cat right there. Outkast has in his lap. Look at that thing. Was he £27? He’s £20, yeah. That’s funny. Oh, that’s awesome. Is he the one that you have that little five minute love session with in the morning? So you just talked about? I do every morning. About you in the mornings, rubbing.
I do every morning. Yeah. He looks forward to it. I get up, he, I get up. He runs right up on the perch. He just waits for me and I’m like, I brush him out and I tell him I love him and tell him that he’s an amazing creature of God. And he purrs. Well, you could put his feet. Or you could put your feet under him when it’s too cold. Outcast. Yeah. Well, that, you know, sleep, sleep with Bruce. You’re going to be totally warm there. You don’t need a water bottle, did you? Yeah, perfect.
What did you have a headlamp you put up there? Yeah, I’ve got this Petzl which I, I’ve been really liking. These guys are pretty good quality and last a long time. Okay. When we, when I lived in Texas, we were homesteading, you know, we had the kids and we had the kids friends and you know, or if people came to visit, you know, we walk out to the car with them with a headlamp and you know, I mean we were on 75 acres, right. And we went through those things because we lost them or someone drive off with them or, you know, when you got teenagers, you never know what’s happening to all your stuff.
So I wouldn’t expect the money for it then. But now, now it’s just, you know me, I’M like, I’ll get the good gear. That’s awesome. Yeah, it’s all about choices. And, you know, here’s the thing is what we’re talking about here tonight, you guys is being right there preparing for the cold. The time to prepare for the cold. Well, that was probably a month ago, two months ago. All right, you can do it right now. But, you know, you’re going to be kind of scattered if you’re in a situation that makes you, you know, feel uncomfortable.
So the best time to prepare if you’re not. Well, that’s going to be tomorrow, right? Think about some things. If, if there’s stuff that you’re missing, there’s. Listen, there’s always stuff that we’re missing. Outcast. We still don’t have the greatest, newest flashlight, but when it comes out, we’re going to get it right. So, you know, that’s what I’m saying is prepare for stuff. What. Best time to plant a fruit tree was yesterday. Okay. The next best time is gonna be tomorrow. So think like that. Go ahead. I was gonna say, you know, if you’re trying to get your, your thinking going, you know, on this, just go to your local menards.
I think they’re, they’re national, right? You just walk into your menards and take a look around and look at their flashlights. Look at all the different. You know, they might even have some old school lanterns in there. They’ve got, they. You never know what you’re going to find in a menards and they might not have everything you’re looking for, but they’re going to get the ball rolling and you’re going to get a couple items that are going to make you feel comfortable, make you feel like you’ve, you’ve made it one step to being prepared. Yeah, right.
I like it. Yeah. Yeah. Good idea. So some basic food, you know, water, maybe water purification. You know, just be prepared for a good week or two and. How do you say that? I think we really also need to look at the bigger picture that we are in collapse, right? This is, this is one little notch in a whole progression of what’s happening in Hurricane Helene. You know, there’s, there’s all kinds of destruction happening all over the planet. And you know, some of like Lahaina, some of that was, was whatever directed energy weapons. The million acres in Texas burnt up.
That’s a whole nother conversation. But we’re in this process. It is happening like you really need to be prepared. And it’s happening faster and faster and you know, we’re going to get to a point where you, you can’t prepare anymore. Right. We’re, we’re going to get into where the dollar is worth absolutely nothing. Who knows when the BRICS nations are going to just pull the plug. Right. Which they totally have operation ability to do. Yeah. Okay, so I saw you had your hands up. I think you were gonna say something about mar in response to something Marjorie brought up.
Yeah, just, just you know, water. You know, I’m just presenting the, the simplest thing that you can do to give yourself a little piece while so you can continue to, to think and make other steps. But there’s a product out there. I’m sure a lot of our listeners know about it already, but if you don’t, it’s called a life straw. Get online, look for them, go to Amazon or if you want you could go to your local army Navy surplus store. They cost about, I’m going to say about 16 a piece. Go buy one for your each of your vehicles.
Make sure that you’ve got a couple in the house. But it’s essentially a water fil filter that if in a grid down situation you had to go to a mud puddle and suck some water out for some from hydration, it would clean that water and give you drinking water life straw. So it’s elementary but it’s a, it’s a very beginner stepping stone to being prepared. Yeah, I like it. That’s a good one. Yeah. And if your, if your house isn’t below freezing, a source of water is the hot water heater. You know, you can, you can drain the hot water heater at the bottom and there’ll be water available for you there.
So you’re going to definitely want to filter that. But I live my Berkey filter. I live the, the city water here is just horrible and I actually try to collect rainwater as much as I can and I filter it through a Berkey. So it’s just like a part of my lifestyle is to always have an off grid water filter system. Yeah. Going, you know now is Berkey still going or did they, I thought they got shut down or something crazy. Go ahead, go ahead, Jesse. Well, they were, the EPA was trying to shut Berkey down because they were a bunch of nonsense.
They don’t want us to be out here to be self, self reliant, self sufficient. Right. So yes, you can still get a big, big Berkey. I’m not sure if it’s from them. I have to do some checking A friend of a friend has one now that, that they, they love the big Berkey. I mean everybody who has one loves it. It’s top of the line. But you know, you let these unconstitutional agencies like you know, EPA get involved, well they, they’re gonna mess it all up. So last I heard that you could still get some big burkies.
I’m not for sure but going back to your life straws and things that you carry on you. For example, if you’re going to be in the cold weather and you have some, some, some serious stuff going on and you need to use that, well, the inside is going to be wet. And miss Melody on Rumble, she says prepare in the off season obviously, but once you use it, talking about the little mini Sawyer, keep it on you so body heat so it doesn’t freeze because once that water gets in there, that little, you know, you don’t want to freeze up the filter portion.
So keep it warm after you use it. Make sure you keep it up next to your body. You know how your chapstick in your pocket always stays nice and cozy in the winter time? It’s because it’s, you know, you know what I’m saying? So. Okay, that’s a good one for me with the, with the Berkey filters. I, I bought enough of them to last me for a couple of years. Yeah. And my thinking is, you know, with a lot of these like stuff is great. Right. But it’s only going to help you in the transition. And my thinking is the next thing I want to figure out if things really start to, to, to really fall apart.
I know I’ve got a couple of years of clean water with my Berkey water filter system. Yeah. And then after that I’m, I’m, you know, I’ve got ebooks or I’m figuring out how do you do the 55 gallon drum full of, you know, sand and biochar and whatever and making your own filtration system. So I can help you with that. Yeah, but I bought some time, right? Yeah, I would love to, love to get help with that. But I’ve bought myself some time by having the filtering system now, which is what all your, your stuff is.
It’s going to help your transition be a little bit easier. It’s not going to make you get through this whole thing because we’re talking about like a decade at least. I mean this is a mess. We are, this thing is collapsing the entire food supply, the banking system, the educational system, the medical system, our governments, everything. Is collapsing. You know, it. We’re in that process. Right. And this is just another little step down. So you have to hold that larger perspective and say, okay, well, the really good news is we’re having this little stumbling block. It’ll give me a chance to.
To see how prepared I am and. Yeah. How resilient I am. Right. So, you know, it’s a. It’s actually a really wonderful, like when the lights go out here or when something happens here. I’m like, this is a great opportunity. Opportunity. Because I know things are going to come back event. You know, they’re going to come back. It’s not going to be that bad yet. Yeah, there’s going to be a time when it doesn’t, you know, so we. Yeah. Basically, we just need the proper stuff and the know how the mindset to get us through that.
Right. And if you have the right people around you that you’ve made relationships with, oh, that’s going to help too. So I think we started this conversation and we got all this fire talking about the fog there in the beginning. Right. I want to play this video so we can watch this video. Because again, I think about predictive programming. I think Walking Dead had had a lot to do with predictive programming, too, because of all the stuff that they showed people how to handle the situation when. When society collapses. You take the whole zombie stuff out of that TV show.
The first three episode or first three seasons were the best. I don’t watch it anymore. But looking back on it, and while I was watching it, I was like, wait a second. They’re showing us all these ways to survive, what to look out for, what to do, all these little cool gadgets, how to make this and that when you need to sleep. It actually was very educated, I thought. Yeah. Unbelievably creative to go into a person. Okay. So I think that was a bit of predictive programming. They do it all the time. They’ve been doing it for decades.
2007, there’s a movie that came out called the Mist. All right, you think about the fog that we just went through, and there’s the mist. Jack Pine, Savage, he says, just walk, walk. Watch the Walking Dead yesterday. And they were filtering water, See? Yeah, exactly. So let’s. Let’s see if we have some predictive programming back in 2007. Don’t know. Let’s see what you guys think. For the audio listeners out there in podcast later, there’s a lot in here that there’s very little words, but the. The imagery in this is really. It’s. It’s crazy. It’s a situation that we can all find ourselves in probably at some point.
Check this out. This is the Mist 2007. So they’re in a supermarket, right? Everybody’s up at the cash register, looking outside. They look panicked. Everybody’s just looking out into the parking lot. They look panicked. Everybody in town there just doing the shopping. Even the cashiers, they’re all up at the window now, looking out into the parking lot. Here comes an old guy running. He’s bleeding at the face. Oh, my God. He’s running towards the supermarket. Something in the m. Something in the mist took John Leave. Man, catch your breath. Something in the mist took John Leave.
And I could hear him screaming. Shut the doors. Shut the doors. My God, can we go home? Go out there. There’s something in the mist. It took John Lee. Screw that. I’m getting to my car. Mr. No. So tough guy, he’s gonna go out there and get in his car. So he’s running out to the parking lot, and you can see the mist is just rolling in really fast. Looks like fog, right? He’s fumbling around with his keys, trying to get into his. Into his wagon there. His output. He disappeared. The fog, he gone. He gone.
So now they’re panicking. Everybody has shut the door. The panic. The mist is right up against the glass now. It’s okay. They’re backing up. It’s a pollution cloud. The mills down in rumps. Some kind of chemical explosion. Has to be what’s going on? It’s death. Right there at the end. She says it’s death. And something hits. Hits the window. So, yeah, ironically, I’ve watched that movie, by the way, and ironically, it has Lori and Dale from the Walking Dead in it. So just for the fun of it, did the. They get these actors signed on for these PSYOP movies, these, these, these program predictive programming movies, because what are the chances you got two of the main actors from Walking Dead in this movie about the fog? Yeah.
Just throwing that out there. Listen, it’s there. There’s no coincidences, are there? No. Marjorie, did you ever see that movie the Mist? I did not see that one. And I used to be all up on my apocalyptic genre. I watched you. I agree with you. The first couple of seasons with the Walking Dead was good. And then after that I was like, ah, yeah, it turned woke and got crazy and I didn’t like it anymore. So, yeah, you know, another one that was really good was Jericho was like a nuclear Explosion goes off. And that was a really good series.
Yeah. So, you know, it makes me think about this predictive programming. Are they putting all these shows out there to show us, hey, this is what we’re doing? You know, that takes the guilt off of them, but this is what we’re doing. And this could happen in this show. And here are some good ways to think about preparing for these kind of things. I think some of that is predictive programming that they do and put out. And, you know, luckily for me, thing is really, really, that is really freaky, the frog thing as a fog thing.
And I, I can’t say for certain that there’s a direct correlation, but I never get this kind of scratchy throat. Just what you were talking about in the earlier. Tired, itchy eyes. Yeah, scratchy throat, achy. It’s just, it’s just I just had my, my vitamin D levels checked and I’m. It’s a little bit low. It’s at 54. But, you know, apparently based on some of the work I’ve seen, that if your levels are above 51, you know, you’re not going to get a virus. Right. That’s one of the things to do is keep your vitamin D levels up.
And so I just don’t, you know, I mean, I’ve been really reasonable this whole holiday season. There’s nothing that should cause me to get sick. So, yeah, yeah, it’s kind of freaky. Wouldn’t put it past them. I mean, they’ve been caught with their hands in the cookie jar so many times over the decades with all these certain operations and all these things. And, and I think this whole bird flu thing, just like the scamdemic a few years ago, I think that’s, that’s running the same course, you know, I think it’s the same. Same line. Jack Pine Savage wants to know, Marjorie, did the fog have any sense of smell or taste? I didn’t notice that.
I, I did see that on some of the other videos that people were talking about, but I did not notice that in particular. And I am up on the top of a ridge and we get a lot of breeze here. And I do from time to time smell different things because I’m kind of on the south side of town where, you know, the, the guys here that operate, you know, tractors or, or bulldozers or they’re fixing things. I mean, that’s sort of the end of town versus the north end is where all the surfers and all the fancy hotels and things are.
So there is A little more of a little bit of. And people here work from home a lot. Like, there’s a lot of industrial stuff going on at home, and I do smell that from time to time. But this. I did not notice that with this fog. Okay. Yeah, every now and then we. We kind of figure stuff out or we smell stuff with rain or see. See funny ice things in. In the Lake Michigan and, you know, a lot of, again, chemical ice nucleation. You can look up, look that up. You know, there’s patents on that stuff.
So a lot of the stuff that’s in the fog, there’s patents on that stuff too. And, you know, what can we do, though? I mean, what can we do? We’re out in it. We can sit in our rooms. It’s still going to come in the house. I mean, I guess we can, you know, fortify our bodies to a point where, you know, it can take that stuff on internally. You know, what else we’re going to do other than do some praying too Outcast. Yep. You know, that what can we do is a whole even bigger conversation and not some younger, younger, younger men that, that are young men tend to be a little more aggressive.
They’re like, I’m ready to. I’m ready to take a bullet. Yeah. But I just don’t know what I could do that would have the kind of impact to stop this. I just don’t know what to do, but I want to do something. And so there’s this, you know, this fog, like that’s, you know, or even chemtrails or. Or the food. I mean, the whole thing is like, so structured against us. And more and more people are starting to realize it when they wake up, especially these people who have woke up and they realize now that they have cancer from what they thought was a vaccine.
And, you know, they may not realize that there’s actually things that you can do about that. And if you have nothing to left to live, you’re a pretty dangerous person. Yeah. I don’t know. You know, when. When are we going to organize? That’s what I want to know. Well, I feel like, you know, I feel like we’re organizing. We’ve been doing organizing over all these years. I mean, you know, we talk about what we do on the shows. We talk about, you know, we, we transfer ideas back and forth to each other. We. We learn from each other and how to, you know, I always say if you can.
If you can camp with the family for, for, you know, some days and some nights off grid where there’s no power. You, you already know, you already know what to do. That’s a big enough skill set right there. If you go, you know, Friday, Saturday, Sunday, and you go up north and you go camping or whatever with the kids, basically, that’s what you need to know. That’s, that’s your basic level introduction to prepping, being prepared for emergencies. We do have, we do have to survive this. And that’s always been what, what I’ve worked on is because people just don’t think about the long term consequences of food.
Yeah. And it’s not the sexiest part of prepping, you know. Right. Like if I had been selling backup food supply or guns or weight loss pills or something like that, a lot wealthier. I tell you what though, Marjorie and okay, as you can attest to this, we’ve been doing this for so long on this show. You know, you’ve been visiting with us. We have a whole decade, I mean, a decade. We have a whole library of episodes with you on the show that we talked about all these things. So if anybody out there wants to go back in our archives, they’re all still there.
Just scroll back. The audio, the podcast, that’s where it all started. There’s a lot of really good information there. You should download. Yeah, there’s so much in there. Just, just scroll back to, to our stuff and look for Marjorie’s name on all those. You know, she’s there once a month, so. And we’ve gone over everything like you said. We’ve, we’ve done episodes on firearms and protecting the home and, you know, food, food storage, building community, growing things, you know, growing stuff. Medicine. Yeah, Medicines. I mean, all these things. So, you know, I think we have a pretty comprehensive outlook and we set up a lot of different episodes for this.
So if there’s a way that you guys can just sort of go back and look at these things, take notes, it would help put, put your preps together in that way because we’ve done a lot together here on the show and I really, and I’m glad for that and I’m happy for that. You know, we’re all learning from each other, right? Yeah, well, we, I, I’ve always felt that we, we, we have some of us that are, are, are on the side for humanity, heart, you know, God, righteousness, consciousness, awareness. And we were truly living in a godless time.
It’s, it’s just astonishing. You know, people are just seem so unaware that what they’re doing is wrong. There’s so many Distractions out there to keep people from thinking about real stuff. I mean, look at all. What time’s the game? You know, what time’s the game on? There’s so much of that going on that. That drove me nuts. And I was the biggest football fan my whole life. I don’t care anymore about this stuff. Oh, I don’t know, man. Do I sound like a downer, you guys? Sorry. No. All right. Yeah, well, we’re. We’re. Life itself is to me.
This is so exciting, because I really do. We’re gonna win this, of course. Right. But, yeah, we’re gonna go through some incredibly tumultuous times and tremendous change, and there need to be enough of us that are strong that make it through this because we’re going to get to rebuild the whole thing from the ground up. And I’m really looking forward to the rebuilding part. Yeah. I think we don’t fight. We don’t fight for victory. We fight from victory. Boom. That’s one of my favorite ones. Outcast. Once I understood that you. I had you say it a few times, and it’s like, wow, profound.
That’s a. That’s really good. I’m gonna use that. I’ll credit you. I didn’t make it up. It’s. You could go for it, though. I can’t take full credit for that. Yeah, that totally is. That’s totally my come from. Like, you know, there. We’ve talked about this before. There is. There is law. There’s a law that what. What you do and what you give out comes back to you. Right. And I fully believe in. In reincarnation. And if it doesn’t come back in this lifetime, it will come back to you. Like, you cannot escape those consequences. So why do that? Like, why.
Whatever that bad thing is, just don’t do it. Well, you know, if. If they were winning, would they have to kill and poison everybody from every direction? No, but that’s. That’s the behavior of desperation. That’s not the behavior of confidence. Yeah, I like that. It’s smart because they’re the ones playing from a defensive position, right? From. From. From defeat. They’re. They’re playing from that position of defeat. They’re trying to get back into, I don’t know, revenge. What do you want to call it? Outcast. I mean, we’re talking about biblical stuff here. Well, on the biblical level, yeah, it’s revenge.
Because if they can’t go to heaven, if they’ve chosen a side, then that they’re going to try to Bring as many people to hell with them as possible. That’s one way of looking at it. Yeah. The other part of it is this is, you know, if, you know, they hate humanity and if they were. I mean, just to think of the sheer terror that they’d have to be in. To think that they have to go scorched earth and kill everybody, possibly even themselves, in the process tells you that that’s absolute desperation. That’s not. That isn’t. That’s not confidence.
That’s. That’s because they know that we outnumber them 100 to 1. We. There’s far more of us than. Than there are them. And they have money on their side. They have power and influence. They have the media. But when. When those things start to fail and people aren’t paying attention anymore. I mean, how many people did you know that watch the news? I don’t know. Hardly anybody watches the news. Even if you’re a total normie. They’re not even watching the news. They’re all these. These channels. The ratings are in the toilet. Their. Hollywood’s in the toilet.
Nobody’s watching their movies. Everything’s fault. Their whole thing, their whole apparatus is falling apart. That’s why they’re leading, pressing so hard at the AI and trying to enslave people through computer chips and everything else is because they’ve lost their. Their main modus operandi for. For control. You know, the, the wizardry of Hollywood used to enthrall us to the point that we stopped thinking, but now we’re. We’re fed up and unsatisfied because what they’re saying is gaslighting us and it’s unsatisfactory to us. So everybody says, no, I’m done. I’m not gonna watch this anymore. And, and, and you know, think about even, even the cult of celebrity, you know, how many people don’t care about these celebrities anymore? I mean, it used to be back in the 80s, we were growing up, you know, people would drool over Julia Roberts and all these types of people and go, you know, wow, they’re so talented, and nobody cares anymore.
I mean, these people could walk down the street on fire, and I don’t think anybody put them out. Nobody would care. Yep. Or very few, I should say. Fewer and fewer care. So just take it out. Really well said. Really well said, you know, because. And, and so many of us are learning what they had to say, what they had. You know, literally, they sold their soul to get that. Those positions and literally. Yeah, yeah, they talk about It. Wow, that’s crazy. Oh, boy. Well, Marjorie, this has been another. Another great episode with you, and I can’t tell you how excited we are for people to hear it.
New people, new audience to get this, you know, we’re running live tonight on Facebook. I put Facebook on there today just to try to reach a whole new crowd, because on Facebook, you know, that’s kind of where a lot of the normies live out there, but a lot of my friends that are there that wanted me to put this out there, you know, I’m glad. I see that you’re in here, and I appreciate you guys for being out there and helping that. But with the help of you, Marjorie, and your crew, I think we’re going to be able to reach a new, New.
New audience tonight. So I appreciate you for helping us with that, too. We could substack and YouTube and Facebook and Bright Ram Rumble, but it’s all different, you know, So I know you’re on some of those channels, Brighton. Oh, yeah, yeah, we’ll get that. Get that out there. You guys have. Have a really fun podcast, and it’s. It’s good. I. I really like that. I don’t. Don’t necessarily agree with everything you say, but I definitely love the conversation. Yes. Yep. Yeah, for sure. No, and that’s. That’s the thing, though, Marjorie. We. We don’t have to agree, but I tell you what, we get along with enough ideas, enough parallel things.
That makes sense. So, you know, that. That little bit. See, we can. We’re civil is what I’m saying. We can get along. We can do this, and that’s how we have to be with our neighbors at some point. Yeah. Yeah. So. Okay, go ahead. Sorry, Margie. I was just gonna say it’s just been. Been really fun, and I guess we’re about to wrap up, but I. I want to hear what Outcast has to say. Yeah, I do, too. That’s why I was going to send it over to him. We have a few more stories we have to hit tonight.
Local stuff around here, but Outcast, any messages for. For our friend Marjorie tonight? Marjorie, as always, thank you so much for your willingness to share your knowledge and your insights with your fellow man and men and womankind out here. People are hungry for knowledge. People love the fact that you love them. They know that you love them because you’re so willing to share everything. There are people out there who will take, gather information, knowledge, supplies, everything, and hoard it to themselves. They’re thinking that they’re going to preserve Themselves for the future. But what future would it be without each other? And you are the epitome of that.
You look at everybody as the collective and you want everybody to succeed. At the same time, it. It goes from your, you know, making farming techniques for your household to seem attainable to just the things we discussed tonight. So we thank you for your spirit, we thank you for your knowledge, and we thank you for your willingness to always come on without a. Without hesitation. God bless you, sister. We really appreciate you. Oh, thank you so much. Outcast. All right, we’ll catch you guys next month. It’ll be. It’ll be good. I’m sure we’ll have some more.
There’s nothing else. There’s always a. Exciting on. Oh, yeah. Oh, my God. Can’t wait. We’ll be in touch. I. I’ll send you some stuff. This show, whatever we have to do, we’ll talk tomorrow on. On the Other side. And, you know, again, great for having you. Great to see you again. And we’ll see you next month. Stay safe, stay dangerous and, you know, stay keeping on Margie. All right, we’ll talk to you soon. All right, good night. We’ll see you. All right, bye. All right, Outcast. Another good outing there with our friend Marjorie. There’s a lot of.
A lot of. A lot of fun there. A lot of stuff that people needed to hear, you know, especially preparing for the cold and that cold polar vortex that they love to bring and put on us. Right. I think that’s going to get a lot of people. I did, too, in the next couple of weeks. They are not prepared for this in the south. They just are not. Right. They get. They get a little bit of snow and ice and in Louisville and I mean, the roads are shut down. And then you add this, which is like a big snowstorm on them.
They are not prepared. Their infrastructure is not prepared for nothing. So, you know, I, I’m not saying I’m not predicting doom and gloom for them. I just can’t imagine that it would. It’s got to be a little bit stressful for them, is what I’m saying. And, and shows like this make it a little less stressful to know that people are thinking and you don’t. Just because something’s out of the ordinary for your local town or your local weather doesn’t mean that it’s the end of the world. Right? Just a deep breath. Center yourself on the God, the Creator, and, and, and, you know, God does not want us to function on fear.
Fear does not produce anything fruitful when you’re trying to survive. I say that boldly, but I’m not stressed right now. I mean, when I’m stressed, when things aren’t going the way I want to think it should go around my house, trust me, I get nervous, too. But we, you know, that’s what the show’s about. It’s about discussing them in advance so that we’re a little less stressed when. When it comes along. I like it. Just thinking a lot. Yep. I like it. You know, today, Justin Trudeau Castro resigned. All right? So I don’t know if it was.
Who knows why I.
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