The Anti-Human Green Agenda

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Following you from the Netherlands 🇳🇱🟧
Or anywhere in the world 🌎 actually 😅

vpnconsult
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How about forcing the MIC to declassify free energy technologies?

mariaangelicabrunellsolar
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Pagans worshiping nature, history repeats!

richardaurre
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Well..I like Lou Rockwell but I don't see what revelance his personal preference for the indoors and urban environments has to a discussion on energy policies. As to his aversion to recycling, I don't really understand it. Perhaps it is a generational thing. I'm amazed at how much trash I alone produce weekly, and I live a simple outdoors life in New England, Mountain Biking and Hiking. I'm glad that at least my water bottles and broken down Amazon boxes get recycled and used again in some other manner perhaps. I'm not going get to excited by a campaign to eliminate recycling in the interest of personal liberty. This one just doesn't grab me. The lakes in the Adirondack Mountains in upstate NY are dead because of Acid Rain. I do love those mountains as well as the Appalachians, I'm concerned, and don't think that is irrational.

johnwilhelm
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great podcast and good information, the only thing you got wrong is about fossil fuels being more efficient than nuclear, nothing is more efficient than nuclear on a pound per pound basis of material.

hoppeanofasgard
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Atheism is the ultimate 'luxury believe'.

AtaraxiaaixaratA
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I don't like nuclear because there is no way to deal with the waste.

jasoncopin
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The hard-money movement is implicitly anti-human as well, in that it wants to chain human productive ability to the arbitrary Malthusian limits imposed by a finite supply of commodity money. It's not a coincidence that systems of commodity money worked just fine with mass poverty and starvation for thousands of years before the Industrial Revolution. Our ancestors' money kept its "value" as well as any Austrian economist would want; but most people didn't have any, and they and their families often went hungry.

Just to show how poor people were back when they used commodity money, consider that the Jewish authorities got Judas to betray Jesus in exchange for a bag of silver worth only a few hundred dollars at today's prices. That trivial amount looked like a fortune to the gospels' writers.

albionicamerican