These are the concluding notes of my book, A Natural Language, which exposes the environmental narrative as propaganda and puts bottom-up solutions in front of the actual problem.
Put together, our environmental issues are not nearly as preoccupying as what green finance and green tech evangelists would have us believe. The wholesale reinvention of our energy systems is not called for. Nor are the associated land theft, the green taxes and tithes, the digital control grid, or the genocide. Solving our environmental crises is actually straightforward with adjustments to the way we steward our landscapes. Large landholders with notorious environmental preoccupations will, one hopes, lead the way forward. In particular conspiracy theory super-villains and would-be satanists. There is little need to panic about these crises, either. At worst, plants will enjoy the warmth in the decades it takes us to soak up the carbon hockey stick and excess water vapor. The seasonal ups and downs of the carbon dioxide concentration in the atmosphere should be enough to convince anyone with doubts that we need longer than that. We could go faster by improving how we manage our coastlines. Aquatic ecosystems are so much more productive than land-based ones, in fact, that it would make sense for us to burn more fossil fuel to have more carbon dioxide to work with.
Not being shy about burning what is available would help alleviate our ongoing supply chain problems, too. The push to defund fossil fuels in recent years and the lockdowns since 2020 have brought about shortages everywhere. The transparent sabotage of western economies by manufacturing a war and a supply chain backlog is not helping, either. Westerners might get fuel and electricity shortages in winter 2023 at this rate. Drax would do well to stock up on coal like Orsted is doing in Denmark, and perhaps try the idea of piping their smokestack’s output to nearby forests to have more wood to burn. Enviva and Suzano might also want to try making new biomass products. Urban homeowners who build a rocket mass heater ahead of winter 2023 are going to need fuel. Hollow bars or cylinders are solid options that promote airflow in rocket burners.
More pressing is the looming food shortage. The fertilizer and biocide shortages in late 2021 have prompted farmers to not sow farm fields in early 2022. The warmongering in Ukraine made things worse. Incentives like farmers being pushed towards retirement and programs like carbon dioxide pipelines are making it worse too. Feed shortages are forcing meat and dairy producers to cull their herds. PCR tests that produce lots of false positives are being used to justify culling chickens. Speaking of which, demand proof before surrendering your birds. Ask for evidence of an isolated virus sample that can demonstrably harm birds (see Stefan Lanka). Also check for snake venom (see Bryan Ardis). Efforts to dim the sun to stop climate change could hinder photosynthesis to boot. So could the plumes of silt tied to deep sea mining. The grand solar minimum could add further dimming and freak weather. People who have not eaten for days tend to behave like mindless zombies. The bioweapon and the mind control grid would no doubt add convincing cinematic effects. The cherry on the pie would be propagandists trying to spin this ghastly clown show as zoonotic disease tied to climate change.
A starvation crisis is not yet locked in as of early 2022. Communities can simply grow food to avoid a tragedy. You can help build awareness by sharing this document. If it is not in your language, find or create a shared document, translate a paragraph or two, and share that instead. Share it with your family, your friends, and your local council, those of towns near you, farmers, loggers, activists, churches, schools, and so on. Print it and leave copies around. Meet once per week when and where it makes sense in your context — say, each Sunday at noon in front of the nearest church, town hall, school, or post office. Form a farming coop or a gardening group if there isn’t one. Make your yard and tools available if you’re not using them. Reach out to your mayor and suburban homeowners to get land to work with. Ask around for seeds and tools. Help build garden beds, wicking beds, plant towers, greenhouses, chicken coops, bug barrels, compost bins, water harvesting systems, irrigation lines, aquaponic systems, ponds, and so forth. Help harvest and preserve food. Organize gardening classes for kids to ease parents into it. Help local farmers plant and maintain hedges. If you have legal skills, help repel chicken cull orders, and anything that hinders harvesting water or exchanging seeds. In passing, commodities like seeds could back a people’s currency should one ever be needed. A meal could make a relatable, inflation-proof unit.
Last but not least, consider joining indigenous peoples and small farmers in their fight against the largest land theft in history. The United Nations are coordinating the 30x30 sham with conservancies. Controlled opposition actions like petitions and protests that can be ignored or beaten into submission will likely get us nowhere. Coordinate instead with genuine indigenous rights groups like Survival International or the World Rainforest Movement, and with No Deal for Nature. Crowdsource locating the key stakeholders. Explore the decision process and the org charts like a salesperson would. Locate the levers and influencers. Don’t forget the propagandists. From there, put them on notice about the heist and crime against humanity that they are partaking in. Doing so strips them from their ability to claim that they did not know in court. Send them polite but firm emails and phone calls. Protest wherever they spend time if that is not enough. Tell their spouses, their families, their neighbors, their colleagues, the locations they hang out at, and so on. (Leave the kids out of this as much as possible.) People usually care about what others think, so make them terrified to meet disapproving stares all around them. The sociopaths who don’t care about reputation typically go to great lengths to avoid taking responsibility and put the onus on their victims. Expose their lies and go after their enablers instead. Coordinate with independent media for other atrocities. A permaculture paradise awaits us on the other side of these strange times.
Summary | Next: Exploring Further.