So the thing is, is their creativity is their opportunity. It's maintains temperature perfectly and it has this incredible application. Right. You don't have to truck your guts to a rendering plant. And the same with the chickens. When you get a hamburger from us. But I mean, literally in my day, I don't think about it. And and it's just you really epitomize the best example of that sort of regenerative farming. And we know that these diseases are all coming from these place. A lot of smoke. OK, it doesn't take any more land to grow the feed for a chicken on pasture than it does in a confinement house. You know, fear. Like, what are you going to do? Hello, friends, welcome to the show. So as a farmer all this nomenclature is real. If we if we spread out the production, if we if we did, for example, you know, if we took all the confinement chicken houses and put those chickens on pasture. We're in a very strange crisis now, and you just keep hearing time and time again in the news how much ranchers and farmers and people are really suffering right now and how much folks who don't have anything to do with that are now forcing they're being forced to understand the importance of the food supply chain and ranchers and farmers and all the stuff that we've taken for granted for quite a long time now. OK, let's just just the mind body connection, what that does to your body to suddenly get a burst of hope as opposed to a constant diet of of despair. That's exactly right. Yeah. Like we were you're talking about the cost of food. What's what's the cost? That's the bottleneck right now in our in our fragile system. Child abuse is up. And it could be absolutely devastating. One is that, you know, our country has never told people when we talk about, you know, personal self-worth and your own personal affirmation in a climate of fear and worry. And tomorrow everybody. They're very confusing there, and what happens is when you have when you're faced with. You wouldn't be able to do that. Odd thing is, is a complete I mean, we we started the interview talking about standing on nature on her neck. I mean, the offices are closed, the theatres are closed, the convention centers are closed. No, but three. So. Like if you want to have, like, those mono crop agricultural fields where you see hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of acres of corn, just corn or just soybeans or just alfalfa, whatever it is like, if you want to do those mono crop things, how are you going to re fertilize the soil in the same manner with that? There's there's a lot of money and sickness now. And it's it's a real issue, particularly with highly sweetened, highly processed foods that are the things they crave there and also their gut biome. Oh, yeah. You know, it's been nice hotel. And and two weeks ago, they had 10000 new email sign ups for their postings in one day. That's not just whatever nostalgic I would be interested to see what's going on, I'm sorry, but what's going to happen when people do go back to normal life with these compromised immune systems from being inside all the time, whether or not just regular common cold kicks in on a larger scale? We don't put them in plastic wrap, bubble wrap. Yeah, yeah, yeah. But of course, as you know, milk is being dumped, pigs are being euthanized. And I said, Well, no, I'll ask. Perspective: Joe Rogan podcast wrongly puts Salatin on a pedestal Worry. OK, they're not showing you how dependent that is on this massive land base. This site is in no way affiliated with Joe Rogan, his family or his management. And I think this is this is along those lines. You know, it's a it's one hundred and twenty horsepower diesel engine that can that can chip nineteen inch. No, no, no. They can't Exuma. It's true in Baltimore. Spain. Well, they came to that conclusion because they looked at old people who got it that might have possibly lived, you know, seven, eight years, five years or more. Eat the soil. It really is. Phoenix is the same way. And what what Congressman Massie is saying with the Prime Act is why should we discriminate and only allow people to tap into the lower cost and lower lower overheads of the custom processing facility to only those people who can afford to buy a quarter of beef at a time that's that's very poverty discriminatory. Why? Lot lot of people I don't have I don't have a number there, but I can tell you that that prices would you know, food prices might go up to what they were 30 years ago. Just think about. So, so spend a bulk, buy bulk, buy unprocessed. You love this machine. That she's worried, she's fearful. Because folks feel this affirmed. So I remember lying in bed at night and like testing my breath, like maybe I have it now. Spinning fans, vent shaft, you know, there's none of this. So, yes, this is really this is really a good thing. We're also brought to you by the motherfucking cash, the motherfucking cash app. And it makes food tastes delicious and it's easy to use it. The pathogen doesn't have to say, wow, boy, I wonder if I can make it that, you know, that half mile over to another. And the beautiful thing is that this this is not that difficult to bring back. What does the future look what what could a future look like? Nothing. But but we have you know, we have excavation equipment that we can go in and build ponds so that when we have a flood and and everything is flooding, we're actually trapping a lot of that, not all of it, but trapping a lot of it up on high ground permaculture style that we can then dispense for irrigation in a dry time so that we never pump from an aquifer. Absolutely. We're going to you know, we're dehumanizing. You would require much more people. Yeah. So we buy from neighbors who do GMO free, non genetically modified GMO free grain. And if there's one time when you want to be together, it's in hard times. You could shut the grill off and it also has fifteen hundred plus recipes and you can use the recipes on the app and they actually control the cycle of the grill. Joel Salatin: The Rise Of Rogue Food Peak Prosperity Yes. The twenty fifth go get some go out there, cook, visit Trager grills, dotcom slash Joe use the code Rogan at checkout to get free shipping on all orders of my favorite all time grill. You've got four guys in the boning room. OK, well, how did you come to that conclusion? If you fall down, it takes years off your life. OK, so you're you're you're essentially saying that they have to convert to not just growing corn? There's a real worry about that. Right. So this summer was going to be in short supply. So the way to save money is to get unprocessed. But then the problem with that is if you look at the overall numbers, the average age that people die from coronavirus is actually older than the average age people die, which is like, well, what do you say in that? I mean, this was part of the part of the kind of unspoken part of the book, Guns, Germs and Steel. And there's and there's a lot of research being done to jam the radar of, you know, eagles and stuff. Thank you my friends. Unofficial fan site for the Joe Rogan Experience Podcast. Yeah. They put up a kitchen and very, very simple, poor boy, bootstrap, you know, nothing. Seems to be a valuable thing, and so if we take that into the food system. I first found out about these glasses from Tarran Tactical. You buy. Six miles apart. We have been encouraging them to exercise. A guy sits across from her on aisle on the opposing aisle, and she asks him to move over to the window. Download the cash app from the App Store or the Google Play store today. It's a different relationship. I'll be the first to be the first. You're allowed to do it. The argument for decentralizing and the amalgamating as opposed to centralizing and amalgamating. I'm suggesting that a carbon economy is one of many, many. And and one of the things that we're seeing as a result as we move into the kind of the social consequences of this whole pandemic is a is what there's a new phrase called the screen New Deal, where everything is going to A.I. Our immune system. So, so we could get the two questions. It has a meat thermometer that's attached to the application. And the fact the fact is, you know, and I think that's an advantage of on the farm where we are. I want all those bugs, all that diversity, we we live in the most amazing microscopic soup. Sure. You're saying the economy is more important than people's lives? If you see a chicken wandering around, just pecking at the grass looks normal, see a chicken in a cage getting fed out of a little cup or something. Double. That's right. And it was just wonderful. It is. Who cares, you know, if son and daughter and grandkids want to come and be around him, I just well, the fear is that they'll get it and they'll give it to someone else and someone else will wind up in a terminal as well. There's a sweet spot here. That's an interesting way to look at costs, right? Should we stop all falling if you get sick, much younger. I was going to get worse. Please use your own judgment to determine if any program, product or service presented here is appropriate for you. My dad. And and, you know, it's been in business for I don't know what sixty years or so. I mean, I just think it's horrible. WebThe Joe Rogan Experience. I mean all that's changing the landscape a lot. And you know develop a. Oh yeah. We just put all the costs in all our all our costs are in. Yeah. But they they presented the same thing. And I'm serious. So there's a there's a huge there's a huge disconnect. They got some chickens. That's the bottleneck. Joel Salatin - Folks, This Ain't Normal - PART 1/2 | London Real London And I was there, you know, I was there with them for a couple of hours. Look at that. But but the difference because we do stuff by hand workstations, you know, the stainless steel work tables are what you know, six, seven, eight feet wide, three feet to four feet deep. He snagged a starring role in the Oscar-nominated 2008 documentary No, no, no. And you get a better product to get a healthier product and you get a better relationship with both the animals and the people that you sell this this food to. But the same thing is true. And so we want our customers to come out and pet a calf, go in the breeder and pick up a chick and hold a chicken. He needs to get out and go stick his hand and boom, don't you think that I mean, I don't know if this is true, but I would imagine that the immune system is like your cardiovascular system and needs a workout. They are also warned by my good friend Adam Greentree, he wears them. But but there's a big difference between doing that and three times a day where what are we eating? And so these big plants are very vulnerable. And they never hit the right strain. WebJoel F. Salatin (born February 24, 1957) is an American farmer, lecturer, and author. #479 - Joel Salatin - The Joe Rogan Experience | Podcast You can buy the grills or they're in ten thousand stores nationwide. Zoome conferences, Zoome phone conferences, different things. Well, a pound of our ground beef is cheaper than that burger, soft drink and and massive fries that he got. How much is that worth? Well, sure. Ethanol is a byproduct of what we used to think that we needed ethanol exist without running out of gas. And when and when we get sterilized and and and move away from that. Oops. And our problem is so many times I start down this path and somebody starts throwing at me the most extreme situation. Joel Salatins Unsustainable Myth Mother Jones And they're in their region regionally, directly off the farm. That's why fire app that allows you to change the temperature of the grill. No, no, absolutely. And so they're living in crowded conditions because they're trying to save every penny to send home to get, you know, uncle and aunt and other family members here from Ethiopia, Somalia, you know, wherever it is. You don't need the tractor. So that's the power of integration, that's the power of of of proximity, of actual putting stuff close, you know, so they wouldn't have an egg industry because everyone would be grown. Right. And and the federal forests are atrocious. And the thought that we can somehow, whatever, you know, isolate ourselves and and and extract ourselves from this from this magnificent life conversation that's going on in us, on our skin, our clothes, our hair, our eyes is is it's just silly. What have we done to ourselves as a culture that every single person we come in contact with is a. So they got six thousand chickens distributed through this the city. Or you're trying to do schoolwork from home. And you've got three guys out on the kill floor. Well, they know by digging up skeletons, they used to have nine foot wombats in Australia, nine foot wombats. We got this coronavirus because something in this in this beautiful life bath that I described was out of whack. WebJoel Salatin is an American farmer, lecturer, and author whose books include "Folks, This Understand, one of our problems is that we haven't done controls. Mm, that's that's how you eat. Having the best, best year we've ever had, it is the it is the it's the industrial mega system that's cracking. The hundreds of acres growing corn and soybeans to feed them in that house. And one of the trends that's been happening in this country now for 20 years is a bifurcation of access between rural and urban to the Internet, like on our farm. #479 - Joel Salatin | The Joe Rogan Experience - Podpage It spoils that's thrown away. This episode, the podcast is brought to you by Trager Grillz, my absolute favorite way to cook. So if I was a homeless person, I would just get me a constant stream of cruise ship rides. If you're if you're uncomfortable, then you can walk the tour and we don't drive fast. It's great. We don't have the equipment for it. So so, you know, if all those people go back to work that have been furloughed, you restaurants and things like that, it'll be OK. She wanted to not have to go to the hospital every day and started a side gig in her home. Well, that's that's the that's the assumption. Yeah, right. About the bones would stay for a good while. Well, I mean, they're like the coolest machine that scares the shit out of me. Oh, really? But the doctor did explain to us that there is primary immune system and there's secondary immune system, your primary immune system most likely if you've been in contact with it. I get that. They they open Wal-Mart and close the farmer's market. And if we just did what we know, I mean, I ran into a lady in in in Edmonton, Alberta. In between us there is there is a lot of protection in that relational transaction that beats all the paperwork you can amass on the industrial scale. And it's not that we don't have time for it. And I have a knife and I was cutting it off, of course, I love fresh I mean, fresh garden. And so at a very time when people need to be personally affirmed, they're being denied their, you know, their social humanity element. With your help, it will be my pleasure. You know, wouldn't it be cool if if mommy or daddy could come home and their six year old says, you know, what did you do today? Joel Salatin is an American farmer, lecturer, and author whose books You know, five acres up on Jack Mountain and and kept it from having a fuel load to burn and took that biomass so that a farmer could feed his earthworms so there'd be soil for your future. But for the average consumer, what can you do to facilitate a secure food system and your own secure food system? It feeds the soil. And so there's no reason why we can't produce a million chickens. That kind of stuff. And if we can if we can even grab a 30 percent. That's right. It's not the wrong way to do it because it doesn't serve the soil. It is. Yeah. That that, you know, we can. We need hook ups. Everything's back ordered clear to the middle of August. There's a flu shot. Oh, yeah. Web The Joe Rogan Experience #1478 - Joel Salatin 2020-05-21 | Joel Salatin is an American And one one is to simply start stockpiling more food. People are so sterile in their microbiome. Oh, yes. A person than to tell them you're not essential. And it talked about the ascendancy of the Europeans who kept livestock in their house, and that's why they were immune to smallpox and all these things that were devastating to the other people that didn't have nearby livestock. And and so when you have those kinds of conditions and they're not getting exercise or not getting fresh air. And of course, when you download the cash app, enter the referral code. I mean, we're in California, right? At your at your dinner plate, and that's why at our farm, our little moniker on our little, you know, our little cooler bags is healing the land one bite at a time. That was it. He's been on the podcast for he's the guy that actually shot that water buffalo above my head, Tim Kennedy, where some Dakota Meyer and these are not some cheap ass glasses that they're trying to Internet. You know, this is my first this is my first job for a month. It's in October, the Homesteaders of America conference. Wow. It's compost. My dad. If you're alive and you're not terribly ill and dying, you could start drinking water, stop drinking soda, stop eating chips, starting fruits and vegetables, start eating lean meats, healthy foods, not even lean meats. I think pretty pretty sure that's what it is. Right. We you know, we barely can do it. None. And twenty years ago, things as people started, you know, awareness and farmer's markets and all, you know, all this. And we were going to have the first one on a farm this year at our place expecting 10000 people. All right. Culturally, obviously, we can learn what we need to we need to decentralize and diversify our food processing system. Sure, sure. I mean, we have food deserts, right? She went to this friend with a backyard. Vocation, that would be, and and it would affirm people who want to work outside and have calluses and blisters on their hands, you know, we've spent we've spent a couple of generations marginalizing what we call blue collar people. You know, you don't have to use drugs, antibiotics. Well, that's a big one. Right. I mean, right now, it's hard to conceive what it'll take. It's been it's been a feeling of fear. You know, there's a lot of that. There's a thing that keeps getting repeated and it's that we only have 60 more seasons left in our top soil. You super smoke and you press that button and accentuates the smoke in the chamber and gives you an amazing flavor to your food. I mean, if you wanted to create an incubator for a virus, there wouldn't be a better place for our small facilities are inherently the workers are spread out. Start discussing where it possibly came from, I think right now that's conjecture. Of that part of life, yeah, I think it speaks to what you were talking about earlier, that they look at death as some sort of a failure instead of just a part of the natural cycle. For me, when you say, how do you scale up for me, it's not well, I'm going to if we hit one hundred and fifty and overrun the ability of this little facility, it's called Platen a box, PIB and his his his pot. Today, that's 18 percent. You're in a little spot. Can you can you feed big urban areas using these regenerative methods? That's our average in our country. And you know what, I don't have all the answers for the most extreme situation, you know, the the single mom of four minority in a food desert and whatever, OK, I don't have the answer to every single situation, but I'm looking at suburbia. That's pretty crazy. But if you're if you're reducing flooding and using that in a drought to keep vegetation growing when there's so much sunlight, then you're actually increasing the commons. You so, so so, you know, we do. It's almost obscene. That's 15, 15 percent. The doctors that push and that he's a biome expert? Yes. In fact, ZIP Recruiters app will send you up to date job openings so you can be one of the first to apply. We convert a lot of it into, you know, Silvo pasture, widely spaced trees that are growing unimpeded with with grazing animals underneath so that there's no fire damage, there's no buildup of fuel. Right. So, so, so that's not good either, you know. All right. And there's there's a lot of productive capacity in these places. You get a very concentrated host facility because there's always a host there close to each other. And rightly so. Yeah, you're right. But when it's, you know, when it's when it's like, well, water, you know, when it's fairly clean water, I get down you the cows are drip and saliva and stuff in it, you know, and I just drink right out of it like a cow. And the things spread like wildfire through the population, but also when you have to get out of something goes down and you've got to get out of there and you realize, I don't even have a car. Oh yes. I don't drink it when it's pond water, although I've drunk pond water. It just I mean, that kind of stress plays a big factor with people's immune systems all the time. Taken from JRE #1478 w/Joel Salatin:https://youtu.be/4-7O3fOXXKo Yeah. Got you know, he's dying. Isn't it also that when you say the word we got, there's so many of us and so many people are already invested in doing these jobs that are actually counterproductive for nature. And we talk a lot about immunity, like feeding your microbiome to build that up so that you have a diversified enough exercise and enough immune system that you can withstand this. It might not be true in L.A., but but but here's the thing. To actually envisioning a future where thousands and thousands of people would be employed in healing ministries so that we'd be caressing our nest, you know, so many times the the idea in agriculture on the farming community is that nature is a nature's a a reluctant partner, that we've got to you know, we got to get them in a wrestling hole. OK, and so we're just, you know, we're rationing here. You don't have to use formaldehyde. How about that? They said, if you take out the dairy and the beef, you know, the big the big mega stuff, St. Louis. And it's exciting to now suddenly have people stepping back and realize, wow, you know, we just kind of put a pause button. It's my favorite way to cook it. We should be increasing the commons. Like if you wanted it, like the factory farms that I've seen in videos where they have these pigs, they're stuffed next to each other in his large warehouse. But yeah. And then when they look at the prospects of New York City going back to normal, like what it was five months ago, boy, that's a long road. Are these big meat processing plants? All right. This is a perfect time to talk to someone like you about our food. And there are so many demographics that we don't know. What a pathetic gym. So we've got we've got ten we've got permission for ten spots. And and each one is a workstation. Yeah. I mean, the idea of of. I read an interesting article just in the last couple of days about how how as we have left, it used to be when we were kids. You know, that was a fascinating book. Maybe so, but. His latest book, co-authored with Dr. Sina McCullough, Beyond Labels: A Doctor and a Farmer Conquer Food Confusion One Bite at a Time is available for preorder now. Roka is building the best eyewear on the planet and it looks great, too. So they don't take very many shipping containers. Good to be here. Well, there are medical doctors. Thank you, Joe. And it's going to hit America really hard because we've been lied to by the Chinese. And, you know, that was the breadbasket of the Confederacy during the Civil War, if you know your history. So so really, I just need to I just need to adjust where my money's going and how it's being so, so spent. I'm wearing them right now. For tomorrow's babies, it makes room for new ideas, new things, I mean, you can't you can't have you can't have life without the regenerative regenerative capacity of death. So this guy has figured out how to take a shipping container and simply refurbish it into a very small expectable poultry processing mobile poultry processing facility. I mean, the fact that landfills get get green environmental awards for poking methane, methane tubes in the landfill and running running the the excavation equipment on the methane from the decomposing material in a landfill. Yeah. Imagine imagine if those if we had thousands of people. It's just managed incorrectly, which is. Right? What I've just described is modern, efficient, industrial factory farming. Could feed its entire city within the city limits this way. Yeah. How about sleep? Like, it's taking years of some people's lives, but everything does. And you just have eight of these scattered, you know, five miles apart. You can buy a Trager Grill online or you can buy them in one of 10000 stores nationwide. And so they love us because we're giving them more per bushel and they have a nice secure buyer and they're local. She took care of them, three of them in her home. If you're only going to keep three, you're probably going to see them, you're probably going to have a direct relationship with each of their of their caregivers. And you got to imagine that that's going to lead to a compromised immune system. If you can't sell it, how are they going to buy it? A poultry worker goes out in the field and moves to move some chickens in a field. They're legit. Forget about that. You don't have to go to the grocery store three times a week, buy in bulk, go to the go to the farmer's market, buy from a farmer. But when you're running a business right. What you don't see in those videos is you don't see. They make first of all, they make great everything. If you could take an electro magnetic photograph of of the air of where we are, I mean, the very I mean, our skin is exuding stuff, you know, our our noses, our our clothes, everything where it would look like a it would look like the the cloud over Pigpen in a Peanuts comic strip, you know, I mean, that's literally what we're living in and and and all of this life, all of, you know, vak, viruses, bacteria, microorganisms, all of this life is is literally having a conversation. We we don't have the soils for it. I mean, if if our if our discretionary spending if this is going to make people more careful about discretionary spending, you know, flying to Paris, going on a Caribbean cruise, going to the sandals, I don't know how cheap those Caribbean cruises. Organic was cool. So so that's up and running. Well, I mean, you're familiar with urban agriculture. Joel Salatin Episodes - Joe Rogan Podcast
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