Interview 1278 – James Corbett on Resistance Without Anger

by | May 30, 2017 | Interviews | 26 comments

via freemantv.com: Can we have resistance without anger and anarchy without chaos? With A.I. technology like Watson, even lawyers are about to be obsolete. How can we possibly know what we want to be when we grow up, if we don’t know what is possible in our future?

SHOW NOTES:
While You Weren’t Looking the Globalists Just Passed A MAJOR Trade Deal

Trump Defiles the Sanctity of Government, and It Drives the Center-Left Mad

What Are You Going To Be When You Grow Up?

Adam Curtis documentary about central planning

P2P Solutions: An Open Source Investigation

Red Pill Expo

Open Mind Conference

26 Comments

  1. Many of Corbett’s episodes and articles tie in well to this road we are now upon. A profound favorite of mine is this 5 minute video Economics in One Image.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_ff0IfLcKkU

    I kid you not…
    I, Pencil is extremely enlightening and in a beautiful, aesthetic, high wavelength way.
    I recommend listening to the audio in order to capture the beautiful explanation of the miracle of the “invisible hand”.

    I, Pencil LINK – https://fee.org/resources/i-pencil-audio-pdf-and-html/

  2. Solutions. I hear ya! Create and find communities.

    ANECDOTES
    On my very, very small, poverty area, rental duplex parcel, I am growing all kinds of stuff… tomatoes, peppers, greens, turnip greens, collard greens, brussel sprouts, Stevia, Rosemary, Sage, Thyme, Oregano, horsetail, Black Seed, Mucuna Pruriens (L-dopa), Tulsi (Holy Basil), Ashwagandha, Peppermint, turmeric, ginger, peanuts, alfalfa, Flax, Chia, celery, bamboo, peach tree, apple tree, pomegranate tree, olive trees (for the leaves), Goji Berry, water melon, cantaloupe, cucumber, pumpkin, (cuttings for other or more trees such as apricot willow pomegranate apple), and a host of other plants such as morning glories, etc.

    Like I said, I live in a low end poverty rental area. My place even has concrete floors, except for the kitchen.
    Across the street, in a two bedroom duplex live a Hispanic family with an unknown number of kids because the quantity is so high. The adults do not speak English. ha!…the kids will sometimes play “La Migra” and ‘capture’ another kid and pretend to interrogate him like Immigration.
    Anyway, when I first moved in while working in the yard, I overheard one of the kids talking to his friends about “the pasty gringo viejo guero” in a prejudicial way. So, I went to the Dollar store and bought a dozen foam swords and some bubble-soap makers. Then one day, I walked over and rang the doorbell, telling Mama that these were left over from my grandson’s birthday party. Does she want them?
    5 minutes later about a dozen kids come pouring out of the house do the sword fight thing. The girls with the bubbles. The kids and I get along great now.

    Yesterday, I am in the yard and a guy is jogging in the heat was coming by. I said: “Man! Are you industrious!” He confided in me that he was trying to detox from Adderall because it turned him into jello. I fixed him up with some supplements & herbs and protocol.

    Yesterday, I ended up sending “How Big Oil Conquered the World” and Chemtrail links to my son and to my granddaughter who recently had friends asking about aspects of these.

    I like participating and interacting with people.

    • Are you doing any hydroponics?

      • No. No hydroponics (nor mosquito breeders). Just plain soil. But sometimes I amend it with compost, greensand, lava sand, molasses compost tea… and homemade bug sprays, etc. It depends upon what I am doing on how much effort I put into things. Celery – After I chop the butt off, I go out and stick it in moist ground. Then it grows.
        I have some books on organic gardening like Howard Garret, the Dirt Doctor, or Malcolm Beck. Did a lot of study on it. Went to trade shows for buyers. Howard Garrett’s newsletter is great. He helped in the Dallas Fluoride fight and it caused a big stir.

        Once, (2004) I almost got into being a self-employed entrepreneur “home delivery” business for organic gardening products, natural pest control, health stuff, and related…hence my name HomeRemedySupply. The two car garage was packed with inventory and I was just about to launch the website. My wife suddenly changed the rules about the garage and me working from home. So that venture died.
        (I am no longer married.)

        Actually, I don’t get too worried about gardening…plants may live or they may die. Plants can be grown again. It is fun to try stuff. This evening a family drove by as I was in the yard. They are doing guerilla gardening at their apartment complex. I told them that they could dig up certain plants of mine which they could use.

        My blackberries are fruiting. The rabbits and I ate the blueberries. (I finally hooked up an electric “fence’ for the bunnies.)

      • My soil. They call it “Black Gumbo”, a sticky black clay. Actually, it is technically “Vertisol”. Over time the underlying white limestone (calcium carbonate) breaks down and the dark black vertisol soils are born. It holds nutrients and water very well. They used to grow cotton as a cash crop in these parts because of the soil.

        Greenville, TX (east of me about 50 miles)
        Until the early 60’s or late 50’s…
        Banner over Main Street read “Greenville Welcome – The Blackest Land – The Whitest People
        https://68.media.tumblr.com/5e7113143ebfdbcc85a223f16c43bf32/tumblr_n73asnS38c1rcgl2jo1_400.jpg

        East Texas and West Texas are two different breeds.
        East Texas has the flavor of “To Kill a Mockingbird” storyline.
        West Texas is more Cowboy and rattlesnake round-ups (which are fun).
        I have lived in many areas of Texas.

        Deep East Texas – As a kid, before integration, I rode my bike downtown to watch the free Saturday early afternoon movies with a milk carton top. I had to go pee before the movie theatre opened. The courthouse on the square was there. The “Colored Restrooms” were outside the courthouse in kind of a basement level. I went in there, but was scared that the old white men sitting on a nearby bench might yell at me.

        • I like sharing valuable stuff.

          You know, there are various flavors of hydroponics. One doesn’t need a pool of water to do it. I’d like to get into stuff like that, but staying in a building has its shortfalls.

          • I hear ya.
            We do what we can with the resources at hand.

            I would love to have the time and resources and space to do the permaculture David Blume type scenario.

            I feel like this pathway is one of the ultimate Voluntaryist solutions towards a freeman’s currency, a freeman’s energy source, a freeman’s method to grow organic food and pest control, a community economy or catallaxy, etc.
            AND it will help take down Big Oil.

          • MOONSHINE – A freeman’s solution
            Alcohol can run your car.
            The cost per gallon can range from 40 cents to $1.50.
            Here is an average guy who made a still which produces about 100 gallons a day.
            https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Go3USwVIqfs

            An anecdote which is currently being done on a large and also a small scale:
            During the distillation process of alcohol production CO2 is given off. This can be fed into a greenhouse to accelerate the growth of plants and to also kill off the bugs. (Note: Greenhouses sometimes will purchase a CO2 machine for this purpose.) The mash left over from the alcohol production can be fed to fish, which in turn can be sold commercially. The fish poop can be used to fertilize the greenhouse plants.
            https://youtu.be/rR-C_bcEGf4?t=1h15m8s

            Corn may only get 250 gallons of MOONSHINE an acre, but cattails could get 10,000 gallons an acre.
            Watch 5 minutes.
            https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M7D_PhSRKmk&feature=youtu.be&t=5m37s
            …and continued here…
            https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tdKbTARhVh8

            • Lets also remember James talked about alcohol fuel in his seminal “How Big Oil Conquered the World” and the way the technology had been shut down at the time, even if it was economically viable and could be produced locally, something on which really can’t put a price tag.

              I wonder how would the world look like today had a different direction been taken at that crossroad.

            • I liked many of the concepts Blume presented. He called it really well on the fracking business, even if I’ll hold some reservations over his political analysis of the oil industry.

              Either way, it’s insane how much possible progress is being held back.

          • MOONSHINE is a viable, cheap energy solution which aligns extremely well…
            …with the philosophies of agorism/anarchism,
            …with facilitating alternative independent scrip currency,
            …with organic food production,
            …with increasing food production (plants, livestock, fish),
            …with destroying the oil industry and also destroying companies like Monsanto,
            …with cleaning up the air (it cleans pollutants out of the air when one drives their car) and also inhibits pollution of oceans/rivers,
            …with natural pest control,
            …and many more benefits.

            Here David Blume gives an agoristic/anarchist approach to ending the petro-dollar.
            https://youtu.be/bgFwToz2ICo?t=6m41s
            LINKS
            http://www.permaculture.com/
            https://www.blumedistillation.com/

  3. If lawyers had become obsolete two hundred years ago, we might have avoided all this trouble with government!

    • Reminds me of Shakespeare.
      We’ll get “Dick, the Butcher”.
      He will know what to do.
      “The first thing we do, let’s kill all the lawyers.”

  4. Great interview! And thanks for the words about the Left losing their minds over Trump. It only makes sense: if your religion is government, then I guess you would be pretty upset when the “devil” takes over. Never mind the fact that devils were already in charge though…

    • Good comment. I am chuckling.

  5. The human being is naturally sociable, so why do we become unsociable (or worse)?
    We learn as children from treatment by parents and schools.
    Schools actually prevent children from cooperating, conversing, etc, by repressing, forcing and imprisoning.
    There are schools that dont do this (have a look at Sudbury Valley School on Youtube). In spite of real freedom, the children all learn the 3Rs when they are ready, but they also learn confidence, social skills and to follow their own interests as well. Brilliant! Do have a look. Also see Prof. Peter Gray, and J.T.Gatto.

  6. I come from a long line of dirt farmers and we know how to grow our vegetables. We also know enough history to realize gardening know-how isn’t the half of it. A fractional view: On Sunday 1st April, 1649, Winstanley, William Everard, and a small group of about 30 or 40 men and women started digging and sowing vegetables on the wasteland of St George’s Hill in the parish of Walton. They were mainly labouring men and their families, and they confidently hoped that five thousand others would join them. (90) They sowed the ground with parsnips, carrots, and beans. They also stated that they “intended to plough up the ground and sow it with seed corn”. (91) Research shows that new people joined the community over the next few months. Most of these were local inhabitants. (92)
    Local landowners were very disturbed by these developments. According to one historian, John F. Harrison: “They were repeatedly attacked and beaten; their crops were uprooted, their tools destroyed, and their rough houses.” (93) Oliver Cromwell condemned the actions of the Diggers: “What is the purport of the levelling principle but to make the tenant as liberal a fortune as the landlord. I was by birth a gentleman. You must cut these people in pieces or they will cut you in pieces.” (94)
    Instructions were given for the Diggers to be beaten up and for their houses, crops and tools to be destroyed. These tactics were successful and within a year all the Digger communities in England had been wiped out. A number of Diggers were indicted at the Surrey quarter sessions and five were imprisoned for just over a month in the White Lion prison in Southwark. (95)

    • The fight for freedom is clearly as old as humanity. Thanks for sharing this.

      • Yes, but point being – the Diggers (and the Ranters and the Levellers) made the often-fatal mistake of assuming normal humanity on the parts of the psychopaths in control (the Normans/Khazars/Phonicians) and thought they could resume their pre-feudal pre-Norman overclass lifestyles of fending for and governing themselves. This in spite of knowing the absolute ruthlessness of Cromwell’s methods, as we are just as aware now of our Cromwells. If they had used their spades and pitchforks to better use at that juncture the ruling classes were changing between Charles and Cromwell, things may have turned out a lot different. An end of era like that only happens once in a very long while – like now. The psychopaths learned ages ago not to let us reasonably assume we can get along on our own. Growing vegetables and networking to help our communities are signs not lost on the elites. They count on our inability to imagine the evil they are capable of. Effective resistance doesn’t mean we will be like them. But we have to intelligently process what they are capable of.

        • I believe in today’s world labels are a reason for our general inability to actual measure the actions of individuals, in particular the ruling elite. If Obama had not had a “Democrat” label, then people may have seen him and his regime for what they were. If “Pope” and “Priest” were removed as titles, we would see them for the reprehensible scoundrels they are. We need to see past labels and really pay attention to every person’s/organization’s actions.

  7. Thanks for the link, Pablo. As a homeschooler myself (very blessed for it) I am interested to here from more people about the evils of our school system.

    • Well I tell you every time I pass by a school I refer to it as “prison” or “the Indoctrination Station.” I was home schooled and I attend “tutorials” where we were given lessons and assignments once a week. I met plenty of wonderful people that. Of course there are some screwball parents, but I believe most of the families I met have raised intelligent and productive people.

      We did not escape all indoctrination though ( too much has sadly seeped into Christian circles), so I still had to have my “waking up” event, but I feel home schooling was a great foundation to allow that to occur at all. I was taught “how” to think, not “what” to think. True reason and logic are natural cures for the inconsistent tales we are told as children by government/media/corporations.

      Your links show me something that make me very happy: When some people actually look into the lies they are actually moved to uncover the truth for others. Not everyone just turns a blind eye and hides their face.

      • “brainwashing mental diarrhea” is quite a mental image!

        I agree with you on technical training. When I became a high schooler I was lured into going to public school for a year, all thanks to media exposure. TV shows had shown me that it was normal and even fun. Very, very wrong. The only class I can definitively say I learned something was Algebra, because it is a training that explicitly requires the ability to arrive at the correct answer. The rest of my classes were mind-numbing baby sitting sessions.

        After that year I vowed to never return to high school nor advocate for anyone else to attend.

        I believe trade schools and technical schools would be much better and more helpful to people. They are also voluntary as well, which is much better for a human mind. You could choose what you want to learn, and have skills that can transfer into everyday life as well as work.

        • Great anecdote on Education.

  8. Lindsay Whorehan? LMAO

    Otherwise, this video is a bit of stretch. A bit of a naked butt skin whore does not make imo But that insane Brittney look is well worth revisiting lol

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