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Thriving Outside of "Their System" w/ Jay Noone image

Thriving Outside of "Their System" w/ Jay Noone

Connecting Minds
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Born in ‘79 on western Massachusetts, the oldest of six kids. Jay was raised by an O.G. libertarian horse trader, Spud Noone. Jay spent his youth at horse auctions, livestock auctions, stacking hay, competing in horse shows and rodeos. Jay also attended many freedom meetings and law study groups like ones put on by the John Birch society. As a teenager Jay worked or apprenticed in many trades that include, HVAC, logging, auto and equipment repair, roofing, welding, blacksmithing, farrier, feed broker, hay stacker and all around farm hand. Jay was a hay dealer and horse trader until 2013, then he moved to Colorado to work on a 3500 acre crop farm, a large commercial dairy operation, and a harvest crew, that was Owned buy his Mom Karen and Stepfather Trent.

Connect with Jay: 

Website: https://jaynoone.com/

Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLtqcQP48gA7gjPtNU4HVOA

Get 10% off Anarchapulco 2024 replays with code JAY: https://anarchapulco.com/



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Transcript

Introduction and Book Launch

00:00:01
Speaker
Hey folks, Christian Jardinov here. Welcome back to the podcast. A quick reminder, my new book is out, How to Actually Live Longer Volume One. This book series will add decades of quality life to your life. I absolutely guarantee that. All your money back. So check out the first book in the series and start learning the right way to extend your lifespan and health span. So today's

Guest Introduction and Libertarian Background

00:00:28
Speaker
guest,
00:00:29
Speaker
I saw at Anarchapuco, which was in Mexico in Anarchapuco a couple of weeks ago, I was front row for his talk, how to not fuck up your kids. Brilliantly titled talk. He was raised by an OG libertarian. Hence why he was speaking at an anarchist conference. So he's done a lot of different stuff. His full bio will be
00:00:58
Speaker
in the episode description he's done a lot of different things and so he lives in New Hampshire he has he's part of the freestateproject.org so check that out we can we can ask
00:01:14
Speaker
a little bit more about what that is.

Living on the Land and Non-Archist Lifestyle

00:01:17
Speaker
So he basically, Jay, instead of trying to define you and pick and hold you, can you tell us how do you define yourself if you had to pick, let's say, five words? I know anarchists would be one of them, but what would the rest of them be? Well, the term I like to use is a non-archist that is living on the land.
00:01:38
Speaker
So we know the word anarchy comes from the term without rulers. And non-archist just sounds a lot less threatening than anarchist. And it makes people sort of think when you're telling that. But yeah, I'm just a non-archist living on the land. And how else? So you're a farmer? Yeah, I'm a farmer. I'm a welder, fabricator.
00:02:05
Speaker
I just, I earned my dopamine hits as a child doing hard work. I am, my parents divorced when I was really young. So I was about, you know, two years old and my dad had me all, you know, to deal with all by myself. And I had a little younger brother that my grandmother pretty much, you know, was dealing with most of the time for first couple of years.
00:02:25
Speaker
But I was just hanging around my dad, and my dad was out wheeling and dealing, buying and selling horses. I was a little kid. And so I always remember when I start stacking hay in the summertime,
00:02:41
Speaker
And they're just like, when I was like, I must've been about four years old or five years old, I guess. And I just wanted to be one of the men so bad. So I've just tried so hard to like hang with them. And when you stack hay in, you know, New England, uh, it's basically like the weather was in Erika Polko last, you know, Oh my God. Uh, cause you got to make hell when it's hot and dry. Pure hell, bro. And it's never dry when it's hot in New England. It's hot and humid in New England. Yeah.
00:03:10
Speaker
Yeah, it's incredible. I'm so lucky that when I was growing up in Bulgaria, I'm from Bulgaria, and my grandparents on the one side were living in the Sofia. And on the other side, they were living in a village just on the outskirts of Sofia. And all of my grandparents, they were basically plebs, if you can, in a non-derogatory term, imagine what that means.
00:03:40
Speaker
people living in the villages and they growing their own food self subsistence and subsistence through your community was the only way they knew they literally had zero shops to go to until much much later in their lives and so my grandmother they they moved to that village from a smaller village even so I was exposed from a very early age to we had pigs we had a goat
00:04:06
Speaker
I had a lamb for a period of time before they slaughtered him for a saint's day. Chickens, obviously one of my earliest memories was her cutting the head off of a chicken when I was visiting to make chicken soup and zero sort of emotional disturbance from that, you know.
00:04:25
Speaker
So I feel like I was fortunate to be connected to that, you know, digging potatoes, picking corn, all that stuff. So I really think it's super important, our kids, especially for us living in urban environments that are reminded, because I know it's in our, it's in our genetics, probably it's in our core of what real life is supposed to be. So I love the

Homeschooling and Skills Education for Children

00:04:46
Speaker
work you're doing. So you're in your community, you were of urban folk are coming to your garden to do chores and learn about the process, right? That's a big thing you do.
00:04:55
Speaker
Yeah, well, there's more in the garden. It's a straight up farm. So, you know, raising cows, pigs, chickens. And a couple of years ago, when my daughter was first born in 2020, February 2020, she was born where we were basically forced to go to a hospital. We had to do a C-section. That was like the first time I sat in front of a TV for multiple days.
00:05:19
Speaker
you know, probably in 15 years, you know, I actually haven't had a television and, you know, since I moved out of my parents' house, basically. I had roommates at a couple of times. They had TVs, but I was just never really into TV. And anyways, just all this stuff on the news, you know, the COVID stuff was starting. And then I started, you know, you're euthanizing pigs. And my best friend, one of my best friends, Neil Smith, Bardo Farm,
00:05:49
Speaker
He was like, hey, we're all out of meat. We sold out of everything, but they were a small operation. They were doing like one cow a month or one cow every other month. And they were doing like two to three pigs a month, you know, butchering and selling them locally. So they sold right out. So we were trying to buy pigs from these guys and they were gonna euthanize the pigs. So we went to buy these 300 pound market hogs from a guy in Pennsylvania.
00:06:15
Speaker
And we were going to go down there and get them. And the guy tells us we can't because he has to gas them all. He can't sell any of them or he'll get sued by Tyson because they didn't belong to him. It was a corporate farm. So then they had these, I found through some horse trader friends from years ago, he used to do business with. And I've been in agriculture my entire life, but it was mostly as a hay dealer and a grain dealer.
00:06:41
Speaker
and horses. So I get ahold of this guy, and he's got these piglets that are free in Indiana. It's like 1,000 miles away. So we hire a guy with a cattle pot, and he goes out and gets 860 piglets. And I took 250 of them. And my brother took like 100. My brother's down in Massachusetts. Another guy, another friend of mine took a few hundred in Rhode Island.
00:07:08
Speaker
And we got them all distributed. Another guy, a couple of guys in Massachusetts took the rest of them. And then we got them all distributed. And I put an ad on Craigslist. Piglets for sale, $150 cash or $100 in bullion, bullets or Bitcoin. So I sold piglets for bullets, cryptocurrency, silver, and I got paid in gold also, the goldbacks. I don't know if you've seen the goldbacks. Someone showed me something in a kapuku.
00:07:38
Speaker
Yeah, Colin and I had them. And so we ended up, I ended up wintering 54 of those pigs and then hooking up with a local slaughterhouse, a USDA slaughterhouse and that we still have a good relationship with today.
00:07:53
Speaker
So my partner, Bardo Farm, they've been raising, you know, breeding like, you know, 60, 70 to 100 sows, you know, every year. So he's still at it. But what I did with my operation is I scaled it way down. And so last summer we just had three pigs. We raised 100 meat birds. We've had about 25 laying hens and we had five cows.
00:08:17
Speaker
In about two weeks, I'm going to get two pregnant sows from my friend Neil and homeschool co-op. It's actually the first part of homeschool co-op is I'm going to take a couple of the kids from homeschool co-op that are older. I'm going to take them to the farm with me an hour north to get the sows. So they're going to help me load the sows into the trailer. They're going to see the other farm. And they're real excited to do that. And we're.
00:08:42
Speaker
So the homeschool co-op kids are going to participate in the baby pigs being born. So they'll still be cleaning the pig pen. And then we're also going to.
00:08:54
Speaker
In fact, one of our friends that's taking care of the farm right now is starting to gather up clean eggs from our hens to put in the incubator. So we're gonna incubate whatever, I think our incubator will hold like 32 eggs. So we're gonna incubate 32 chicks. Basically, as soon as we get home, we're flying home on Tuesday. We're still in Florida right now at my father-in-law's. And the other part of homeschool co-op
00:09:22
Speaker
for this summer is going to be my daughter who's just turned four. I'm going to get her and the other kids into some garden tractor pulling. So I can kind of build that earned dopamine hit of equipment and machinery. And that's what I do for money. I fix equipment. So I really want to instill value in these guys.
00:09:47
Speaker
I really didn't even want to be a farmer again until I was holding Cypress in my arms when she was like two days old. Yeah. And I was thinking a couple of things were running through my head. So, you know, one of my friends sends me a message. So what's your plan for her to keep her off a stripper pole in 20 years? And because this is one of my old friends and he's always hurt. I'm always thinking about the future.
00:10:14
Speaker
I've always had forward thinking. I'm always thinking next decade, tomorrow, next week. And it's the farmer in me. I'm basically a multiple generation farmer. So I shut off the notifications on his phone. Anyways, I ended up
00:10:36
Speaker
And then I'm deciding, well, what's more important than I'm not worried about my daughter being a stripper. I'm more worried about there being decent, viable men out there when she's of age to start a family herself and become a mom.
00:10:58
Speaker
And so that's like a lot of the reason beside my home, my homeschool co-op is I want to, you know, I want all the kids I can get to come to this because we need to make sure there's a bunch of men her age that aren't, you know, soy boys. And, you know, that are useful and competent themselves and
00:11:20
Speaker
you know,

Self-Sufficiency and Financial Independence

00:11:21
Speaker
how much better is my neighborhood going to be for me in 15, 20 years when all these kids are useful and competent, you know, that are, that are in my community. And so like the one thing I really wanted to do at Anarchopulco, which I kind of forgot to do was
00:11:38
Speaker
And it's happening by like doing this podcast with you and I've done a couple other podcasts now and I have a few more lined up to do is sort of spread this message for influencers to push this message that hey and the biggest thing is is like if you have skills or know anyone that has skills
00:11:58
Speaker
you know, put these kids to work. You know, and like, for example, where I'm sitting at now is my father-in-law's house. And I said in my talk, you know, these highly skilled guys, you know, don't retire, don't go to Florida and, you know, sit on your couch and watch TV and hang out in your pool. That's what my father-in-law has been doing. And this guy's
00:12:20
Speaker
really brilliantly skilled. You know, he worked in nuclear power plants. He's, you know, build houses. He just understands everything about everything. But he grew up on a farm. You know, when he was nine years old, he was out in the woods hunting squirrels by himself at nine with a little 22 rifle. And he was telling me him and his brother would go hunt squirrels and they would bring home about six or seven squirrels. And their mom would and him and his brother would clean them and the mom would cook them up.
00:12:49
Speaker
And, um, you know, and, you know, what more organic meat can you eat than a squirrel that's in a forest of New Hampshire? Especially these forests, you know, they're 150 year old forests. A lot of them are older than that, but you know, a hundred years ago, New Hampshire and New England was all pretty cleared because it was all farmland, but it's basically gone back to forest. You know, 80% of New England now is forest.
00:13:16
Speaker
80% 100 years ago, 80% of Southern New England anyway was, you know, cleared land. So like, they're organic critters, these, these, these squirrels out in the middle of the forest, just kind of like the deer that are in the middle of the forest, you know, you don't get much more, you know, organic than that. And
00:13:34
Speaker
So anyways, he earned his dopamine head going and getting his, you know, his food and working on the farm. And even at our wedding, I got a horse and carriage that I got brought to my wedding, when Shallon and I got married, and he was able to drive the horse and carriage. You know, he hadn't done that in 40 years. And he did a great job with it, you know, my wife's father.
00:13:57
Speaker
And so anyways, and he's an inspiration too, because I understand how he grew up and he can afford to relax now. He made a good living, working in a nuclear power plant and stuff like that. But it's kind of a bummer that he's just kind of hanging out here, just retiring, and he doesn't have his own man camp down here in Florida. In his neighborhood, just teaching kids the skills, because the problem is,
00:14:26
Speaker
You really got to do this stuff with kids. A lot of this introductory stuff when they're, before they're six years old.
00:14:32
Speaker
And the idea of, you know, an electrician or a mechanic, you know, taking a six-year-old into his shop is very unrealistic. They don't even want teenagers in their shops, you know, because the insurance regulations and stuff. But the kids are just so thirsty for it when they're that age, especially when they're living in like a suburban, urban area where the only thing they're really doing for a pastime is playing video games or playing sports ball.
00:14:57
Speaker
Yeah. So yeah, so the idea is, you know, we just, you know, the easiest way to make the world better is just to do it right in your own backyard. So that's what I'm doing. And I really want to encourage others to do the same thing. So the man camp folks bring their kids and you're teaching them various kinds of skills, right? Yes. And but is it just for boys?
00:15:24
Speaker
No. So when I say man, I mean mankind because a woman is a man with a womb. Bro, you're going to get a soul canceled up in here. That's

Critique of Financial Systems and Health Over Wealth

00:15:36
Speaker
what they keep telling me. I don't care. You can't cancel me.
00:15:43
Speaker
Here's what we'll do. We'll take your credit card and we'll stop your bank accounts and then let's see what you're going to do then, bro. What are you going to do? I'm just going to keep operating as usual because I don't have a credit card. I've never had a bank account. I don't use any of that stuff. So you don't even have a social security number, right? No social security number. My father never got me or my brothers any social security numbers and he didn't get my younger brother's birth certificates.
00:16:09
Speaker
That, so you have a birth certificate, but they don't. Yeah. That is absolutely fun. So, okay. So what have been some difficulties in terms of interfacing with society when we don't have a social security number? Obviously we know the bank account stuff, but in terms of driving a car, this kind of stuff, how does that happen? So I don't have a driver's license either. And I don't need.
00:16:38
Speaker
And I haven't had one since 2008. And if you quite simply read the code, the statutory construction manual of any state in the United States anyways, you know, Massachusetts, for example, is where I was for, you know, up until I was 33 years old. I didn't have a driver's license from the time I was 28.
00:17:01
Speaker
But when I went and got a driver's license, I actually got one in Colorado. My mom was living there at the time and I would go visit her often because Massachusetts required you to have a social security number. In fact, my one brother just went and got a driver's license in New York because they made it that you don't have to have a social security number to get a driver's license in New York. So, so-called undocumented, well, they call them illegals, but undocumented
00:17:26
Speaker
citizen people could get driver's licenses and they actually gave him a hard time because he wasn't an immigrant trying to get a driver's license without a social security number but it says applicant if an applicant does not have a social security number all they have to do is fill out an affidavit saying you don't have a social security number well this is true with the passport application for United States passport if you don't have a social security number you just fill out an affidavit saying you were never issued one
00:17:53
Speaker
One of the challenges was when I was So when I was 21 years old, I wanted to buy a brand new diesel pickup truck and I was so I did a deal with a local Ford dealership to buy a brand new Ford F 350 diesel pickup truck for $19,000 and I had $6,000 cash to put down on a truck and When it came to do the financing
00:18:20
Speaker
The owner of the dealership was a really cool guy, Jeff Sarat. This is Sarat Ford and Aguan Mass. And he was like, yeah, you should have no problem getting financed, putting that kind of money down. Because a lot of people put $100 down. That's it. I'm putting like one third. And so they wouldn't finance me because I didn't have a social security number. So I asked the...
00:18:44
Speaker
So I talked to somebody on the phone at Ford Motor Credit and I said, can you please send me on your letterhead the explanation why I'm being denied this loan?
00:19:00
Speaker
So like a week later, it shows up in the mail, this letter that says you've been denied a loan for failure to provide a Social Security account number and we need this Social Security account number for identification purposes. Well, the Social Security Act of 1938 clearly states that it can't ever be used for identification purposes. And the Privacy Act of 1973 says
00:19:26
Speaker
any citizen or non-citizen who is denied of a right benefit or privilege for his or her failure to produce a social security number or shall not be denied any right benefit or privilege. And then in 1981 or 1983, that was amended to apply to the financial sector. So my grandmother actually helped me write a lawsuit against Ford Motor Credit. So we typed up this lawsuit
00:19:54
Speaker
We wrote it up, we included just basically those two acts of Congress that they were violating, and also they were violating my religious beliefs because I have a religious objection to the inventorying of human flesh. A religious objection to the inventorying of human flesh.
00:20:18
Speaker
We mail out this lawsuit and we didn't file it with the court. We just sent it right to this lawyer. I talked to this lawyer a little bit, the same lawyer that at Ford Motor Credit who sent me this letterhead. And it was a very simple like seven page lawsuit and it wasn't even structured correctly and the grammar wasn't right. And the lawyer
00:20:43
Speaker
And so it was like, I don't know. We mailed it, certified mail, priority mail, whatever, return receipt. And then the guy who owns the Ford dealership calls me at like 7.30 on a Monday morning. He goes, hey, when I walked into my office, he says, in the fax machine this morning was a approval for your loan.
00:21:03
Speaker
on this truck and we still got the truck here. He goes, did you buy another truck yet? And I says, no, I didn't. He goes, come on down and get your truck. And so then what happened is I started getting these credit card applications in the mail immediately. Wow. Multiple of them. So I fill out one.
00:21:21
Speaker
And someone from the credit card company called and I sent it in. And it's one of these credit cards where you had to pre-pay $36 for a year. It was $3 a month service or $12 a month service fee or $3 or something. I can't remember what it was. But I sent them a money order for $86. It was $50 to get the credit card. And then there was a service fee I pre-paid a year ahead for.
00:21:45
Speaker
And they're like, no, you can't get a credit card because you don't have a social security number. So I said, please respond to me in writing.
00:21:54
Speaker
why you're denying me this. So they did. So I basically took that same exact paperwork from Ford Motor Credit. I just put the names in of the credit card company and I mailed it to their legal guy and I always asked to talk to somebody in legal. And so I mailed it to the legal guy and sure as shit, don't a credit card show up like three weeks later, that's got like a $500 limit on it. So what I was doing, so people always want to write me checks.
00:22:19
Speaker
And the banks right after 9-11, right after, you know, 2001, they wanted two forms of ID to cash check, right? Which is really stupid. And so I did have a driver's license at that time, but that was the only thing I had. So they were really difficult about cash and checks. So I started just endorsing the check to the credit card company. So I would write to check and I would send them to the credit card. So that's how I dealt with my checks. And I would use the credit cards to like, you know, buy fuel or truck parts or whatever.
00:22:47
Speaker
And then in like 2005 or 2006, the credit card company was like, we're not taking third party checks anymore. So I just whacked a credit card out and never dealt with them again. And for a couple of years, they tried collecting on me in a credit card and I just never paid them. It's all funny money made out of thin air, made out of nothing anyways. So I haven't had a credit card since then, that worked for a little while.
00:23:16
Speaker
Apparently there is a way to get a bank account and a social security and a credit card and all that stuff without a social security number. But just like you said, you get dependent on that and you can be canceled. So you can't cancel my Bitcoin and you can't cancel my gold and silver. But my most important asset I have is my skills and they can't take your skills away.
00:23:39
Speaker
And another thing, I did a podcast the other day with Luke Radowski, We Are Change, bestpoliticalpodcast.com, I think is what it's called, or bestpoliticalshow.com. And we had a round table discussion on like, what's your number one prepper tool, prepper item? These guys are like guns, food, you know, living in the middle of nowhere, one guy says or something. And I'm like, it's your skills. You know, you could drop me butt naked,
00:24:08
Speaker
wherever and I'm going to be fine because I got the skills. You know, I'm not one of these, you know, yuppie YouTubers who's got like, you know, $100,000 sports car, you know, all kinds of guns and, and RMEs and, you know, tents and survival blankets and water filters, but doesn't ever practice them or know how to use them. Well, health, health and skills, probably those two are. Yes. Yeah.
00:24:38
Speaker
Definitely health that they were talking like surviving, you know, the first several weeks of a zombie apocalypse basically, you know, what they were talking about when that when that, you know, the shit hits the fan. Yeah. Yes. And I often say our most valuable asset is our health. Yeah. I know a lot of people who got all kinds of money.
00:24:56
Speaker
In fact, I know people that are so damn poor, all they have is their money.

Diet and Health: Criticism of Modern Practices

00:25:00
Speaker
But you see a lot of wealthy people, they got houses in Florida, houses in New York, they got yachts, they got all this stuff, but they're on 50 different medications, they're chronically sick, they got cancer, they got this, they got that. And then you see these poor farmers that are working hard at 80 years old and they're healthy.
00:25:23
Speaker
Exactly. And by the way, when you actually think about it, so knowing how to take care of your health in the modern world, being a big sort of
00:25:33
Speaker
caveat here. So back in the day, taking care of your health was super easy. You just throw your food, eat your food, stay away from the company store and it's trappings. But nowadays, knowing how to circumvent a lot of things that are trying to suck the light out of you, it's a skill in itself. So having your health
00:25:56
Speaker
and maintaining your health requires skills. You need to take responsibility, like knowing about seed oils, about plasticizers, pollution, all of these things. You really have to spend quite a number of hours researching, and that actually becomes a skill in itself. Yeah, so surviving the modern day environment,
00:26:25
Speaker
and being healthy in a modern day environment, yeah, is a whole brand new skill set that sounds like a guy like you who's been working on developing. A long time now, yeah. And just the fact that a lot of the, well, let's talk about herbicides for a second, right? So in the United States, all the cheap food is laced with all kinds of sides, herbicide, pesticide, fungicide.
00:26:53
Speaker
Synthetic manure because the only way you get a crop subsidy as a farmer in the United States is to use Monsanto growing practices Yeah, so and that Monsanto seed doesn't grow unless you it's engineered for all these, you know Yeah, and the word side means death, you know, so a herbicide means to kill herbs kill weeds and and they're not even weeds or herbs and
00:27:19
Speaker
So so and like that's been around that just started like when I was six years old five years old like 1985 is when that started getting introduced so that that's just like that's fairly new you know my generation is really you know the first generation born you know that I got got that stuff at a young age and I believe that the the degradation or
00:27:46
Speaker
cultural downfall, especially within the urban areas in the Western countries where the food is government-subsidized via these Monsanto growing practices, the IQ is being diminished in the inner cities mostly, the urban areas in the United States, in Canada, in Europe, because the children are being, you know, the first thing the moms are all given that are on welfare is infant milk.
00:28:12
Speaker
or Similac, which is basically breast milk flavored Coca-Cola. If you start looking at the ingredients and then, and this goes back to Jordan Peterson talking about when a baby's born, they have all of their IQ they're gonna get, they have it right then and there. And it is very, very difficult to increase that, but it is relatively easy to reduce that IQ via poor nutrition.
00:28:39
Speaker
So if you look at the standard American diet of essentially the welfare family in America.
00:28:45
Speaker
which somebody's welfare children being born right now are eighth and 10th generation welfare recipients from the same bloodline. And for generations now, those people have been consuming all of the seed oils, the GMO, and anything that's GMO is sprayed with all the chemicals, all the chemicals. And more, when I worked on that crop production farm in Colorado,
00:29:13
Speaker
You know, the limit was like, I'm going to make up some numbers because I don't know what the limits are off top of my head. But let's say the limit was 200 ounces a year. You could spray on your crop of corn, your, your Roundup ready corn. Well.
00:29:26
Speaker
what's happened in the past couple of 10 or 15 years is all the weeds are becoming resistant because that's what mother nature does. You start killing mother nature, it becomes resistant. So then they not are spraying like three to 400 ounces per acre. And when I say an ounce of Roundup, this is like the concentrated stuff. Like you have to have like a special license to even like buy this stuff. And like all these farmers,
00:29:52
Speaker
They have all these licenses because Monsanto pays for them and gives them all the education on how to use them. And it's just a facade to make it look like everybody's taking a safety protocol.

Traditional Farming and Nutrition

00:30:05
Speaker
But sort of double and triple dosing all of the cropland. In fact, some of the farmers I worked with in Colorado have gotten away from all the Monsanto stuff and they can't get financed.
00:30:19
Speaker
like by the banks. There's no way you're getting a bank to finance you unless you have a federally subsidized profit insurance policy. So like, there's one family that I know their names. I'm not going to say their names, but because I could be a little wrong on it, but they're four boys. They're about my age, roughly the family. And so they all worked hard. They work at the airport in the winter time. They work driving snow plow trucks in the winter. These guys work constantly.
00:30:46
Speaker
And then some of the farmers, they work hard all summer long and they get drunk all winter long. Um, kind of like fishermen, they get drunk in the off season and they work hard and they're inefficient season. And, uh, but these, this particular family worked hard and they went all to, uh,
00:31:01
Speaker
non-GMO. They're not organic. They tried doing organic, but the organic stuff was really difficult. But now they just market everything non-GMO. So they're not spraying any Roundup. They understand that the Roundup and the synthetic manure is just destroying the ground. It doesn't have what Mother Nature intended.
00:31:21
Speaker
And now what they're doing when they raise a lot of corn, they just burn the weeds. So they built these big weed burners that burn 12 rows of corn at a time, which is almost as efficient as spraying Roundup, but it's way more efficient than trying to till ground. These guys work a couple thousand acres of land. So people are learning. They are coming around, but they're no longer subsidized. So all your cheap food is bad for you. It's really the bottom line.
00:31:51
Speaker
Yeah, I think that's the worst part is because if you're on welfare, if you're not doing well financially, you have no choice but to go for the cheapest stuff. That's kind of the double whammy there. And that's the worst stuff for you as well. And you'll notice the welfare families, and I'm being judgmental as some of my friends would put this when I talk like this, but
00:32:19
Speaker
So in New Hampshire, welfare day, one of the EBT cards are charged as the fifth of the month. So I've done some case studies where I'll go down to the big grocery store in our biggest city, Manchester, which is like a population of 110,000. And you'll see all these welfare moms. They got their babies in the baby carriages. The babies all got government subsidized Obama phone tablets in front of them. You know, the pacifier and the babysitter.
00:32:45
Speaker
The moms have got their $1,000 iPhone. They got their couple hundred dollar fake fingernails. They got their multiple hundred dollar hair weave, hairdos. They got all kinds of makeup on. They're carrying a Louis Vuitton bag.
00:33:04
Speaker
and they're buying the kids, you know, generic Fruit Loops and Malta meal and, you know, all these el cheapo macaroni pastas and like,
00:33:18
Speaker
Zebra cakes is what's coming to mind. I don't know if you know what a Zebra cake is. So a Zebra cake is like a little, it's like a little pastry thing that comes in like, it's like this big. It comes in, it's like four ounces. It comes in like a plastic wrap individually and they sell them in every convenience store in America. They're like 89 cents, but you can buy like a 36 or a 24 pack at the grocery store for like a dollar 50.
00:33:40
Speaker
And it is literally... Sounds nasty. These things are like 600 calories each, but there's 600 of the worst calories you can consume. And the ingredients list is, you know... 30 things. 30 chemicals. Yeah, it's a whole bunch of words you can't read. It's two pages long. It doesn't even fit on the individually wrapped package, the ingredients list.
00:34:04
Speaker
And there's all just like nutty buddies, zebra cakes, little Debbie things, all these garbage, you know, pastries. And that's what the moms are buying their kids and feeding their kids and like, and all the, but that's cheap. It's like that box is like, I did the calculation once a couple of years ago, that box for like a dollar 19 is something like, like 12,000 calories, right? If you take the dollar versus calorie, that's really inexpensive. Yeah. Yeah.
00:34:32
Speaker
How much does it cost to get 12,000 calories worth of steak? Probably $150. Or more, I don't know. I mean, we'd have to get a calculator out. But the way the mom's looking at it is, well, how am I going to feed these kids three times a day so I can have my hairdo and my iPhone and my Louis Vuitton bag and I only get X amount of dollars from the state? So what's happening is they're diminishing the IQ of their children. Like one of the things I've been feeding my kids ever since they would eat it,
00:35:00
Speaker
is butter from grass-fed cows. Unsalted butter from grass-fed cows. I let my kids eat several tablespoons of that a day if they wanted. And people are like, oh my God, you do that to them? Jay, just yesterday, I was like, I want to talk about how much butter my daughter demands. She's two and a half, as I said earlier.
00:35:25
Speaker
she demands she's like she she is like bottle and i'm trying to like negotiate with her okay let's have butter with

Cultural Background and Farming Discussions

00:35:34
Speaker
cheese or butter with something like bottle bottle okay okay okay i'm getting the butter get a spoon of butter
00:35:43
Speaker
more butter and then it's like it's this loop bro more butter more butter and at one point I have to really just stop because if her mother finds out you know I'm on the chopping block but I am I am the exact same opinion like it's decent Irish butter grass-fed cows because it's just more economically feasible to feed the cows grass because there's a lot of grass a lot of rain yeah Ireland is literally the best place in the world for cattle
00:36:13
Speaker
because I got a cousin that lives over there and she's like, oh yeah, we mow the yard year round in Ireland. It just doesn't stop growing. And the beef, you just cannot compare Irish beef to anything. In fact, my daughter would eat a lot of meat in her first 18 months or basically the one year of weaning that we did. But after that textures, it became a texture thing for toddlers. It can become an issue. The one meat she will continue to eat
00:36:42
Speaker
Add the beaten literally she will eat a full six ounce, seven ounce steak. If you don't stop her halfway, she will eat the whole thing. More, more, more and bottle, bottle, bottle. But it's the Irish beef. That's the only meat she will eat right now. And that's another reason I'm only raising a couple cows at a time.
00:37:03
Speaker
So i used to be in the hay business so i do feed my cows grain but i actually feed them barley that comes from europe it comes from scotland and ireland and it's and it's intended for breweries here in the united states like hipster breweries and it says right on it pesticide free herbicide free fungicide free
00:37:23
Speaker
And they even have like disclaimers like our barley may not be consistent because we do not use any, you know, synthetic fertilizers, you know, it's and we get it from it expires and they don't and the breweries don't use it. So we get this.
00:37:42
Speaker
So I raised my cows on it, but I finished my cows for 90 days on just hay or grass. I don't have much grass because I got a new farm. I'm working on building it. Actually, this summer, I'll have some decent grass for the first time. But because I was in the hay business, I know how to source hay, and I can source hay very cheap. So my cows get all the hay they want, and I finish them on hay. And actually, when I take them off grain, they lose weight.
00:38:10
Speaker
Because, you know, they're so used to grain, but I just give them grain to, you know, the first like, you know, for the first like two and a half years, then like the last 90 days, no grain, just hay, hay and minerals. I give them minerals too. The thing about ruminants, at least cows from what I've read is they have this bacteria or maybe it's various species of bacteria in their ruminants that it actually can saturate unsaturated fats like those in the seeds.
00:38:40
Speaker
So that's one of the best reasons ruminant meat is the healthiest meat for us is because even if they're fed grain, it's not as bad as monogastric animals like pigs and chickens because what they eat is what they become. So even organic chicken, you have to be very careful because its fat content can be
00:39:02
Speaker
It's fat profile can be almost the exact same as like a seed oil. So you have to be very careful with too much pig or chicken fat, but the beef especially is one of the safest things. So, you know, if you're giving them non-GMO, organic or really clean grains,
00:39:22
Speaker
for some of their life or as a supplement. Even the meat we buy here, organic, the guy that I buy it from, he tells me they are supplemented because seasonal difficulties and the cost would be way, nobody would pay that much for that meat otherwise.
00:39:37
Speaker
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. My meat is tremendously expensive because I'm not government subsidized and I'm a small operation. You know, last year I only raised five cows. Actually in a couple of weeks we're going to be getting some, some new bottle calves. And the other one, the other thing I'm doing is I'm raising Jersey cows because I can get the calves. And that's the only thing too. Beef in America has gotten stupid in price, just in general.
00:40:04
Speaker
Yeah. Right now to buy a calf at auction, like an Angus calf at auction, that's a day old, they're bringing $1,000 right now. Wow. A year ago, they were bringing like 350 bucks, but like six, five years ago, they were $100.
00:40:20
Speaker
That's a thousand bucks now. So I can get these jerseys from a local guy. He'll basically just gives them to me Jersey bull calves. He gives them away, you know, cause they're not, you know, you don't milk the bulls and, uh, and they don't produce much meat, but it tastes really good. And they're an heirloom heritage cow. How much, how much meat would you get out of one of those?
00:40:41
Speaker
So the last three Jersey steers I raised from bottle calves, we butchered them a little early because we needed to sell the meat. But the biggest one hanging weight was 390 pounds. And that would be about 220 pounds of actual packaged beef. And the smallest one I believe was like 325 pounds hanging weight. So he was like 190 pounds of packaged beef.
00:41:09
Speaker
And how long does it, this is just because I'm interested because once we get out of this apartment, get a house, I definitely am getting goats and chickens at the very least. But how long does it take to butcher one cow for you? And what do you do with the blood? I've always wondered. So I just send them to a USDA slaughterhouse. What's really cool in New Hampshire, so this
00:41:35
Speaker
And my pigs, I said, no USDA slaughterhouse too. But when I was butchering my own pigs, for example, and I did a cow with my brother a few years ago, basically we just let the blood drain on the ground and we just mixed it with our compost.
00:41:51
Speaker
And then, um, and then all the guts, I just bring them out to the woods and I make an offering to the forest animals. Whenever I bring the guts to out to the woods, I got a lot of acreage around me. I, I go out there and I say animals of the forest. I make you this offering. Please enjoy this, this blood, this guts is Oregon meat, bones, whatever, hide and leave my livestock alone. If you leave your livestock alone, I'll continue to bring you this offering.
00:42:20
Speaker
That's incredible, but you don't use the organs? Some of them we do, but like there's a lot of intestines and now we're recently using the organs. I wasn't using the organs back then, but now we have our pigs and cows butchered at a slaughterhouse. So I get all the organs, I get the tongue, I get the heart, I get the liver.
00:42:40
Speaker
I get the kidneys, but I give those to a Russian friend. His wife does something with the kidney and actually I'm going to pick up my pigs when I get home and I got the kidneys and what else did she want? I'm going to give her some liver and some heart and she's going to make us some kind of Russian dish out of it all. I don't know what it is, but what we've been doing with the liver is my wife's a little squeamish about the liver.
00:43:08
Speaker
So we've been taking the liver and we just frozen liver and put it through a cheese grater and just mix it in with whatever sauce is all eat the liver. And I got my kids eating liver. They eat the liver too.
00:43:21
Speaker
That's awesome. Yeah, that's what I advise my clients. If they or their kids don't like liver, just freeze it and then grate it into stir fries or whatever. But what I would do is I would just chop. That's what I do when we only get chicken liver, but I compartmentalize it into small little chunks. And then every couple of days up to every four or five days, I just
00:43:44
Speaker
cook a bit, everybody gets a bit. And it's like nature's multivitamin. But I remember my grandmother, they only had three pigs or huge pigs, but they only killed one for a special occasion. I remember my grandmother would clean the intestines in the kitchen sink, bro, it's gross. But she would use the intestines to make
00:44:08
Speaker
Sausage. Sausage. But the thing is, you know, more recently, they're discovering all these peptides that are actually very expensive to buy like a in milligram amounts that you have to that you can inject in your subcutaneously.
00:44:23
Speaker
and they do all these kind of healing processes. But a lot of these things are getting identified in places like the stomach lining, the gastrointestinal tract. So I think another one of the many reasons why we're not as healthy and robust as our ancestors, even more recent ancestors, is because so much of this goodness is being thrown out that we could breathing.
00:44:51
Speaker
So one of the other thing we're going to do, I was telling you, we're getting a couple of pregnant sows. So we're going to have the baby pigs, the piglets with the homeschool co-op. And then when the piglets get to be about 60, 70 pounds, we're going to harvest like four of them. So I want to harvest them with the kids and the moms like we did the chickens. And you saw the pictures of us doing that at my presentation.
00:45:19
Speaker
So we're gonna harvest that and what I'd really like to do is I would because they're gonna be small animals is a lot easier work to harvest a 60 pound pig than it is a 300 pound pig and Because they're gonna be small. I want to I want to utilize all of that stuff. So I know there's like some kind of some kind of dish that you can cook with inside the intestine or inside like the stomach of like these animals and
00:45:46
Speaker
So, there's a Mexican thing called Manuto, and they use the intestine or the stomach, and I don't even know if it's of a pig or a cow, but to cook this in. So, I believe what you're talking about, that's a way to somehow extract those nutrients and those valuable peptides you're talking about.
00:46:07
Speaker
And I think even the blood man must be incredibly nutritious at the very least to give to other animals on the farm. But I think a lot of people, like if you look even at the Maasai people in Africa, they just subsist. They kind of, they pierce, I think somewhere near the neck, maybe a carotid type. So they drain the blood out of the cow, a different cow every, however many days. And the milk, they mix it with the milk.
00:46:37
Speaker
You know, occasionally they slaughter a cow and they subsist on that. So I think the blood is very nutritious. That's why we have things like blood sausage. And yeah, man, this is the thing.
00:46:49
Speaker
If you only eat muscle meat like most people today, it's better than only eating vegetables and plants, whatever, but about half of the animal is collagenous tissue. So that is incredibly beneficial for bone health, skin health, detoxification.
00:47:09
Speaker
For mood for sleep just a ton of different benefits and if we're if we're not utilizing that this way I go out of my way to kind of add these things to our diet It's difficult especially being in an urban environment. We don't slaughter our own animals So it's difficult to procure it because you get what you get from these stores and these rags do this So, you know, I think that's another reason

Legal Disputes and Child Welfare System Critique

00:47:34
Speaker
to try to emulate our ancestors because they were doing a lot of things right in terms of this miniscale agriculture they were doing. Right, so yeah, so my miniscale agriculture I'm doing has a lot of health benefits. So my buddy who's got 80 sows, so sometimes he's got like 200 pigs on the property, and he's doing everything from a tractor seat.
00:48:01
Speaker
Me, I'm just walking with five-gallon buckets of feed and water. I'm hauling bales by hand. We do feed some round bales also, but I really like to just do the work. I got these little buckets for my kids and for the homeschool kids, and I got Tonka trucks for them to haul the feed and haul hay in and stuff.
00:48:24
Speaker
because I really enjoy the exercise and I know it's really good for me. And when I'm just feeding, you know, three to five cows and, you know, three to five pigs and a hundred meat birds is, you know, you're not, you know, you're not, that's a couple of five gallon buckets of feed, one five gallon bucket of feed a day. And then we're grinding all of our own feed
00:48:47
Speaker
that really, that's what our grandparents, all of our great grandparents were doing pretty much everywhere unless they were living in a city back in the day. But if you live in a city back in the day, you were getting your chicken and your beef from a guy that was doing it that way. And so that's why, you know, the average life expectancy, you know, in the US 100 years ago, if you made it past five years old, it was like 87. And today it's like 72 or something, I can't remember.
00:49:14
Speaker
You know, it went down over the last five years or so. It started to trend down, which is really bad. It's been going up for like half a century. Yeah. Yeah. And well, it's just we've gotten, we've gotten gluttonous with pride and
00:49:34
Speaker
you know, and live in a world of I can't remember the name right now. World of abundance. Everything is so abundant that you can make up half a million dollars a year just sitting in front of your computer a few hours an afternoon or make millions of dollars a year sitting in your front of your computer all your hours of the of the day and get takeout.
00:49:59
Speaker
Exactly. Bro, before we finish, I just want to talk a little bit about your story. Was it in 2022? You had a bit of a run-in with some state... Child protection services. Child... Tell us the story. The New Hampshire Division of Children, Youth and Families were... What was their problem?
00:50:24
Speaker
So my wife, so Cyprus, who was my four-year-old, you saw her running around there at Antarctica, and she's in the videos, had just fallen asleep for her afternoon nap. And Cash, my son, who's two and a half, was two. I mean, was six months old. And my wife had to go return an item at a TJ Maxx. Now, this was Concord, New Hampshire, which is a small city, 90,000 people.
00:50:53
Speaker
And the store, this TJ Maxx is on the outskirts of town. In fact, there's a river between the TJ Maxx and the actual city of Concord. And it's in a small lot that has a hardware store and a little Caesar's pizza in it. And it was March, March 18th, and there was still snow on the ground. And it was a warm day, it was about 60 degrees out.
00:51:20
Speaker
So she goes into the grocery store, into this TJ Maxx to do her thing. And Cyprus is strapped in the car, sleeping. She leaves the air conditioner, the climate control at whatever, 62 degrees, whatever it's set for in the car, 68 degrees. And leaves the car running, takes the baby out of the car, changes his diaper, gives him a boob.
00:51:46
Speaker
locks and then shuts off the car and then locks the car door and starts the car with a remote start so everything comes back on and the climate controls going. She comes back out about 20 minutes later and there's a couple of cops and a career Karen outside there giving her a hard time. So they don't give her a ticket or nothing they just
00:52:05
Speaker
this Karen called the cops. Well, the Karen who called the cops, it's actually works in the prosecutor's office in that city for 20 years. She's a secretary in the prosecutor's office. Um, she's also very, very woke, you know, uh, woken prideful, put it that way. And that, you know, has this rainbow pride nonsense going on. And so, uh,
00:52:31
Speaker
So then like three days later, we get a call from a social worker. She says, I'm coming to your house to interview your child alone. And I said, I don't accept your offer to contract with me. I reject your offer to contract with me. She says, it doesn't work like that. She goes, I'm doing this or we're getting the courts involved. And I said, well, I have a right to be left alone. And I reject your offer to contract with me. So fast forward, a week later,
00:53:01
Speaker
the local police, local chief of police, who actually turned out to be a really good dude, and he's a father. And in this whole case, this whole scenario, all the people that we dealt with, this is the only guy that was a family man of all the bureaucrats, the only one. The social worker, the Karen, the other cops involved, none of them didn't have any kids, they're all, you know, childless people. And there's a lot of those. And anyways,
00:53:28
Speaker
The chief of police finally, I get ahold of them and I said, hey, meet us at the local restaurant. We go to this local restaurant like once a month.
00:53:40
Speaker
So he meets us down there and he shows me that this order that the social worker submitted to family court. And in the order, paragraph eight, it says, the social worker, this is her affidavit, says, I contacted Henneker police. They say they're familiar with the family, that the family is freestater, anti-government, and live on a compound with lookouts.
00:54:03
Speaker
And it would be very dangerous to approach the property without an order. So I asked the Chief of Police, I go, did you write this? He goes, nope, I never told him this. These aren't my words. None of my guys said this. And so we're actually filing a tort claim against Child Protective Services in the state of New Hampshire this week when we get home.
00:54:23
Speaker
In fact, we have a non-lawyer, a non-bar attorney, a non-bar lawyer, I'm sorry, a lawyer who was not a part of the Bar Association who was drafting this for us. Why is that important? Because Bar Association is basically part of the problem. They're all corrupt. It's all the lawyers, all the prosecutors, all the judges, they're all members of the bar. The Bar Association is essentially the master enslavement mechanism of the Western world.
00:55:02
Speaker
basically made it that members of the Bar Association, uh, people who had titles of titles and nobility could not be in government. They couldn't be elected. And it's infiltrated with a bunch of people who hold these titles of nobility that are essentially given by the crown and all in the bar association derives right out of England. The crown, um, is the same bar association and all the five I countries, you know, all the Western nations. So.
00:55:23
Speaker
There was actually the original 13th Amendment to the Constitution for the United States of America.
00:55:33
Speaker
I basically offered, you know, made a peace offering, offered extended olive branch to these, you know, to the state. And I said, hey, if, you know, you guys are so hell-bent that somebody interview my children for their safety and inspect my house, I will allow the chief of police in town to do it.
00:55:56
Speaker
And he had a lieutenant that was actually used to be a social worker and a lieutenant was specialized in like child prime stuff. And so the chief police like, yeah, that's cool. We'll do that. And DCYF, I got all of the documents. I got all of we're actually going to make an entire documentary about this. So via public records request.
00:56:17
Speaker
I got all the emails, all the text messages, I got all the court documents. So in emails back and forth between the Chief of Police and the social workers at DCYF, otherwise known as Child Protective Services, they go back and forth and they tell the Chief of Police that he's basically incompetent, that his guys can't do this.
00:56:39
Speaker
And then they go get a contempt order against my wife and I at this family court. And a contempt order basically means you're getting put in jail for not letting these guys interview your child alone. So what can they interview a two year old child about? You know, nothing. And the chief of police told these guys multiple times that they that the children were not neglected or abused right from the beginning. And the social workers kept escalating and escalating and escalating.
00:57:09
Speaker
Now, I did that release video if you go on my YouTube channel, which is JNoon and a whole bunch of numbers. And it might be linked at my website JNoon.com. That's J-A-Y-N-O-O-N-E.com.
00:57:29
Speaker
So I made that video like, you know, a week after this social work. As soon as I got the documentation, I made that video of me, you know, talking about the situation. And so I also do a radio show called Free Talk Live once a week.
00:57:47
Speaker
and that's been, you know, brought, that's been attacked by the FBI, actually, multiple times on the radio show. It's been raided, the studios, all their equipment's have been seized a few times. The guy who started the Ian Freeman's actually serving eight year prison term right now for selling Bitcoin. Oh my God. But Sam Bankman Fried's not in prison and he stole millions using Bitcoin. But anyways, so just multiple examples of political attacks. So the fact that I expose these guys
00:58:17
Speaker
you know, on the internet really pissed them off. And the fact that, here's the big thing, in the United States,
00:58:25
Speaker
The Judicial Pension Fund of every single state gets a massive kickback, gets funding, financial incentives via the Social Security Administration is called Title IV-D, if anybody wants to look this up. Social Security Administration Title IV-D gives money to the Judicial Pension Fund of the judges, so this is judges, lawyers, prosecutors.
00:58:51
Speaker
for the, based on the performance of Family Corps and Child Protection Services. This is why Child Protection Services is so hardcore corrupt. Because the judge's pension funds are all wholesale funded. So the way the funding, one way the money gets into the pension fund of the judges is by collecting child support. So this is why in the United States has the largest
00:59:17
Speaker
the most amount of children per capita being raised by a single parent. And almost always in these cases, the single parent is the mom, and the father is almost constantly paying child support. So 80% of children, actually 89% was the last number I looked at, of single parent children being raised by the mom.
00:59:40
Speaker
So the fathers are all being pushed for his child support and the state wants to divorce because for every dollar of child support that the state collects, the Social Security Administration gives 66 cents.
00:59:58
Speaker
And I love how they use these numbers 6-6-33 and all these calculations. You can't even make this stuff up. The Social Security Administration gives a judicial pension fund 66 cents for every dollar of child support they collect. So like in New Hampshire right now, one of the things the legislature is trying to do is to make a thing so that you can have 50-50 divorce agreements.
01:00:23
Speaker
Right now in New Hampshire, if you get divorced, and in Texas, and in California, and in most states, you cannot have a 50-50 split on child support. Somebody, or on custody, somebody gets sole custody, and somebody gets what they call part-time, I don't know what the other term is, but somebody gets custody, and somebody gets some other custody. So someone has to pay child support.
01:00:48
Speaker
And there has to be an arrangement. So like, if you know anybody in the states who gets divorced, and I'm sure this is the same thing in all of Europe and Australia and New Zealand, if you get divorced, they force you to sign some kind of agreement saying someone's going to pay child support.
01:01:03
Speaker
And basically, as long as there's no report of you not paying child support, every quarter, the pension fund gets millions of dollars from Social Security Administration.
01:01:16
Speaker
and the judges pension fund. So there's other money that is given to Child Protective Services also through this title for A, B, C, D, E, they got all these programs. And the social workers actually have it in every state and in New Hampshire, it's done at Granite State University, they have a class called maximizing revenue for DCYF.
01:01:41
Speaker
So the social workers actually take an online course right now. It used to be in a classroom years ago. You could still do it in a classroom, but an online course where the social workers are trained specifically on how to maximize revenue for DCYF. So this interview my child in the house, interview my child alone and inspect my house is part of what's called an assessment.
01:02:11
Speaker
So they call this, they call it an assessment. And this assessment pays out like $10,000 by the Social Security Administration. And this is under Title IV A, I think. I could be wrong about that. I actually paid a guy to do a ton of research on this. And he has a complete report that I skimmed through once and I got to read again. And I actually forwarded it to the guy who was doing the lawsuit.
01:02:41
Speaker
And so, but DCYF itself gets $6,600 to do this assessment. Other money goes towards other parts of the government. So we haven't found this from New Hampshire yet, but in Texas and California and Massachusetts, and it looks like New York also,
01:03:06
Speaker
When an assessment is done, Child Protection Services gets $6,600. An executive branch that has maybe to do with a pension fund, I'm not really sure, and a legislative pension fund also gets like 14% of the money or 13% of the money. It's split up between the executive and legislative.
01:03:29
Speaker
So there's a lot of incentive for the social workers the courts and the
01:03:38
Speaker
and the legislature to make sure that these assessments happen, make sure the social workers get in with the families. And in order to do this as a mom and a dad, you have to consent. You actually have to sign a release form allowing them to do this, saying you're gonna hold them harmless. And what they do is they threaten to put you in jail, they threaten to put you in prison. Now what we found out is that this contempt order through family court, basically they really can't put you in jail for it.
01:04:08
Speaker
But with my family, we've never stepped in any jurisdictional traps. So a jurisdictional trap is like, if you're on welfare, if you're taking food stamps, if you get fuel assistance, I believe if you send your kids to public schools, which we haven't done or we're not going to do, you sign up for any government programs, you take a court appointed attorney, there's all kinds of things, take any benefits from the state, you waive your right to due process a law.
01:04:38
Speaker
So there's a farmer called something Miller Amish farmer that's been in the news recently and the state's been coming against him pretty hard. And he started a couple of years ago, they came against him and he started a private member association and they shut them down again. And basically what I understand about that case, and I've never read about this anywhere. I've never heard anybody talk about it, but he did take some government subsidies.
01:05:07
Speaker
And there's court presidents that as a farmer, if you take a subsidy from the government, you waive your right to due process. You no longer have due process a law. And due process a law is sort of the foundation of American jurisprudence, that they must prove that you've injured somebody or that you're under contract.
01:05:26
Speaker
And this is how the state is able to harvest children, and that's what they're doing, child protection, service, industrial complexes, harvesting children for their whatever, their essence, their adrenochrome. You know, there's dark forces working here, and these dark forces
01:05:46
Speaker
where they get a lot of their energy from is essentially from harvesting the innocent. And there's nothing more innocent than the children. And this is happening on a colossal scale in the United States. This is happening in all of the Western countries. It's happening in all of Europe. It's happening in Australia. And I

Activism, Family Targeting, and Government Corruption

01:06:06
Speaker
also believe that this is why they want so many migrants coming over with the children. They could snatch up the migrant children.
01:06:12
Speaker
And then the local people, especially in the States who like have guns and have, you know, somewhat rights, you know, it might cause a real problem. You know, aren't really going to notice or care. There's not going to be a big problem with, you know, grabbing migrant children, like they would be, you know, grabbing, you know, regular people's children, you know, that are living there, the regular citizens, uh, and the migrants, you know, those guys got no say in what happens to them. Nothing whatsoever.
01:06:39
Speaker
It's a it's a major catastrophe what's happening with all that stuff in Europe and in the states and so anyways, it's a massive racket, but I'm in New Hampshire and New Hampshire has a thing called the free state project and The reason one of the reasons New Hampshire was picked for the free state project is we have a actual citizenry citizen legislature That is a volunteer legislature
01:07:06
Speaker
So the legislature, so we have 400 state representatives in New Hampshire. That's more state representatives than the rest of the 49 states combined. Well, the state representatives are not paid. They get a stipend of a hundred dollars a year and they get a license plate to put on their car. And that means there's no legislative pension fund that can be influenced by
01:07:32
Speaker
the performance of some state agency can happen in all the other states. So you have the extreme example to the other way. So we have the largest amount of state representatives per capita in New Hampshire, to where states like California and New York, who have the least amount of freedom, who have the most tyrannical states, have the least amount of representative per capita at the state representative level.
01:08:01
Speaker
And so in New Hampshire, we have the Free State Project, and we have quite literally, I think, 17 self-proclaimed anarchists in our New Hampshire state legislature. We have essentially about 120 legislators that are the equivalent of Ron Paul. And I'm sure you know who Ron Paul is.
01:08:22
Speaker
So New Hampshire has this other thing, if you want to check out, if you're interested in going to a place where there's like maximum freedom in a first world nation. New Hampshire Liberty Alliance, you internet source that you'll find that and they rate with a scorecard, a report card, essentially all of the state representatives and the 35 state senators. And they get a rating from an A plus.
01:08:52
Speaker
to a CT. CT means constitutional threat, which is basically an E. Well, I think that there is 120 representatives in New Hampshire who have at least an A minus rating with the New Hampshire Liberty Alliance, which is the equivalent of a Ron Paul. So we have now- The motto is live free or die. Yes. That's incredible. I love that.
01:09:17
Speaker
So now what we're actually doing, and this might be the very first time in history this has happened or recent history, is we have a legislative committee to investigate specific crimes of New Hampshire DCYF.
01:09:33
Speaker
And tomorrow, which is, I believe March 5th, and I won't be there for it cause I'm still in Florida and I didn't know it was happening until a couple, till like a week ago, is another meeting of this investigative committee to investigate DCYF. And the chairman of this committee is a representative Leah Cushman, who's also a neighbor of mine. She's a mom, she has four children. She's a homesteader herself. They, they raise chickens, they've raised goats.
01:10:05
Speaker
good family, good values. Has her husband there, they're still married. She's the kind of family like mine that Black Lives Matter hates, that the Soros people hate, that the New World Order hates, that Klaus Schwab hates because families are resilient and they're strong and they have something to lose, so they're going to fight like hell.
01:10:33
Speaker
present my wife and I and several other families presented affidavits sworn affidavits to Leah Cushman. This is our redress of grievance to exercise her powers of checks and balances.
01:10:46
Speaker
to bring a check against this administrative organization called New Hampshire Division of Children, Youth and Families. So the second organization meeting is actually tomorrow and there's going to be people there testifying about due process of law and how due process of law works.
01:11:07
Speaker
And New Hampshire DCYF does not use due process of law. They don't even follow it. But if you are someone that is a ward of the state, and that's kind of what the definition of children is, a ward of the state, if you are somebody who is taking a state privilege or benefit, you don't have due process of law. The problem is,
01:11:32
Speaker
And the thing with DCYF is, you know, they fucked with the wrong guy. They fucked with me. And we're not, and we got to fix this problem. I wasn't aware of how bad the problem was until my ox was gored, right? I never had any, and I thought I wouldn't be bothered by them because, you know, I'm not part of their system. And so they opened up a hornet's nest, as far as I'm concerned. You think they targeted you specifically because of the, yeah? Yes.
01:12:02
Speaker
And I'll explain how they targeted us. So during the lockdowns, this group was formed called New HampshireHealthFreedom.org. So they're on Facebook, New Hampshire Health Freedom, actually .org I don't believe is a website. There are some stickers that said .org, but I think the website never went anywhere or something with New Hampshire Health Freedom. And my wife had a sticker on the back of her car that said New Hampshire Health Freedom, and this was March 2020.
01:12:29
Speaker
And the individual who called the cops is a secretary for the Merrimack County Prosecutor's Office. Her name is Pat Barnett. And she's also a beneficiary of the Judicial Pension Fund. So her pension fund collects money based on the performance of DCYF. There was a executive
01:12:55
Speaker
council meeting, governor's council meeting in New Hampshire in 2020 or 2021, I forget, to get like $27 million in COVID stimulus money. That executive meeting was bombarded by New Hampshire health freedom participants and other New Hampshire health freedom activist groups.
01:13:19
Speaker
A whole bunch of people were arrested at that meeting for saying, amen. They did a prayer.
01:13:27
Speaker
And there was so much pushback at this governor's council meeting that New Hampshire was the only state in the United States of America to reject the COVID stimulus money, which really pissed off the governor and all the bureaucrats in New Hampshire because they just love, they're a parasite and their money is like sugar to a candida parasite, let's say. So they really have this blood thirst for this money.
01:13:56
Speaker
And so New Hampshire Health Freedom did many, many rallies, did tremendous amount of organization, was an extreme thorn in the side of the New Hampshire
01:14:09
Speaker
I call them a pedophile class or to pedophile elite, but the Democrats and we got a whole bunch of Republicans like the governor of New Hampshire is just a career, you know, I'm statist, you know, whether you're a Republican or Democrat and you've supports the state, you're still a parasite, you're still a statist.
01:14:26
Speaker
So

Free State Project and Community Initiatives

01:14:27
Speaker
Health Freedom New Hampshire was very instrumental in shutting down a lot of the mandate stuff, pushing it back up against the mandate stuff. There was We the People New Hampshire, Push Back New Hampshire, you know, there was a bunch of these groups that were organized, but the one big one, the sort of the umbrella group was Health Freedom New Hampshire was huge and instrumental. So Health Freedom New Hampshire created, we had these t-shirts made for the kids. It said, Big Pharma, Ain't My Mama.
01:14:54
Speaker
another t shirt that had a picture of Bill Gates with a hypodermic needle. It said say no to the prick health freedom new. Nice. I wore that one to the airport coming down here and a lot of people really like that. That shirt I try to wear I wear that shirt a lot. So and also I'm like a high profile name, you know, I got the radio show.
01:15:16
Speaker
And so they definitely have major having acts to grind with me and the free state or community. So this is Concord, New Hampshire, where in 2012, the chief of police of the Concord Police Department at a press release said that they needed to get a tank they call a Bearcat. It's a tired, it's a wheeled tank.
01:15:39
Speaker
like what they use in Afghanistan and Iraq. And they said they needed a Bearcat to deal with extremists, sovereign citizen groups, and free-staters. So health, freedom, New Hampshire, so one thing that the scam-demic really did in New Hampshire is it really brought the native New Hampshireites that are libertarian-leaning, and pretty much all the New Hampshire natives are default libertarians, unless they're of the parasite class.
01:16:08
Speaker
And by parasite class, I mean working government or working heavily government regulated industries like financial, real estate, you know, medical, like all the nurses are a bunch of woke parasites. Most of the doctors are woke parasites. All your accountants, all your bookkeepers, all your school teachers, which, you know, their government. But basically the administrative classes, you know, they're all woke and they're all parasites.
01:16:33
Speaker
And even like your snowplow drivers, for example, and people who fixed the road at work for the state, they're still of the parasite class.
01:16:41
Speaker
But when the state collapses, they will have value and they will still have jobs to do because we still need roads to be plowed and roads to be fixed. And some of the local police in my town, Hennaker, New Hampshire, they get the parasite money because they're working for taxpayer money, but they're like good people and they're all family men. That's a huge difference too. Most of the bureaucratic parasite class people are these, they don't have any kids.
01:17:09
Speaker
institutionalized their entire brain developmental years and They bought the woke ism and decided not to have and didn't have any kids because they did their careers, especially the women So anyways There's been sort of this kind of battle in New Hampshire between the parasite class and
01:17:28
Speaker
And then on the other side, you got like your loggers, your farmers, your construction workers. You got like your men that do the men, you know, the real and your traditional families. There's a lot of those in New Hampshire. New Hampshire is mostly rural. New Hampshire has at least restricted gun laws in the world, I believe, and is ranked the safest place in the United States and might be the safest place in the world because everybody can carry a gun open or concealed with no permits unless you're a convicted felon.
01:17:58
Speaker
So New Hampshire, for example, has this
01:18:03
Speaker
very much libertarian mentality. The Revolutionary War in the United States, from what I understand, started right in New Hampshire. It literally started five miles down the road from where I live. I don't know where my hat is. I have a hat I wear that says, where it began, because where New Hampshire is where the pine tree riots started with basically the red coats trying to track down a man named Abel Ebenezer.
01:18:29
Speaker
I've heard that name. Yeah. And anyways, one of my slideshows I'm going to produce is all about Abel Ebenezer. But anyways, so Health Freedom New Hampshire, my wife had this big sticker on her car, Health Freedom New Hampshire. She has a license plate that says free on it. And it's not her car, it belongs to a trust. And the car is registered in Montana.
01:18:56
Speaker
So you'll see a whole bunch of Montana license plates in New Hampshire and it's all freestaters registering in Montana because you could just do it over the internet. You can set up an LLC or a trust and the plate lasts forever. You never have to register your car again. And there's actually nothing the locals can do about it. The local DMV can't do anything about it.
01:19:16
Speaker
It's already been to court, it's already been settled multiple times because the local registry of motor vehicles, New Hampshire Department of Motor Vehicles is a private corporation.
01:19:28
Speaker
And

Legal Challenges and Vaccination Debates

01:19:29
Speaker
it can't force you to use their service. You can use the service of whatever corporate private entity you want. You can't be forced to use it. So like another thing that happens, if you talk to a lot of cops in New Hampshire, they won't pull over people running Montana plates because they know they'll have to go to court. And the police know that there's plenty of low-hanging fruit out there. 95% of tickets that are written, people just pay that.
01:19:55
Speaker
And actually only 1% of them really get fought in Massachusetts. I don't know about New Hampshire. It might be more in New Hampshire. And cops hate going to court because if they're in court, they're not out writing tickets, especially the cops that are essentially armed revenue collectors. And a lot of cops don't like writing tickets. Well, some cops don't like writing tickets, but definitely the cops that are in the more left-leaning cities really like writing tickets.
01:20:25
Speaker
So yeah, my wife was targeted by an individual that works in the prosecutor's office that had prosecuted multiple people who were affiliated with Health Freedom New Hampshire in the past two years. So at multiple rallies, we got a list of over 40 people who were affiliated with Health Freedom New Hampshire that were arrested during activism events.
01:20:47
Speaker
So at the governor's council meeting, I think they arrested something like 13 or 14 people there. All those people, except for one guy, the charges were either dismissed or they were found not guilty. And the one guy was found not guilty, has taken his guilty. So it's another cool thing to do in New Hampshire. If you're charged with a class B misdemeanor, you get a bench trial.
01:21:14
Speaker
before a judge and you usually get found guilty because the judge is prejudiced. And that guilty finding, you know, basically means that a judge is going to get more in his pension fund. So they find you guilty, even though there's no victim, you know, all this stuff. So this is like, so my wife was charged actually with child endangerment by Concord police. Oh, this whole part, I forgot about this. So yeah, she was absolutely targeted.
01:21:40
Speaker
because she had Health Freedom New Hampshire on her car and had a Montana license plate that said free. Getting back to the police, when family court, the social workers and family court brought a contempt order against us, the chief of police, the Hennaker chief of police did a motion to vacate the contempt order. He actually went against the social workers. He went against child protection services.
01:22:08
Speaker
And they fought back like hell, we got all the documents on this. The lawyer, so the way contempt works is when the only way you can be held in contempt is if the court orders you to do something. So in the assessment order, which is the one that says that the social worker can interview the child alone and can go into the house and inspect the house,
01:22:37
Speaker
It orders a police officer, a social worker, or a child probation officer to do this order, carry out this order. It doesn't order me or my wife. It doesn't say the parents. It doesn't say my name. It doesn't say my wife's name. It says a social worker, police officer, or probation officer.
01:22:55
Speaker
So we said, okay, a police officer can do this. And in the emails, the attorneys for DCYF were like, no, no, no, that's not what it means. It has to be a social worker because they want that money from the federal government. That's what it's all about, about the money. They don't get the money if the cops do it. So the chief of police went to Family Corp, actually went and hired his own attorney.
01:23:19
Speaker
like what you got up like this attorney, I don't know if it was a personal attorney or whatever, but some attorney he got and he like hired the attorney and actually the attorney never charged him for it, which was really cool. Like, like, you know, cause he would have paid for it out of his own pocket. Maybe we're not sure about this, but he got his own attorney to write up a, um, a motion to vacate the contempt order. So.
01:23:46
Speaker
They fought the contempt order tooth and nail, but the contempt order finally got vacated. On the day the contempt order got vacated at family court, they put a warrant out for my wife's arrest out of Concord. Concord is a city where this TJ Maxx parking lot was. And our town is Henneker, which is like 20 miles away from Concord.
01:24:07
Speaker
So the conquered police officer in the emails between the conquered police and the social worker are chatting back and forth about how there's a warrant out for my wife's arrest. And then in the emails from the same social worker and supervisors and lawyers to the chief of police in my town, they never mentioned there's a warrant for my wife's arrest.
01:24:32
Speaker
So my wife is driving around for months with a warrant out for her arrest and included with this warrant is going to be a bunch of catchphrase words like, anti-government, freestater, compound lookouts. And a friend of mine who is a sheriff in another state actually brought all this up to me.
01:24:55
Speaker
So that's actually one of the things that I haven't done a records request for is all the intel with the warrant. That's one thing, I gotta write that down.
01:25:05
Speaker
because we're going to nail these guys to, you know, we're going to crucify them. We have to. There has to be an example made out of them. And so, but what they wanted was the social workers were in contact with both police departments. The police departments were not in contact with one another, but the social workers wanted to have my wife pulled over
01:25:27
Speaker
with the kids because they would arrest her and then DCYF would get the kids. As soon as DCYF gets the kids, it's a big paycheck from the federal government. Even if they only have them for five minutes, even if DCYF takes the kids and they put them in a car and they brought them to me, never did anything else with them, they have them for five minutes. But the horror story of DCYF is they get these like Amish kids in custody. First thing they do is give them all the vaccines.
01:25:56
Speaker
First thing they do. And the only autistic Amish kids are the ones that have been vaccinated against, and they were vaccinated by DCYF because DCYF took them.
01:26:08
Speaker
And this is like, you know, the Amish guy goes to Walmart and has his buggy tied out in the Walmart thing. And he runs into Walmart to get a couple of things. And he leaves his four kids in the buggy. You know, the oldest kid's 12 hanging out with all the other kids and DCYFs, you know, some caring calls. And they take the kids and then they take the kids and they vaccinate them. And the older kids don't get autism, but the younger ones do.
01:26:32
Speaker
And do you have, do you have any documented cases of this that you can share with me at some point? Cause I'd love to. Promise kids being vaccinated. Yeah, because.
01:26:46
Speaker
That's something I wanted to see. I'm not saying, because I work with families with autistic kids, I'm not saying only vaccines can contribute to autism, but so far I have not worked with a family, with an autistic child that has not received vaccines. So let's look into that a bit deeper. There's something a little better I could probably find for you, and I have to ask my friend Ernie about it.
01:27:14
Speaker
So there's a doctor in Washington state or Oregon that is a holistic doctor. And in his practice for like 30 years, he did a whole study, basically vaxxed versus unvaxxed. And what it came down to is the vaccinated kids had very expensive insurance claims throughout their entire lives. This guy's a pediatrician.
01:27:44
Speaker
And there is essentially, according to this guy, there is zero cases of autism in children that are unvaccinated. And the only cases that he has come up with of autism are unvaccinated kids. So the thing about the Amish kids being vaccinated
01:28:09
Speaker
Taken by so the story I told you about the kids being taken out of the because the dad went to Walmart That was a third-hand story I heard because I used when I was in the horse business I used to deal with a lot of Amish and I buy hay off Amish guys and I would hire a lot of Amish kids to stack hay for me One of my hay buyers in New York was an Amish guy. I still talk to him often I still broker a little hay on the side, but not much and
01:28:39
Speaker
But there's some, and it might be this guy from Oregon, he might be the one that talks about how in Lancaster County, there is basically the only Amish kids that are autistic are the ones that got taken into child protective services custody and got vaccinated. That would not actually surprise me, honestly. Yeah. So there is none of that. But anyways, so my wife got the day that
01:29:09
Speaker
This thing was all vacated in family court, this whole case against my family. They brought a charge of child endangerment against my wife a month after the incident. It was a month and a half after the incident. And if you read the warrant where they put a warrant out for my wife's arrest, they basically say that, oh yeah, the air conditioning was on in the car. The child seemed happy and fine. The child was sound asleep.
01:29:38
Speaker
Shallon is my wife's name. They write Shallon looks like she knew how to take care of her children And So but the social workers I've really really done some bad vial stuff and we have all the documentation on this and actually I
01:29:56
Speaker
If you or anybody else wanted, I do have a file of documents, a zip file I have all put together that has all these emails, that has a court documents in them.

Healthy Lifestyle Choices and Dietary Insights

01:30:10
Speaker
And I've been sort of passing them out to people so they can study them and find things with them. So that's like one of my books I need to write. I got several ideas for books. One of them is how not to fuck up your children.
01:30:25
Speaker
And I really want to get into the nuts and bolts of dopamine hits, of food addiction, proper food. They had some chicken nuggets at a fast food place in Florida here. And each one of my kids took one bite of the chicken nuggets.
01:30:47
Speaker
And my four-year-old's like, this isn't chicken, dad. Because the only chicken she literally eats is a chicken that she feeds, and she stuck her arm in and pulled the guts out of. That's the chicken that we eat.
01:31:02
Speaker
And basically what my kids ate was the salad. That's what they ate was the salad and a little bit of some kind of pudding or cake or something they had for dessert. But even like the cake and stuff, they take like two bites of it and they're just not interested. And my kids don't even know what soda is. We don't give them juice. We don't give them soda. They get a little bit of milk.
01:31:25
Speaker
and they had some store bought milk here where we are, but at home, we got a really nice goat dairy down the road, but the woman retired, but we get some local raw milk from A2, A2, A2, A2, A2, A2, A2, A2, A2, A2, A2, A2, A2.
01:31:43
Speaker
heirloom, you know, Jersey cow farm. And, uh, and it's expensive. It's like $7 and 50 cents for a quarter of that milk. And it comes in a glass bottle. G bro. I did not think I would find anyone on the planet that's paying more for milk than me. That's you. Yeah. But not a big margin, but yeah, Dan, that's, that's quite expensive, bro. So we don't drink a lot of milk and basically only our kids drink the milk. Yeah.
01:32:11
Speaker
I don't need milk, I'm an adult. I'm already developed and grown. I eat some cheese over eggs. Concentrated milk, yeah. Right, right. And some butter. But the... Yeah, one of the things people don't understand, the reason that our brain, we got to be the brain mass that we have and the smart beings we are has to do with the fact that we figured out how to concentrate that really nutritious fat and dairy into cheese and butter.
01:32:41
Speaker
And if you can feed your kids nutritious animal fat, highly dense animal fat, good quality, grass-fed from the cows, for example, or grass-fed goats.

Farming Practices and Glyphosate Concerns

01:32:55
Speaker
And I love goats. I had dairy goats for a lot of years. And we're going to do dairy goats when my kids are old enough to do all the dairy goat chores. That's one of our plans. Because dairy goats are a lot of work. Milking anything is a lot of work.
01:33:13
Speaker
And by then I'll have the pasture system, the rotational grazing system to where I can, I won't have to buy any hay really. Well, I'll have to buy hay, but just for the wintertime, but I can, and I'm probably going to do a seasonal dairy goat just in the summertime and we'll use, and we'll save our cheese and our butter for consumption in wintertime. And we'll drink the fresh milk in the summer.
01:33:35
Speaker
That is like brain food. That's like what builds a brain. And it's, and we gave, both my kids got a lot of butter and a lot of really high quality broad dairy before they were two years old. And that's when it really counts. And that's like another thing, cause like these 45 minute presentations I do, it's like, it's just a teaser. It needs to be a teaser for a book I'm selling. It's what it really needs to be.
01:34:00
Speaker
Yeah, yeah. Well, listen, we'll continue to be in touch, I'm sure. Anyway, I've been through the book writing process a couple of times. Actually, just yesterday, I feel like Spirit or the Universe last night, 10 o'clock in the evening,
01:34:20
Speaker
time when I'm usually very tired and just winding down before bed I got another idea for a book so I took the phone out which I don't do at that time and I started researching some stuff and all day today except for this interview I spent that time researching my wife and my kid were out
01:34:41
Speaker
And it's all about a book on optimizing and enhancing fertility for males and females. So I feel like this is where like I've done the longevity book. I've started that series, the autism stuff to address the health issues of our children. And I feel like if we can teach the couples how to maximize their chances for a healthy
01:35:06
Speaker
child. I think that's the basis I want my work to cover at the very least. I would love to sit down and have a chat with you focused just on basically getting yourself ready for fertility, maximizing fertility. I was part of a horse breeding program. I was part of a dairy breeding program.
01:35:34
Speaker
One of the things on the dairy farm I worked on is they started, about when I was there, they started feeding the cows that they wanted to come in, when the cows came into heat to be bred, they were all put in a separate pen. So you could feed those cows separately. So they started feeding them green chopped wheat.
01:35:58
Speaker
Now, wheat will die if you put any kind of herbicide on it. So the wheat never gets herbicide put on it until right before you harvest it for grain. That's one thing they do in the States and in Europe is they dry the wheat. Well, I don't know about parts, all of Europe, but it might not use Roundup. They use like 2,4-D or something over there, I guess, or whatever it is.
01:36:20
Speaker
So like these big like Kellogg farms, you know, they do like hundreds of thousands of acres of wheat. They spray it two weeks with crop dusting planes and spray rigs with Roundup to dry the field off. Right. Because when it goes through the combine, the wheat needs to be all dry and crackly. You ever take like dry hay or dry grass and break it up, it goes into little pieces of shaft? Yeah.
01:36:45
Speaker
So yeah, because that's what you use for bedding for your chickens on your grandpa's farm. You take that hay and straw and break it up for little chickens and the baby cows. And so that's what the combine needs to do. Well, the combine that we ran had a rotary drum in it and it turned all of this wheat shaft and it would separate the grain from the shaft. Well, if you have green wheat coming in there because sometimes
01:37:13
Speaker
when the wind blows hard and it rains, the wheat seeds will fall off some of the mature ones and they'll start to volunteer and wheat just pops right up real fast, just like rye. But sometimes you get rye in there and the rye stays green longer than the wheat and they don't want it
01:37:30
Speaker
any of that green grass or any weeds doesn't let the combine shake out all those wheat seeds. So it drops the wheat back out with all of the hay, all the straw. So they spray it with Roundup two weeks before they harvest it and gluten
01:37:46
Speaker
looks like a ball of rubber bands. And who told me about this gluten looked like a ball of rubber bands that are a microscope was a guy that worked for Cargill. You know who Cargill is? Oh, yeah. Cargill is basically a Monsanto company. Yeah. And he was a grain distributor. And he was a fertilizer seller. And you know, this guy is really smart, this old man. And he's like, Oh, yeah, he goes on every Wonder bread. It's got all round up in it. And
01:38:09
Speaker
And he Darren's his name. I can't remember his last name. But anyways, so he's telling me that this that the gluten just holds that Roundup Right in the wheat seed and then the gluten is part of the process is what is basically a lot of what's left in the week that goes into your commercial baking products and This is why like you got guys like the Health Ranger Mike Adams natural news comm he does these reports where they do the glycophate and
01:38:39
Speaker
you know, parts per million in like chips and Doritos and bread and you know, all these products and it's like 1500 parts per million. And glycophate, you know, when you take 48 ounces of glycophate and you spread that over an entire acre until you mix 48 ounces of glycophate to like, I don't know, 75 or 80 gallons of water and you slightly a mist, like if the crop sprayer goes over you, it does such a mist, you barely feel it.
01:39:10
Speaker
That's how powerful Roundup is. And it kills everything that's not Roundup ready. Yeah, man, I when I was working for my dad, he has a he used to work more. He was more involved in like construction type projects in Spain. So I used to work for him in the summers when I was a kid. And I remember one day they just
01:39:32
Speaker
Loaded me up with the sprayer. I didn't know what that was back in the day. I was maybe 20 something and I Sprayed they thought we just spray everything here on this It was like a slope next to the guy's pool that they were kind of putting marble all around and like nice gorgeous house looking Over the Mediterranean to spray the shit out of this slope. So I sprayed that dude the next day and
01:39:58
Speaker
It was all yellow. Everything was yellow, dry. That's what you're saying. I should talk about in my autism book that even if a crop does not use, they don't need glyphosate for the growing of that crop, they may still use it near the end to desiccate it. So it doesn't spoil.
01:40:18
Speaker
That's actually a term I was looking for when I said dry down. They use it as a desiccate, and that's the term, yeah. And also like your barley, they use it in barley, they use it in rye, they use it in oats, they use it in wheat. In fact, I know guys in the hay business that before like, so in Massachusetts,
01:40:44
Speaker
For erosion control, they want to use small square bales of straw.
01:40:50
Speaker
but they want to make sure that there's no seed in the straw. So if they can't get in the field to cut the straw, to harvest the straw, because it's too rainy or too wet, they go spray it or round up before it comes in the seed. And then that's because that's required by the state Environmental Protection Agency, and then they use round up to do it. And years ago, so probably what you were spraying in Europe was a thing called 2-4-D.
01:41:17
Speaker
No, we have glyphosate in Europe. I'm not sure where it's sanctioned, but you can buy it in the hardware store. In fact, our neighbors under us, they moved in and I remember this woman, every time I saw her, she was holding a freaking bottle of Roundup because they're French.
01:41:38
Speaker
I wrote them a big old letter, Google translated it. Like, please stop throwing things around the area here. We have kids, we have dogs, we have whatever, you know, it's gross. And then I gave them a copy of my book and it's like, look, there's some research in there. But what I was going to actually just remember this,
01:41:55
Speaker
They told me, what you said the light missed, you just have to touch the plant. So even if you spray a little bit on a leaf, it will do the job. You don't have to spray the bejesus out of it. And it's, dude, this stuff is everywhere. And here I saw recently,
01:42:18
Speaker
They are putting posters that the city next to us here in Portugal, south of Portugal, will be pesticide free in the next, I think, five years? There's a five-year plan or whatever. This is what people don't realize. When you take your kids to the park in these cities,
01:42:38
Speaker
they are being exposed to probably glyphosate. They used to have chlorpyrifos in the states that got banned in the late 90s or early 2000s from schools and public areas because
01:42:55
Speaker
This is why I'm against all these institutions as well, like schools and whatever, for my kids, because they're going to be eating seed oils, they're going to be eating glyphosate-laden foods and grains. And everywhere they go, there could be probably a 5G tower, there could be rat poison residues all around from all the various pesticides and herbicides and so on.
01:43:25
Speaker
Yeah, it's not easy living in the city nowadays. Right. Hey, were you a speaker at Anarcha Polka? I was not, no. Okay. Did you by any chance watch any of the replays? I watched one replay yesterday, actually. I did start watching them. So it's kind of on my to-do list for sure. Yeah. So one thing I'd like to pimp out while I'm on here with you is
01:43:53
Speaker
And I can send you my affiliate link. But so if people want to buy the anarchopoco replays and they can watch my replay, they go to anarchopoco.com, I believe, and then click on replays or they can click on tickets.
01:44:11
Speaker
And if they put coupon code JAY for Jay, and I will send to you very shortly a affiliate link you've put in your show notes, you'll get 10% off and I'll get 10%.
01:44:26
Speaker
because that's one of the things I kinda need to do here is recuperate some money from, you know, I spent like $4,000, more than $4,000 on plane tickets, you know, just flying my family around.

Supporting Work through Affiliate Links

01:44:39
Speaker
And my wife was like, you know, Jay, you're like one of the only speakers that didn't have a book to sell. You really need to have a book to sell or something to sell or offer. You know, cause a lot of these guys got like, you know, they got something they're doing.
01:44:56
Speaker
a program, consulting. Yeah, yeah. Yeah, we'll have that for sure, bro. We'll have that for sure. I think, yeah, it's especially when you have to travel with your whole family. I myself going alone, it was quite the investment.
01:45:12
Speaker
Right. So you flew a lot further. And also if somebody wants to support me via cryptocurrency donation, they like what I'm doing. They go right to my website, JNoon.com, J-A-Y-N-O-O-N-E.com. And I'm pretty sure there's a contact me thing on there. They want to send me an email, but there's
01:45:36
Speaker
Bitcoin Dash, Monero, Bitcoin Cash, they can throw me a tip in.

Community Education and Child Health Practices

01:45:43
Speaker
That'd be pretty awesome. I really, really want to focus more and pay attention more on this kind of work because I just want to convince people who have the ability to do what I'm doing to do this in their neighborhood. Because if
01:46:04
Speaker
You know, like, like I got 25 kids. I'm affecting direct directly doing it one day a week at my house. I'm hoping I'm putting one of the things I'm working on right now. And my wife and I have been talking a lot about is putting together a program so I can do this like three to five days a week at home. Cause I have the infrastructure. I know how to do it. And we didn't actually talk too much about what I'm really doing. We'll do it another time. Yeah. But, um, we got into a bunch of other stuff.
01:46:34
Speaker
So yeah, yeah, this was great. I mean, I can go a little more, but if, you know, we've been here an hour and 45, so whatever you want to do.
01:46:42
Speaker
Yeah, we'll we'll wrap this one up and then we'll for sure we'll have you back on in the future because I like the I didn't know about you until an archipelago. So right. I you know, you're clearly very deep in the understanding the legislature and all this stuff and how to evade or how to basically opt out of these systems because I mean, I wish I wish
01:47:10
Speaker
we could just talk about, we could devote 30 minutes on how, because people think, oh, you don't have a social security number, you can't travel anywhere. And you're driving cars, you know, you're flying out of the country, going to different states. So we can talk about that in the future, continue to talk about these freedom, anarchy related topics. And of course we can talk about, you know, I myself have a passion for
01:47:37
Speaker
you know, being good examples for the next generation. I think it's the least we can do, man. It's important that we talk more about it and share more resources for people and create more resources for people where they can learn from other people's examples. And like you say, replicate, not replicate, but model those things in their own communities, whatever way they can.
01:47:59
Speaker
Yeah, and I don't know if you went to my website yet. It hasn't been updated in like a year and a half, but there was a guy, another fella who's from... It wasn't you who contacted me about the website, right? No, it wasn't. I almost want to say he said he was in Portugal, but he wasn't from Portugal.
01:48:22
Speaker
Anyways, a lot of people contact me about anarchopulco and it was actually a handful of them I just haven't gotten back to yet because I haven't really had the time or the answer for them. Yeah. But like, so I got a guy who I've been back and forth with a little bit about, he's going to like work on my website and he's a web developer. He wants to like, he really likes what I'm doing. So he's going to like freelance, just, just help me out with it. Like pro bono or for free or something. That's awesome.
01:48:45
Speaker
And I was just great because, you know, I just don't get a dopamine hit off of sitting in front of a keyboard and doing stuff. So therefore I don't do it that often. It's fucking hard. There'll be some improvements there and I want to start.
01:48:57
Speaker
I just want to start making videos and workshops of examples I'm doing with my kids and make it so people aren't intimidated to carry out these things in their own community. And then if a bunch of kids in your neighborhood are coming over to hang out at your place and learn skills,
01:49:19
Speaker
you're going to know your neighbors, you're going to have fellowship. And if anything bad happens in your community, you're going to be okay because you know your neighbors and you know each other's skills and strengths and you're able to help each other out. That's what we're talking about with my wife, because there's so many expats from all around the world coming to our area that all the
01:49:43
Speaker
preschools and crashes are filled up and my wife she's not quite the anarchist I am and the thing about here is the laws are to homeschool your kids you have to have a degree and follow their curriculum so I'm you know my kid is only two and a half years old I don't mind her going to crash and and whatever so she can interact with other kids because it's not like school they're not they're just playing all day you know
01:50:09
Speaker
brainwashing them yet so one of my sort of solutions and we've been discussing it is you know one parent takes the let's say the several parents with one or two kids whatever one parent they stay at their house for the day looks after them these other parents have some time on their hands whatever and we kind of swap that around and then now after talking to you I'm thinking
01:50:37
Speaker
In terms of activities, another idea I had is how can we teach these kids skills, man? Find someone with a farm and take them there. Maybe pay that guy a few bucks. We all learn some stuff, the adults learn some stuff, and we're learning skills that we can actually then apply. So you've given me a lot of ideas, a lot to think about, my man. We'll definitely be keeping in touch and doing it in the future. Yes.
01:51:05
Speaker
And the thing is, is let your kids do any possible work that they can. Put them to work. Like you, like, you know, your daughter should be like cracking eggs. Oh, she's eating, she's eating potatoes. Yeah. She's asking, she's asking to help. You know, like we have, it's so cute. We have little videos of her loading the washing machine and oh man. Yeah, for sure. And they want to help. They want to be included.
01:51:33
Speaker
One of the worst things parents do is they're like, no, don't do that. Get out of my way. It takes too much time. I have a really good friend that he burns firewood. And I'm like, dude, you need to be splitting and cutting the firewood with your kids. He's like, oh, that's such a handy ass. That takes too long. That would take like a whole weekend to do one cord. I'm like, yeah. But meanwhile, he buys the wood, cuts split and delivered, dropped.
01:51:58
Speaker
And he's got a wood splitter. He's got a chainsaw. He's a man. He knows how to do this stuff. And by his kids, they play video games. That's all they want to do. And I also told him not to let the kids play video games. But that's super important. It's like with my daughter, she's helping unload the dishwasher. So she's bringing me a plate. And the plate is for the other part. I'm like, that should have, you know, if you let your sort of analytical, but I know that it could be like just let them.
01:52:27
Speaker
let them mess around if you're okay if you're in a hurry tell them okay let me get this done because we gotta leave the house but i think this is my my wife she's been reading a lot of the the baby books and yeah just let let them all right let them make a bit of a mess yesterday yesterday bro it was me and her and she she wanted her learning tower by the sink i'm like oh it's gonna be fucking water mess everywhere so yeah let her do it so she's there like like rubbing things that she's pretending to clean them like
01:52:56
Speaker
this is i let my kids do that every day yeah i saw the video i remember the video where you're doing the omelette yeah that was very fun yeah my dad's doing eggs but at home my kids pretend to do the dishes every day and i say pretend
01:53:11
Speaker
You know, I gotta basically I let them just they hope they just spray them off. They scrub them They I give them some soap to make some suds with they just have fun making suds and a soap and and but actually We're at the um, in in in acapulco Uh the place we stayed in the anarchopulco staff house uh, that was for the staff after some of the staff left because we were there for another week and my daughter
01:53:36
Speaker
I let Cash get up on a chair and do what you're saying in the sink there. And then he was all done with it. My daughter's like, I want to do dishes, Dad. And she actually took the scrub brush and she wanted to show all these people in the house.
01:53:52
Speaker
how well, um, and if she can have an audience, my daughter will really ham it up. Like she will just do a good job. She scrubbed every single dish, like every part of it, rinsed it off, put it in a dish strainer. And then, uh, every fork, every, every butter knife, you know, we didn't let her do any sharp knives, every, everything.
01:54:13
Speaker
And the two girls that were at the house that were watching this, who just were floored with how thorough of a job she did. And I'm like, well, she's never done a job that thorough. But I've just been letting her play. As soon as they saw interest, you just let them do it. And yeah, they're going to get water all over the place.
01:54:32
Speaker
But like, you know, my house can handle that. I got a concrete floor. It's on a slab. The house, you know, it's not like I'm in an apartment living above somebody where the ceiling is going to fall down on them, you know, downstairs.

Homeschooling Standards and Family Structure

01:54:45
Speaker
So, yeah, that's you're doing the right things, man. And about your wife not quite being an anarchist. Women are not anarchists by default.
01:54:54
Speaker
And moms are only as good as the father, as the man. But by you being an anarchist and understanding that anarchy means no rulers, my wife does consider herself an anarchist now. And she dated an anarchist guy before me who was a good man.
01:55:20
Speaker
And so she got a little bit of it there too. But just, there is, by being a real man, being an actual legit anarchist, and your wife having confidence in you that she can rely on you and doesn't ever need the state is huge.
01:55:45
Speaker
Yeah. Because the people that want government that need that beg for government are the people who lack confidence. The people who want to be ruled over, they don't particularly feel they need to be ruled over, but they lack confidence in mankind and they want their neighbor to be ruled over because they don't have confidence in their neighbor. But maybe their neighbor is like a slacker or a loser or a slob or a drunk or a drug addict, for example.
01:56:10
Speaker
So it's like, and that's another thing too, just keep those people out of your community. Like my homeschool co-op, we don't have any drunks or drug addicts, for example. And in fact, all the kids in the homeschool co-op, mom and dad are together, for example. They got really good traditional families. And I want to exclude somebody because mom and dad are divorced, for example. There's actually one kid who comes occasionally, the parents aren't together, but they're actually really good people, both the parents and they're good friends.
01:56:39
Speaker
But we don't have any troublemakers or riff-raff.

Porcupine Freedom Festival and Cultural Resilience

01:56:43
Speaker
And another thing, if you can, in the third week in June is Porcupine Freedom Festival. It's in New Hampshire. I talked about it in my presentation.
01:56:56
Speaker
is awesome. There's hotel rooms you can rent. There is campsites. You could even like show up by a tent at Walmart and just tent on a campsite. If there are no campsites left to rent, you can totally get in with somebody if you get on a telegram chat. There's hotels pretty close. There's hotels on site that are usually all rented out on site, but there's hotels a half mile down the road. There's hotels a half an hour away.
01:57:25
Speaker
And with that as well for the listeners, because a lot of them are in the States porcupine. Yeah, this is in New Hampshire. The porcupine freedom festival is, is, is put on by the New Hampshire free state project. If you go to free state project.org, I think it is, you can, um, or, or pork fest.org. Okay. Okay. P O R C F E S T.
01:57:49
Speaker
that's a week-long festival and and even the week before that festival they have another festival called Forkfest which is basically you don't buy a Forkfest ticket you just stay at the campground and what a lot of people have been doing because Forkfest sells out is they just go to Forkfest a week before
01:58:07
Speaker
man, you just got to have a year long freaking event after a while, I think that way. Well, what happens is a lot of people just stay in New Hampshire. And you know, if you're really looking for like, you know, a first world libertarian utopia, you know, we're, we're really close to it here in New Hampshire, like homeschooling, we are have the most amount of homeschoolers per capita in the country, because there is no regulations on homeschool homeschooling, you just do it.
01:58:34
Speaker
What's the winter like? Is it pretty bitter? So this winter's been super mild. Yeah. It's been in the forties and the fifties Fahrenheit. You know, I don't know what that is Celsius at my house, uh, on and off, but like two weeks before I left, it was 18 below zero, you know, Fahrenheit. Okay. It was. And, uh, yesterday it was 10 below zero at night and it got up to, it was a high at 23 degrees.
01:59:03
Speaker
Winters are kind of tough. That's the hardest thing for some people, but winters are why the natives there are so hardy and resilient and competent and don't need government and are basically libertarians because it's not for wimps.
01:59:22
Speaker
And I see here that you're mostly or large majority is Northern European. So you have that hardiness living in Northern European. So that's awesome. Just very briefly, we've got to wrap it up. It's two hours now. But what's your ancestry? It must be Irish, right? No, I'm Irish and Polish.
01:59:41
Speaker
That's awesome. I love you in Ireland. They're pretty tough people. The kids in the winter barefoot running around on cold floors, not an issue, not a bother, as they say in Ireland. Yeah. The Irish and the Polish, they're tough. They're hardworking. I got one grandpa.
02:00:04
Speaker
And also, my grandmother, I have an Irish grandmother.
02:00:12
Speaker
a Canadian, French grandmother, a Polish grandfather, and an Irish grandfather. And they all grew up in sort of rugged climates. So that helps for sure. But coming down here to like being in Mexico or being here in Florida definitely spoils you. It takes a little bit of adjustment when I get home. Big time, big time, brother. Jay, we have all the links you mentioned in the episode description. Are you on any social media that people can follow you? Yes.
02:00:42
Speaker
The only social media, well, I'm on Telegram. So Jay Noon on Telegram, J-A-Y-N-O-O-N-E. And you got me there on Telegram. And I'm also on Twitter. I actually just got on Twitter for the first time about two months ago. Kind of had to, to do a couple of things. And my name is Jay Noon Man Camp.
02:01:11
Speaker
on Twitter. I'm going to have that on in the episode description for the guys listening. Jay, bro, this was a pleasure. I feel like we definitely could talk for multiple, multiple hours. So we do it again in the future. Talk about all these topics and more. Thank you very much for coming on the show, bro.

Wrap-Up and Thanks

02:01:31
Speaker
All right. Thank you.