The Prepper Broadcasting Network - Surviving America 018 - The Gulag is Digital
Episode Date: January 22, 2025Home Security Superstore https://bit.ly/3QmRV72LIMA TANGO Grey Man Kit https://bit.ly/40iHcAfPackFresh USA Giveaway https://bit.ly/3VJ2QvUPBN Merch Store https://cartunedune.creator-spring.com/...
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Society in every state is a blessing, but government, even in its best state, is but a necessary evil.
The future has already arrived.
Cheers, PBN family, what is up? Good morning. Welcome to Surviving America. Way too caffeinated
this morning, way too early this morning and way too damn cold this morning. I'm still
with it. The sun is just starting to make its presence known out there, but it'll be what it is.
It'll be what it is on a day like today.
The Gulag is digital.
TBN family.
The Gulag is digital.
That is what's on my mind this morning.
We have had a lot of techno digital sort of news as of late in the form of things like a TikTok ban and
all that kind of stuff.
Probably two or three years ago, sometimes these phrases and stuff just pop up when managing
life and one of those things, one of those phrases that popped up was the gulag is digital and
the gulag is digital became, you know, they're like warnings, you know what I mean?
That pop up in my head.
You probably have them too.
Or it could be because I read people who make notable quotes all the time that like my mind
will generate quotes from
you know the impacts of life but I can assure you the Gulag is digital and I
want you to think about that and I want you to wrap your head around that and I
want you to understand that that's that's part of your challenge in this
life right we all know about the Gulag, the relentless and torturous
icy prisons of communist Russia, right? Probably one of the worst places to
spend any duration of time as a prisoner and looking for that, looking to avoid
that Gulag, looking to avoid that those same Human missteps that we continue to make time and time again
You know, I was talking to my father about it just a couple days ago about like
Watching people watching the the the crazies particularly on the left side of politics and culture
You can really easily see how groups of people
can wind up in concentration camps, gas chambers, ovens.
You could see it.
You can watch it.
You can watch how they become drunk off the power.
Put your mask on, your needles, your this, your right.
You can see it.
It's pretty, it's pretty obvious.
It's pretty scary.
What's most scary is that it's clearly in everyone.
You know, not like going to bubble to the surface in everyone, but everyone feels the pool.
Everyone can feel like the pool of, Oh, I got power.
Ooh, I could, I could tell you what to do.
You're doing the wrong thing, and I'm
going to tell you about it.
And I've got all this power and backing behind me
to make sure that you know you're doing the wrong thing,
damn it.
And you could see it.
You could just see it.
You could see how it takes hold of people.
So today, we're going to talk about the Gulag as digital,
and we're also going to talk about who's here to spring you
from that torturous prison.
Now, I think it's in degrees, but what me and Jay Ferg
were talking about on Monday night
was the fact that these digital
technologies are powerful.
These scrolling apps, these shorts, these YouTubes, TikToks, Instagram, Snapchats,
video games, virtual reality, these are impressive drugs fundamentally,
and we'll talk about that later.
But largely, that's what they're doing.
They're making you feel real good for next to nothing.
The only thing that stands out in that
is being somewhat different as virtual reality because it is a physically demanding... it's physically demanding, right? So in
other words, I mean there are things that you can do in virtual reality that are
like dopamine pumpers, but at the end of the day for most games, you... it's at
least physically demanding.
You have to physically work for that good feeling. It's not like scroll, scroll, scroll,
the dizzy anime eyes is what I always picture on people. Oh, we got another medal.
We got another medal from our friends at YouTube today for our conversation on Monday night. In our war against censorship, we were handed another community guidelines medal from YouTube
for medical misinformation of all things, you know, as if they don't know that Fauci
was pardoned the other day had no clue
Well, why was it if all of his advice was so great? Why was he pardoned? What's what's the deal? I?
Want to talk about Henry David Thoreau today, we're gonna spend a lot of time on him. There are things, you know
age independent
I
Want to talk to you about testosterone, I want to talk to you about testosterone.
I want to talk to you about, uh, Poppy the baby hippo.
Well, to be honest, Poppy, the baby hippo kind of set the whole show
in motion for me, truly set the whole show in motion because here in the
Richmond Metro Zoo, a baby hippopotamus was born and it's super
cute.
It's like a little slimy little, I don't know, little-eared horse creature thing.
They're super cute, baby hippos are.
And Poppy's been in the news like crazy and constantly, and now they're allowing people
to go visit Poppy like hip waiters, like you're going trout fishing and you go pet
Poppy or what? I don't know. You feed it. Maybe I don't know what you do
and
The visual was this all happened this morning, by the way
I don't do like great planning on shows, but this all happened this morning
So I'm watching poppy the baby hippo come up to the bars of her enclosure to meet people and they're they're standing in water
She's in water and they're standing in water she's in
water and they're feeding her like celery sticks or whatever and I'm
watching and I'm going like when does Poppy start to realize she's in prison
you know because she's a baby and that immediately flip-flopped into the
children right that immediately flip-flopped into the children, right? That immediately
flip-flopped into the kids. I immediately got to the headspace of like, okay, when
does Poppy realize that she's in an enclosure and in prison for the rest of
her life and she'll never be a wild hippopotamus? And then I started
thinking about children. And I started thinking, when do the children understand
that when they're, see, and this is a bit,
this is a bit much, but we'll go with it.
When do the children understand the Gulag, the digital Gulag
that they're in, right?
Not that they're in it constantly,
but a lot of kids spend a lot of time in it.
A lot of kids spend a lot of fun time in it.
A lot of kids spend a lot of rewarding time in it.
But there does come a time, and I've seen it in my own kids, where they will understand
that they have been a part of something or are now a part of something that is Way more nefarious than they thought you know what I mean
it would be like playing with your matchbox cars and
all of a sudden your mom sits you down and goes like
You know these matchbox cars are
They've been created by scientists at the highest level. They know how to mess with
your brain chemistry to make the paint jobs on the matchbox cars have been designed by
neuroscientists to take advantage of you to some degree and assure that you only want
to play with matchbox cars. You know what I mean? Can you imagine something like that?
The bicycle manufacturers have worked with hot top-level
Neuroscientists to assure that you want to spend all your time on your bike
This generation of kids and generations to come will have to grapple with
That sort of digital Gulag as part of their entertainment as part of their not only their entertainment but you know the digital gulag is
Most certainly a part of it is their number one communication method, too
If you haven't noticed like kids don't do this
Kids don't do this. I don't even know if I've ever seen my son do this in the last five years
Hey, what's up, man? What are you doing? Oh?
do this in the last five years. Hey, what's up, man? What are you doing? Oh, yeah? Cool. You want to go out? All right. See ya. Click. My kids are perpetually on my son. My oldest
son is like he can come downstairs like on video people on like, you know what I mean?
There's no phone calling. all that stuff happens through apps
It happens, you know via video or the video turned off, but it's not like a phone call phone phone
It's a different world it's a fundamentally different world and one of the crazy things for our kids is that they they do have to
come to this realization that they're
even if they're just at the gates or even if they're just at the gates,
or even if they're just visiting the digital gulag,
they're in it.
You know what I mean?
This is part of the deal, they're in it.
And what Jay Ferg and I were talking about Monday was,
so are we.
You know, I think as parents, it's easy to deflect.
It's easy to be like, well, I got to make sure that my kids aren't
spending too much time on electronics.
And they're doing that while they're like this number.
I got to make sure my kids aren't on electronics too much.
You've got to come to the realization, you're on it all the time too.
You're on it all the time.
Maybe you're not. Maybe you've you know you've figured it out. In my experience
it seems like the best way is to just put it away and forget about it. Like
mentally forget about it. Like fill your time with something else. But watching
Little Poppy it is it is an interesting exercise in this whole digital prison that we have
created and look to be clear right up front, like we participate, don't get me
wrong.
I'm not the type of dude who is like, uh, my kids get an hour, they screen time
and we don't do X, Y, and Z and we have shut off the Wi-Fi like we participate
You know what? I mean, we all play video games have fun have social media
Talk to you know, look what I do here with the podcast. You know what I mean?
This is why the phrase the gulag is digital was so important to me
Because I live in this world, you know what what I mean? I exist in this world.
All my business is done through digital.
You know what I mean?
And it's just, it was one of those sort of warnings that, that popped up in my
head and I wanted to share with everybody at PBN it's just that it's like, don't
get stuck, don't get trapped. Right?
You can visit the Gulag, but you don't want to become a prisoner.
Right?
Because the Gulag is digital.
So do you want to see the I did link to this?
I mean, I might as well show you.
We have merchandise.
I never talk about it.
I never promote it.
It's just one of these things.
I never I don't care
To sell merchandise much. You know what I mean?
There's a link down to our merch store down here
And I just wanted to show you this because if this if this resonates with you
You know this quote if it resonates with you then it's something worth talking about
it's it might be something you want to own a t-shirt or a sticker that says the gulag is digital because and like I Said you'll see those postings are old man. They're that stuff that we
Like I said, I could probably two or three years ago I started saying that so it's all it's old stuff but whatever
For those of you who are listening to the podcast it's down below that the down in the show description there
You can see the gulag is digital listening to the podcast, it's down below, down in the show description there.
You can see the Gulag is digital.
Now I want to talk about who's going to spring you.
I want to talk to you about just the absolute amazing foreshadowing of one Henry David Thoreau
and how his writings and his mentality were built.
This happens a lot in humanity.
This is why it's so important for you to access that sort of creative side of yourself and
to express the things that you are feeling.
You know what I mean?
Like the podcast for me, man, and writing for me, one of the most important things for me in life is self-expression. It's huge
It's absolutely it's monumental for me
It's why I can't stop podcast
I'm okay with saying that I'm okay with letting you know that I can't stop
All right
It's just one of those things and many of the hosts are in the same boat, right?
You get in this self-expression you get
into doing the reps of expressing yourself and you like what comes out and you like the way you feel after and you like the
you know the uh
the feedback from other people who say like yeah
I feel the same way thanks for saying
that that really you know helped me out with something I was dealing with and
you're like why why wouldn't I put these little cluster bombs of thought and and
expression out into the world that help you and it also helps you like mitigate
the stress of a life in the gulag right so So it's important. But, you know, all that self-expression in Thoreau's time,
he didn't know it. He couldn't have known it. He knew to some degree, but this is, you know,
the early 1800s, early to mid 1800s. He had no idea TikTok was coming. He had no idea the digital gulag was coming. Maybe
in his wildest dreams, but I doubt it because it wasn't really his mentality. But in his writing,
he tapped into something that transcends the threat. In his writing, he tapped into things
that transcend, in other words, whatever the threat is to humanity.
He figured out there's a thing and it's the wild and it transcends the threats.
So we're gonna read a bunch of quotes from Thoreau today. We'll talk a little
bit very briefly about sort of his journey and how he found the way in a really funny way out of this sort of rat race.
And you know, he didn't live some kind of lavish. He's not this super success story.
Henry David Thoreau was not a guy who made millions off of his writings and died in a
golden-posted bed, you know what I mean?
But that doesn't matter.
Because what matters is his writings went on to land at a time like this.
And as we get through some of these quotes and some of his writings, I'm telling you,
you're going to understand, like, if the Gulag is digital, then Thoreau is here to spring you.
He is here for the jailbreak.
That's what this dude was put on the earth for a hundred years ago.
I'm sorry, 200 years ago.
And it's one of those wild things.
Simplify your life.
Don't waste the years struggling for things that are unimportant. Don't burden yourself with possessions.
Keep your needs and wants simple and enjoy what you have. Don't destroy your peace of mind by looking back,
worrying about the past. Live in the present. Simplify. Now this is
this is Henry David Thoreau's most hallmarkish quote in my opinion.
This is Henry David Thoreau's most hallmark ish quote in my opinion
This is hallmark right back in the day I'm sure it was was a little more profound but
This is not the Henry David there but it's but it's a big one It's a big long one. It kind of sets the tone because this became this guy's whole mantra. It's became his whole mindset, right?
I guy's whole mantra. It became his whole mindset, right? I don't want to do the beauty within us. Now this is one that really sets the tone. This is a quote that I think this came out
of civil disobedience. I could be wrong though. We'll talk about civil disobedience and how
he wrote that book and why he wrote that book
and the tax debt that got him thrown in prison.
It's interesting.
But all the way back in those days, you know what I mean?
Henry understood the value of time.
You know me, if you know me, right?
My podcast audience, my listeners who've been with me a long time, you understand that I am always
very cognizant of time.
In every way, you know what I mean? In every way. In the the the aging of my physical body,
the limited time I have with my kids, the limited time I have with people who are older than me and who will be gone, standing there talking to my father, we talked for like three
hours.
We stood in the living room.
We had a little bit of an electrical issue.
We fixed it and then we stood in the living room side by side, arms crossed, rocking as
we do.
You do this with your dad?
Yeah, I'll tell you about
You know what? I mean, it's one of those numbers and it's a great we have fun
We laugh we joke we laugh about politics and sports and all that kind of stuff. I just have a great time
And I get back home. I
get back home with my wife and I'm like sorry I was gone so long and
You know because I didn't whatever
you know and I get back and everybody's hungry and she was making dinner and all
that kind of stuff and I get back and I'm like how many more three-hour talks
with dad do I have left you know not not in like we weren't arguing about it at
all or anything like there wasn't it wasn't that kind of a comment.
It was just a literal like a, because this is something I think about all the time, right?
I think about this stuff all the time and you should too.
You should most certainly think to yourself the next time you're with your parents, your
kids, your whatever, anybody who's of value to you.
Look at them and in the midst of whatever it is you're doing say say like, no, really, like, how many more
times in my life am I going to do this?
How many more opportunities in my life do I have to stand in the living room with my
dad and talk for three hours straight and laugh with him and joke and talk about the
past and about it, fishing adventures and life and, you know, he's 70, what?
He'll be 75 in a month and that's it that's
the average you know what I mean there's a chance based on averages that that
might have been the last one that might have been the last I did the same thing
with my in-laws I just spent hours with my in-laws I'd go over there to help him
with something and I'd sit there on the couch-laws. I'd go over there to help him with something and
I'd sit there on the couch. My wife would be texting me
You know what I mean hours would go by and they'd be telling me about my wife and what she you know when growing up and About their other kids and about growing up in Richmond back in the 70s
And I just sit there man and listen and it would be so great to listen to the stories and also in the back of
My mind I would always say like how much more time do I
got how many more times am I going to sit down with both of these people and
have this kind of a good time and every day Henry David Thoreau reflected that
in his quote he said the price of anything this is is so valuable in this day and age where people are always
chasing money, crypto, you know, wealth. The guy on social media who's got the
Lamborghini and all that kind of stuff and he says the price of anything is
the amount of life you exchange for it. That's heavy man. The price of anything is the amount of life you exchange for it.
Now, when you put that in context to the digital gulag, what is the price? What is the price?
What is the price? What is the true? Remember, TikTok's free. Facebook, Instagram, every social network is free. YouTube free 100%. You
might have to watch a couple of ads but largely it's it's free right? I'm allowed
to do this for free. But then the price of anything is the amount of life you
exchange for it. You want an in-depth look?
I feel like I'm in the mood to...
I'm getting some...
What is this?
Hypothermia from Chin.
Warning signs of hypothermia.
Confusion shivering, difficulty speaking, sleepiness, stiff muscles.
It's 7.30 in the morning.
That's an interesting one.
But I think that's going out to probably to the Rabelais.
The Rabelais are having a blast down there in Louisiana.
They got like nine inches of snow.
That stuff don't happen. So the price of anything is the amount of life
you exchange for it. Put that in the back pocket. That's everything. That's everything, man.
That's everything. Your work. I'm going to get this project done at work and I'm gonna get a big bonus for it. Oh yeah?
Go confidently in the direction of your dreams, live the life you've imagined.
I don't know, that's pretty hallmarky too nowadays. Here's a good self-reliance
quote that I like. A man's wealth is measured by what he doesn't need.
There is something about that, right?
There is something to be said about this constant war of
attrition that we all face.
You ever feel it?
Do you ever feel that sort of war of attrition in your own life?
I feel it a lot with bills and with, you know, like, um, clothes for kids and shoes and all this kind of stuff.
When I get real sort of manic, everything looks like attrition to me.
Everything.
Here comes another this, here comes another trip to the market, and we are running out
of this and getting this and that and this.
It just feels like I'm butted up against this like searing hot
life and it just just shears like layers off of me every single week
Until you're dead
You know when you get real
When you get real real sort of sarcastic and sardonic with it, all that happens.
What else we got from Henry? We could go into the book.
Let's talk about the highlights.
So he's a Harvard grad, you know what I mean?
And you must not have been a poor guy.
I don't know his biography. I'm not like an expert
You know what I mean, but I know he went to Harvard. He was studious did well and
And his whole thing was I'm gonna be a teacher and a tutor and he was teaching in tutoring
and then in 1939 he goes on a canoe trip and
On that canoe trip he just abandoned ship on the whole idea.
He just basically abandoned ship on the whole concept of like, I'm going to be a
tutor and a teacher and I have a Harvard degree and he says, no, I'm going to go
into the woods and write poems.
I laugh because like, you know, if you're that kind of person, you're laughing.
If you're that kind of person, you understand it.
You've been gripped by that feeling.
You've been gripped by that.
You've seen the majesty of the wild and you've been like, oh, and you feel it.
You know, you know what it is.
You know exactly what that feeling is.
On July 4, 1845, so six years after he's made that declaration,
he moves into a small self-built house
in a second growth forest around Walden Lake.
And Walden becomes another book that he writes. But Civil Disobedience
was, that's an interesting read because he was arrested for a tax debt that he had that had to
be paid to support the American-Mexico War at the time. And he didn't pay it and he gets lifted.
And out of that whole experience
He writes writes civil disobedience and a lot of the concepts and quotes that we touch on
you know when we think of Henry David Thoreau come from that if they're not like
Based around the natural world of the woods, you know
Now my father's gave me this book years ago
This is actually how I heard of Henry David Thoreau.
I never knew the guy.
I didn't read like Civil Disobedience or Walden because I was such a great student in school.
You know what I mean?
I found these guys, all these writers that I read to you, none of them were like, they
may have been recommended to me by my English teachers, but I didn't care at the time.
And I didn't go to a traditional college, so it didn't hit me there. But my dad sends me home with this book years ago.
I don't know, decade at least.
And the Fisherman's Guide to Life.
And I mean, it's full of...
If you're not a fisherman it may not resonate as
Well, you know what I mean, but but if you are a fisherman it's just
Sparse gray hackle in this book says if fishing interferes with your business give up your business
But I happened upon all these quotes from this guy Henry David Thoreau and I was like, what is this guy's deal?
You know Isaac Walton in here also. Let's see if we can find some Henry. See, I've dog-eared so much.
One of the most epic quotes I think in terms of standing against the digital gulag, right, and Henry's sort, in my metaphoric take on the whole thing, his ability to spring
you from the digital gulag is his quote, we need the tonic of wilderness.
And this is the concept that he drives home in a lot of his quotes about being in the woods and spending time in wild places is it's not
it's not a thing that we do it's not a holiday you know what i mean it's not a day trip it's not one
of these things that humans do because it's like oh let me get some good pictures on the mountain
side a top of a mountain a great view post on social media, and then go about my life.
It's something that we need.
We need this return to the wilderness, and it makes perfect sense.
When you think about what we are, it makes perfect sense.
Here's another great one.
This is direct correlation to what we're talking about, right?
In the wilderness is the salvation of mankind, Henry David Thoreau.
How much more clear can it get than that?
In the woods is the salvation of mankind.
He was living in the early 1800s, so it wasn't like he's traipsing through downtown Manhattan with the lights and the you know concrete jungles and all that kind of stuff
So even then there was a disconnect that needed to there was an emptiness that needed to be filled, you know
You guys digging this?
This is not this is a typical
But you know, that's kind of my my run of things around here. I'm good for
the atypical from time to time. I did want to get into one article. We can break for
a minute. I wanted to talk about the weakness of people. I wanted to talk about... I mean it
Coming off of what we're talking about. It is absolutely terrifying to even read a headline like this
We've got the israel hamas situation. We've got the ceasefire
I don't know what the hell the ceasefire means because there's all kinds of stuff going on over there that i'm reading about
That makes no sense in a ceasefire
But this headline, after 15 months of war, Hamas still rules over what remains of Gaza.
And I don't know how old this picture is, but there's a picture of the foot clan.
Hamas dresses like the foot clan from Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.
You know what I mean?
You look at them.
That's what I see every time, especially when they have like the, Well, I'll show you. Let's put it on the podcast so you can see it. Because they definitely dress just like the foot. And I think
it's kind of a silly outfit. And someone up there in the upper echelons of head cutters should
definitely tell them, hey, look, we look kind of silly silly We look kind of like the foot clan. Whoa, you see all the ads on the website. There's so many ads on websites
Okay, so look at this guy
Right check him out. Now. I'll get you a picture of the foot clan from Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
TMNT let's say
And definitely like the movie version too. I should I should say that movie version
Because they're not like the robot kind but they're definitely like the the foot clan from the movies
Yeah, here we go here's some good ones
Other just look it is what it is
All right, so you got Hamas, let me bring the picture up
You got Hamas
You guys see Hamas now, I'm gonna I'm gonna switch and I'm gonna show you
The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, you know beat him up clan
And you'll be able to see what I'm talking about turtles beat them up clan.
And you'll be able to see what I'm talking about. And there they are.
And there they are.
The comic version of Hamas right there
waiting on the Ninja Turtles.
But what at what?
Whoa, whoa.
I almost just closed out the entire show
playing around with Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles footage.
But in all honesty, you read this sort of story after all this time at war, all these
dead, all these people dead, you know what I mean?
On both sides of the ball, the terror of it all.
A ceasefire brought calm to Gaza's ruined cities Hamas was quick to emerge from hiding.
The militant group has not only survived 15 months of war with Israel among the deadliest,
most destructive in recent memory, but it remains firmly in control of the coastal territory
that now resembles an apocalyptic wasteland.
With a surge of humanitarian aid promised as part of the ceasefire deal, the Hamas-run
government said Monday it will coordinate distribution
to the desperate people of Gaza.
If by desperate people of Gaza they mean the building of rockets and launchers, then yes.
So the Foot Clan, it's just the same old story.
There was an element of theater in Sunday's handover of three Israel hostages to the Red
Cross when dozens of masked Hamas fighters wearing green headbands and military fatigues
paraded in front of cameras and held back a crowd of hundreds who surrounded the vehicles.
And all it is, is guns.
These guys all have a K-47s and
That's the difference
That's why these that's why the people of Gaza will suffer again
That's why the people of Gaza will will be back under the rule of Hamas. That's why Hamas will build back up
That's why Israel Israelis will be slaughtered again by Hamas militants in the future
Because the people are screwed and the reason the people are screwed is they have no ability to defend themselves
None and no ability. We're gonna throw rocks at guys with AK-47
The truth of the matter is the only way, the only way you can ever have
anything in the Middle East is through freedom and firearms. That's it. There has to be,
and division. Yeah, I know we hate that word. What do you mean division? There has to be division.
There has to be a clear line in the middle East.
And it says, look, if you want to cover your women in trash bags and rape them
and rape little girls, you got to live over there and we're going to have to
come over there sometimes when things get crazy and we're going to have to have
wars and this is the Israel position.
Right?
What we can't have is those people in control of everything.
You can't have it.
It just doesn't work.
It's just war.
So if you want to live out your crazy religion, then there has to be a, like a divide.
Morning, Jay Ferg.
There has to be a divide in it all.
You know what I mean?
There has to be an armed population of Muslim militants who tell themselves
that they're righteous and do horrible things and treat their women like cattle
and then there has to be an armed population of people who want to live
life the way they want to live life,
whatever that looks like.
The problem in the Middle East is only one half has guns.
So you'll never be done with Hamas.
You'll never be done with any of these militant groups.
And that's just what it is.
And Israel will be the only ones out there, you know, fighting it off. It just surprised me this morning. It was
a story. I thought it would be a good break in sort of the digital Gulag conversation
because it is it's wild. I mean, it's wild, but it's predictable. You know what I mean?
Again, the digital Gulag does also come complete with tremendous distractions about world news
and all that kind of stuff.
The only people who ever get any place interesting are the people who get lost.
It's an interesting one. This is one that I see everywhere with Henry David Thoreau that I get it, but I, it is
an important one.
And he says, I went to the woods because I wish to live deliberately.
In other words, and in his situation, you can understand it, right?
Harvard graduate, tutoring, school teaching, got to get up at a certain time, got to be
at a certain place, got to do these kinds of things.
And with his quote about exchanging time for life, right?
Or things for time and things for life.
What is the quote?
Let me read the quote again.
Because he says, I went to the woods because I wish to live deliberately. But I want to read you the time quote because
remember this is all ticking in the back of his head. He says, the price of anything is
the amount of life you exchange for it. Not the amount of time, not amount of money, the
amount of life you exchange for it. And life is different than time. Life is different than time because time
is you know an hour, two hours, eight hours, whatever it is. But life I always
look at as... what is it? It's your passion, it's your fire, right? Like many
people come home after spending a lot of time at work, but they've also spent
the majority of their life force at work and they get home and they're washed out.
You know what I mean? So you're presenting a different kind of life. You spent a certain
amount of life on the nine to five and you come home and you're a shell of what you were trying to spend time with the most important people and do the
most important things in your life in a four hour window before bed.
So he said the price of anything is the amount of life you exchange for it.
And I think his sort of mentality of I went to the woods because I wish to live deliberately
was
That idea it well
I'm trapped in this world where I'm exchanging tremendous amounts of life for things that I don't even really want right like to be a
teacher to be a tutor
To have this Harvard degree to live this life. He could see I think the life
to have this Harvard degree, to live this life. He could see, I think, the life.
And anybody who makes radical changes in their life,
they do that.
They foreshadow.
They see, like, in 20 years, I'll still be a teacher.
I'll still be a tutor.
Maybe I'll be a dean or whatever.
And none of that sounds fun.
None of it sounds good.
None of it sounds like something I want to invest all my life
into, because the funny thing about life good, none of it sounds like something I want to invest all my life into because, you know,
the funny thing about life is it just goes away eventually. It's just gone, you know,
and that could be tomorrow or that could be in 40 years or whatever. Nobody knows. So
I think he looked at a life in the woods, writing poetry, writing, you know, self-expression
at large, nothing that was going to pay the bills.
He didn't go into this thing thinking, I'm going to hit it big.
I'm going to be like Shakespeare.
You know what I mean?
I don't think that was his motivation.
I think he truly went in there with this mentality of self-sufficiency and the ability to really
enjoy the things that he enjoyed in life.
And you look at the man's eyes, you know that it was sacrificial.
You look at portraits of Henry David Thoreau, you don't see a guy who
lived this life.
And he's not like a homesteading Instagram mom, you know what I mean?
Like you see those homesteading Instagram moms and they're like,
all happy, great complexion.
You know what I mean?
Like you could tell they're on like this journey.
And this dude's like, well, I'll show you.
I'll show you a picture of them.
For those of you who are watching the video, you can see like many men lead lives of quiet
desperation, which is one of his most famous quotes.
But you could see in the guy's eyes, like this was not a thing that he did because it
was going to make him tremendously happy, tremendously famous, rich, largely alone,
you know what I mean, was Henry David Thoreau's life.
But this is what he wanted.
And out of that, like I said, out of that life came
this tremendous ability to save us all through his words,
to save us all from the digital gulag,
to remind us that, you know,
there's a way out of, like I said, his concepts on the tonic of the wilderness, they transcend every threat, they transcend
every mental situation that people are in.
He didn't create writing, and this is why he's a great writer, he didn't create writing and this is why he's a great writer He didn't create writing that pinpointed one thing like sort of like if if I were to publish a prepping book
Right. I would be targeting your water storage needs, you know what I mean?
his writing
Was about the human condition and how to how to save people from the distractions of what it is to be human
now from civil disobedience he had a great quote that you know this is one of those like what
is it five words this is one of those five words that combined effectively can
touch everything I mean they can touch every major event in history and you
know Martin Luther King jr., these are people that read civil
disobedience and took a lot away from it. But he says, descent, this is so perfect for
our time by the way, descent without action is consent. Remember that when you think about
social media, descent without action is consent.
You think about the social media age that we live in.
See what social media provides people is an ability to pretend that they dissent.
They get to get on there and say, I do not agree with this and here's why and here's
some facts and here's some stats.
And then they turn off their phone and go back to living life back to a life of consent for whatever it is
The government wants to do the you know, whatever it is, whatever your boogeyman is
And I just always loved that quote, you know dissent without action is consent like great that you're upset
What are you doing about it?
Because if you're not doing anything about it, you're participating.
Very good.
Here's the extended version.
I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately,
to front only the essential facts of life
and see if I could not learn what it had to teach and not.
When I came to die, discover that I had not lived. Yeah, see that
we, I don't know if we're related, but that's one of those quotes that is like so akin
to me. I mean, it just, it's so me, it's how I feel. One of the scariest things of all is, and not when I came to die, discover that
I had not lived. Like at the end of this ride, to be laying there in the bed soaked in sweat,
you know, covered in pain and racked with the horrors of the end of life surrounded
by the people that you love that are mortified but faking it to pretend that they're okay and everything's gonna be
okay dad.
And to sit there on your deathbed and say, all the things I could have done I didn't
do any of them.
I could have done this, I should have done that.
How did I make that mistake over and over again?
You know what? I mean, I stayed trapped in some box
For eight hours a day and and went home and and drank a beer and fell asleep and and
Like just like the poem I always read you about rugby rugby chapel
That whole concept of, you know, a man's life is no different than a wave at the center of the ocean rising, foaming for a moment and disappearing and no one ever knowing about it.
And it's just, you know, the great ones are the great ones, folks. The great words stick with us. It is true that we've reached a moment in history where the Gulag is digital.
That's just what it is.
The great prison is not something that you'll be hands clapped together and thrown into
by some black, helmeted, living creature.
It's just right through here.
It's just right through here It's just right through here and we we without the right guidance without the right willpower like
We can fall into that Gulag ourselves. We can lock ourselves up in that hole and it's not just the digital, right?
It's not just the social media and that kind of stuff. It's also
your this this insane drive to have a Bugatti and and I'm gonna work 16 hours a
day every day of my life till I get rich and that's how you wind up on that deathbed going what
what did I do? I had kids I don't know them. I had a wife I don't know her right make sure I I had
know him. I had a wife. I don't know her. Right? Make sure I had, I think I had a life but I was never around to enjoy it. So a little different today. No doubt
about it. A little different today than I think what we do on a regular basis here
but I can only give you what's on my mind, you know, thank Poppy the hippo for today's show
Because it really was staring at little Poppy and wondering when does Poppy realize?
The baby hippo when does she realize that she's in prison and then thinking about people?
And little kids and looking at little kids and going when do they realize?
That they have the power to imprison themselves completely?
Right?
All right, folks, I'm going to get out of here.
Please links down below support our great sponsors.
What is the weird link?
Oh, the merch stores down there if you really like the Gulag is digital thing.
I can promise you it's not a make or break thing in terms of
merch. We're not going to pay the bills off of our merch sales. But if you like the concept
and you want to have a sticker t-shirt, whatever, link is down below. And don't forget pbnfamily.com
man, you know, become a member. This is the year for membership
I don't feel like I'm not in the right headspace to sit here and tell you why
We've got six thousand podcasts to tell you why every every news headline across the world
Explains to you why you should be a member at PBN and take preparedness very seriously in 2025
It'll change your life man, you know a life of prepping and homesteading, urban homesteading, whatever it is, it will change your life. You know, it really will. For the
better. You will, you will by demand wind up living a life like the one we're talking
about deliberately, deliberately saying to yourself like, oh, this is what life is, you
know, because you get forced.
You start getting chickens and animals and all these kinds of responsibilities.
All of a sudden, you're forced to live deliberately.
You're forced to slow down.
You're forced to think outside of the cubicle.
You're forced to think about things and say like, oh, what's happening in my life?
All right, folks, I'll see you tomorrow.
We do have a prepper tip of the day coming today.
We may have a rising republic.
I'm not sure.
See what Ryan and Douglas can put together for us.
But either way, man, enjoy your day.
We don't know how many more of them we got left.
You know what I'm saying?
Alright. You're listening to KBN.
You will pay us back the stability here. Thanks for watching!