The Prepper Broadcasting Network - The New Homestead Act 2025
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You're listening to Payday N.
You're paying back the stability here. Welcome in the new homestead act 2025.
What was the old homestead act?
Homestead acts were several laws of the United States by which an applicant could acquire ownership of government land or public domain, typically called a homestead.
More than 160 million acres.
This was the pioneering movement, right, to run out there and get your acreage.
Ten percent of the total area of the United States were given away free to 1.6 million homesteaders.
Most of the homesteads were west of the Mississippi.
These acts were the first sovereign decisions of the post-war North-South capitalist cooperation
in the United States.
The original Homestead Act.
What I didn't know, and I'm not sure if you knew this, and this is Wikipedia,
so who the hell knows, on RSF over in Ex-Land, says, what in the free-loading hippies is
going on around here? Stick with me, man. So, an extension of the homestead principle
in law, the homestead acts were an expression of the Homestead Principle in Law, the Homestead Acts were
an expression of the free soil policy of northerners who wanted individual farmers to own and operate
their own farms, as opposed to southern slave owners who wanted to buy up large tracts of
land and use slave labor thereby shutting out free white farmers. I didn't know that. I had no idea that was part of the deal. So that was the
original sort of intent. Cheers PBN family. Nice coffee snow day. Disaster
coffee dot com. Check them out. That's what I'll be sipping today. That was the original intent.
Morning, morning, morning, the Phoenix.
Yesterday we happened upon by accident, just by chit chatting with the chat,
talking about whatever China and tariffs and all these kinds of things
and electric batteries and solar panels and tax write-offs with solar panels, we kind
of stumbled into this jokey idea of like, why can't we're in an egg crisis, right?
Nobody can get eggs, eggs are worth, you know, you're given like kidneys for eggs or whatever.
They're ripping trucks off full of eggs.
I ate at IHOP on the weekend and it didn't even cross my mind.
You know what I mean?
Like my plan was to eat at IHOP and go take care of something with my kids.
And, you know, it was just didn't even cross my mind until I tasted the eggs.
They weren't good.
There was something wrong with them.
I didn't even eat them.
I told my kids not to eat the eggs, you know
So, you know this two things
You don't know what you're getting now that we're at the bottom of the barrel. So be careful number one number two
This is one of those pure examples of how you forget about what everybody else is worrying about
Examples of how you forget about what everybody else is worrying about
When you're self-reliant and even in just a couple ways, you know, like that it didn't even cross my mind like you're going to I hop This is this is an eggy place
But anyway yesterday we got into this conversation about
Homesteading and you know the the reality that homesteading is
Homesteading and you know the the reality that homesteading is
highly valuable and and not only highly valuable to the people who homestead but also like
you want to talk about making America great again or
Really making a powerful nation
Do you know what I mean? Like you want to really talk about and I've been saying this since 2018
But really making a powerful nation is about the individual and the power that we all hold.
It's the old, you're only as strong
as your weakest link mentality.
We start talking about why can't I get a tax write off
for my chicken coop?
You know what I mean?
If I'm taking care, if I'm not adding to the problem
of the egg shortage, and why can't I get a write off
on my chicken coop and my chickens and I started thinking about the grift the
grift born to brap at YouTube what's up hey everybody at X and at rumble and at
YouTube hit the thumbs up for me I really don't know if here's the thing I
really don't know if it matters's the thing, I really don't know if it matters.
Our audience is growing, particularly at X.
It's going to grow organically through all this live
streaming, and it's not really something
I'm all that concerned about.
In all honesty, if you're there, hit it.
Do you know what I mean?
Why wouldn't you? What gets stuck in my head when I go to a video and I don't see any
Likes on it isn't it's more personal than anything
Just so you know, like it's not like oh we need to get X amount of like we're not monetized on YouTube
We'll never probably never monetize on YouTube because they're evil
Unless something changes with Google. But anyway, all the snowflakes are falling. But anyway, it's just it's it's person
It's highly personal to me like born to brat
I'm calling you out not to call you out just to you know
the example born to braps at YouTube if I check the analytics on YouTube and there's no like thumbs up then I go
Wonder why my man didn't hit the thumbs up takes two seconds. You know what I'm saying?
It I don't know. It's just a personal little thing
I go to I go to rumble and I see no thumbs up
I go to X and I see like no no hearts or something like that on a video early on and I know we were
Live and you were there just hit it takes two seconds. It'll make me feel much better
It'll make me feel like I got you in my corner. You know what I mean?
Because I don't know just just personal. So anyway, we kind of wandered into this jokingly this idea about
Homesteading and
You know, the how do we drive people into that mentality of self-sufficiency
What could a new homestead act look like in 2025? What would that look like?
you know and and that sent me down a rabbit hole of like
What are people really capable of what could that really do for the country?
and then how can I present that to you guys and I found a
Really great website here this backyard farming coalition and
They had some stats now the stats were put together by a variety of places one of which was China a Chinese university
But you know to some degree that's important because
One of China's biggest concerns is undoubtedly like how do we feed all these billion these?
billion and a half damn near people
So I think you know, I think there's some validity there.
But it was a bunch of universities that did it.
They took the time to really look at these statistics.
We all already know in our heart of hearts that if 50% of America had backyard chickens
and serious backyard gardens and were providing food for themselves, their families, oh, and
by the way, their neighbors, because you know what having a garden is.
You know what having cherry tomatoes and zucchini is and eggplant, excuse me, you're giving
food away.
So if we were in an abundance of,
because that's what, even a small garden,
I don't have a very big garden.
You know what I mean?
Even in a small garden, you can get into abundance rapidly
and you're like, oh God, I gotta get rid of some,
it's going bad, I'm throwing stuff away.
It doesn't take a lot of space.
It takes three, four beds for the average American, right?
Small beds.
To be in that kind of abundant situation. It takes three four beds for the average American right? small beds
To be in that kind of abundant situation
So the bat, you know, you imagine a nation where 50% or so is doing stuff like that cranking out eggs out back
Cranking out, you know kale and whatever whatever stuff you like green beans really dense dense, nutrient dense food. Like, I know your head's where my head is.
I don't know how you get everybody else's head there.
But if you, let's say you took a chunk of your diet
and threw it in the trash and replaced it
with your own grown vegetables, your own raised eggs.
What, how, can you imagine the effect on health care right off the
bat? Right? You took like lucky charms out of your life. Not permanently. I eat
lucky charms. Love them. Right? But if you eat lucky charms every morning, you got
health problems most likely, particularly in your 30s and beyond. Right? You take
sugary cereal out of your life. You replace it with four eggs in the morning, right?
And then in the afternoon, you're eating whatever,
grilled chicken and whatever you get out of your garden.
Like the average person's health is going to improve vastly.
You know, you add some kind of physical fitness to that.
It's epic.
It's an epic change. It really would be an epic change.
Now let's look at it without my meanderings. Let's look at it with the real statistics from this website here, Backyard Farming Connection.
I know nothing about this site, but they had a good collection of stats. Unfortunately, they don't tell you. Let's see before we get into it if I can find that
See in the Google search it told me exactly where the information came from
And it was a variety of we can look at the sources you can you know, you can check it out
This is an amazing thing though. This is an amazing article.
I'm going to actually save this for my own history because it's it's huge.
So homesteading to statistics via food production.
All right, let's start there.
Urban agriculture could produce up to one hundred and eighty
million metric tons of food a year, around 10 percent of the current
global output of vegetable crops
So whenever we have a wildfire whenever we have a situation a trade war of a natural disaster and everybody's sitting there quivering
Because they're like, oh they grow a lot of food here or if we have like a maybe a giant war with the breadbasket of Europe
You don't have to sit there and be like, oh my, oh here
you go, here you go. Arizona State University, Google China's
Qingzhu University, California University, Berkeley, and the University of Hawaii. So,
you know, there's a lean there, but it might might see here's the other thing about homesteading It's like I wrote in my book way way back
And the way I told people to get together with neighbors was very simple
It was all about
It was all about community garden. Start with the community garden.
Why?
Because we were a little, little, little bit divisive back then.
Not nearly as divisive as we are now with one another.
But in 2015, we were still a little bit divisive.
And basically, my understanding was it takes almost no one is going to say no to a community garden.
And I think homesteading now, because of 2020 and everything that happened with that,
it's kind of the next step. It's the next phase. It's like, it doesn't matter who you voted for.
It doesn't matter where you fall in the political spectrum. You want your own eggs and your own
vegetables and maybe some collected rainwater and maybe some solar power, right?
These things make sense. They're easy
You know what I mean? It crosses the whole political line. So
According to the same study same sources
urban agriculture if it pumped out a hundred and eighty million metric tons of food a year be worth
160 billion annually around the globe
Again you think about this in terms of American power to stand on its own two feet
Like a food source produced by the people for the people
Man and then tax deducted
Just based off purchases or output or whatever, you know
The grift the left-wing grift being all sort of shifted out and filtered out of the system
Now is gonna make way for tax breaks like this. I think I
Read
When I would I looked up left-wing grift because I was gonna do a podcast on it
Like I just wanted to see if someone had collected all the grifting or in other words all the money
That the left has made that these
Licentious loud leaders
Of the left
Have sucked out of the system
by lying to bleeding heart, empathetic people
who wanted to make a difference maybe. I wanted a source for like, you know, what kind of,
how much money have people made basically off of these movements. And the only thing
that came up in Google was a Reddit post and it was how come only right-wingers
get grift? I just thought it was so funny. But it's all you know it's all
coming to light so it doesn't really matter. Livestock on homesteads down
here on number 8. 55% of homesteaders raise livestock with chickens, goats, cows
being most popular choices. That really is sort of the difference, right? If you're a backyard gardener,
one of these people's with a crazy garden, right? It's like, I'm a gardener. But the moment you put
six chickens in the backyard, you're a homesteader. So that's kind of like how it feels to me.
In a survey, 91% of homesteaders cited self-sufficiency as the primary reason for adopting a homesteading lifestyle. Oh
Here you go. The rise in chickens here number five. This is good because chickens are the they're the key
Like I always they're the key
Just for a number of they break the mold they crack they like
They shatter that sort of paradigm between what you can do in your backyard
and you're a crazy person.
It's like, well, you know you can grow as many vegetables
as you want, and it's almost admirable
to have a really big garden and a cool garden and stuff
like that.
Then if we can normalize the chicken thing,
you normalize the chicken thing, and then you go like, oh, yeah,
of course.
It's easy.
It's fun you
know everybody that shifts the paradigm big time it moves the overton window if
you will the number of backyard chickens in the United States has increased by
582 percent between 2015 and 2020 you know so like it's already moving this way
Now we need to reward it to increase it, you know, I mean you reward it to increase it
That's about as far as I got on this thing vegetable production home gardeners produced over 1.6 billion pounds of vegetables in the United States in 2020
That has to be an underestimate
that has to be a vast underestimate because I a vast underestimate, because I've never reported it.
I know many gardeners who have never reported
a single pound of vegetables.
I don't know how anybody would even
know that people are producing that much.
So if they've collected data on 1.6 billion pounds,
it's got to be way underrepresented.
Honey production, that's another big one we've never gotten into.
The rise in farmers markets, dah, dah, dah.
Homesteading statistics, changes.
Urban farming has grown more than 30% in 30 years.
The fastest growing sector, hydroponic vertical urban
farming, yeah.
That makes sense.
That's that thing that those of you out there
with the small backyards, you think
there's no way I can do it, oh, yeah.
You can do it in a shed.
You know what I mean?
You can do it in a dining room.
I was talking to a company today.
They have a really cool unit
I'll show you soon 81% of hydroponic farms in the world are in the United States
Vertical farming can dramatically increase food for food production when strawberries are planted vertically can result in as much as a
3000% increase Wow
Here I'm growing my strawberries wrong
Maybe we got to go up with the next batch
Makes sense to keeps it away from some predators
History facts about backyard farming okay enough said
Enough said right
Let me uh
How do I do this again? There we go
Boom
Nuff said you guys get the point right on
In terms of that where's our background at what's going on here where my shows where my wonderful hosts
There we go, boom
Okay
What else?
That's my question to you the audience today is what else what what else would we add in other words?
You're gonna send me to Congress, right?
and I'm gonna walk in there with some papers in my hand a stack of PayPal and I'm gonna like
to walk in there with some papers in my hand, a stack of Peppel, and I'm going to present something.
What am I presenting?
Tax cuts for urban farming or even just homesteading in general, livestock and chicken keeping.
We already have the solar panel breakdown.
What about water catchment, food storage, supplies?
Gets it crazy to me.
Everything that can be pointed towards self-sufficiency
should be tax deductible.
Canning jars, canners, your harvest right
should be tax deductible.
Why not?
Self-sufficiency is the empowerment of the individual, the empowerment of the individual in the United States is the empowerment of the United States. That's pretty good. I did that on the fly. Didn't write that down. But that's basically what it is, right?
The empowerment of the individual is the empowerment of the United States and self-sufficiency is the way there.
It's probably the most direct route there aside from like wealth.
But even then, you know, if you don't know how to handle it, you could be like I read an article yesterday.
I wanted to put it on the show, but it's about these billionaire kids who are inheriting their inheriting wealth and they don't want it.
who are inheriting their wealth and they don't want it and they're being courted by like
demons who are like we're gonna take that money and put it towards a good cause and you know where it's going yeah it's very interesting little tale but what else you know what i mean think about
i'm not you don't have to solve the world's problems right here and now on the on the
fly but this is something i want to talk about and I want to explore legitimately.
Because I think the Homesteading Act 2025 has legs.
It can empower people who are already doing it.
It can reward people who are not putting a further strain on the system for situations just like we're in.
With the egg situation.
Tax deduction if you start a biz. Okay homesteading businesses tax deductions
yeah well Hunter you bring up a good choice man you are sort of our our
Swami on the on the blacksmithing side of things and that is like look that is self-sufficiency as far as I'm concerned, you know, you see
people make knives and you know cool stuff
weapons that kind of stuff
But there are a lot of utilities that you can make for your home with with basic blacksmithing
It's also a lot of repurposing and recycling
that goes along with blacksmithing.
So yeah, I just think that these things should be outlined,
the woodworking, all that kind of stuff, the craftsmanship,
cheese making, soap, whatever.
And they should all be tax deducted.
When if you start a business, yeah, why not?
Why not?
But there's more there, you know, there's definitely more there. There is
You know there there are
You know what you give
What you give in it all maybe you you know, we used to receive donations to the food bank
I don't know if that's the best way to give or not
Hunter SF says they do tax-free in Texas for emergency prep day. I wonder freeze-drying would count. Yeah, see that's what I mean
We get it. We were just we got to push the cart like just over the hump
You know, like everybody's kind of there
They watch people who do the things that we do and they go like man
I want that like I don't want to worry about every problem that happens in the world and go
Oh my god, am I gonna have this? Oh my god. Am I gonna have that? Oh my god
am I gonna have power am I gonna you know, and
I just feel like the
Really what it is is it's the antithesis to the Green New Deal
Right. The Green New Deal was let's take billions and hundreds of billions of dollars
Push it up the companies out to
China you know out to grifters who are gonna tell you like this is the way and
then never really do anything to help you because you know despite the wind
farms the solar farms the solar panels on roofs the energy companies telling
you hey we're now generating X amount of watts in solar power and I'm sitting
here like this like okay if you're pulling free power from the Sun then my
energy bill should go down any day now right any day now my power bill should
go down because you're not burning coal you're not you know I mean why is my
energy bill going up what What's going on?
Tax free or not. I don't want to spend fifth 1.5 to 2k
On a freeze right? Hey look freeze dry. It's not for everybody You know what?
I mean if you want to live on limited amount of of power through solar panels and stuff like that
The let a battery bank the last thing you want to do is run a freeze dryer, you know, it's it's and I'm telling you from
you want to do is run a freeze dryer. You know, it's it's and I'm telling you from
not my own perspective but Rick Austin who lives that way. He uses a freeze dryer but he says it takes a lot of power. So that's something to consider. You ready for a break? Let's get into some
into some SHTF chef.
What do you guys think of this anyway?
It's not bad.
It's it'll start to build on the membership side and it'll become, I mean, it'll really basically become a recipe book fundamentally.
So today tomato sauce this is like the 10-12
year tomato sauce recipe that it's sort of like you know there's a slow and long
and boring way to do it and then there's a oh shit we need something to eat right now way to do
it you know what I mean and I think it's important to have both the sunday sauce and the monday
sauce maybe that's the way we should put it you know what I mean like it's the the sunday
sauce and the monday sauce because sunday you start the sauce at 10 o'clock in the morning
and you eat at six or whatever five four and you got meatballs and sausage in it and it's cooking all day that's
momentous right and and then you have and then you have the you know the
Monday sauce which is we got in late I literally did this yesterday that's why
it's making me laugh
honor SF says a spiral bound cookbook, please.
We'll get there.
We'll get there.
All these are going to be posted on the membership side.
I did the Moros recipe on the membership side of SHTF Chef
last week.
We're going to do the commander's sauce over there.
It'll show up just like this, the graphic, this video.
What did I do video?
I don't remember.
Neither here nor there
We're gonna go over the recipe here, and I'll just sort of talk you through the ins and outs
You know what I mean the other thing about this recipe. That's really cool is
You could double it triple it ten exit and then can it because it's good the only thing that's not in here
That does add to it, and I probably should put it in here
I might actually modify the graphic as an optional ingredient is
Oh, and the graphic will be better than this one for some reason it stretches. I gotta figure out how to fix that
Is the meat meat makes a big difference, you know fundamentally
This is like a bolognese base that I do
No, not necessarily because this is a pretty thick sauce when it's all said and done
So, you know tablespoon good olive oil
Good stuff the best stuff you can get I don't I know a lot of people say you shouldn't cook with good extra virgin olive oil
I do it all the time, especially when I'm making sauce
But my sauces are oily right there is oily're as oily as my Dago hair.
That's how it goes, right?
It's in my blood.
So, small yellow onion, I use about a half,
about a half an onion, I should say half.
Peeled and chopped, you know, quarter inch dice,
something like that.
Four garlic cloves, crushed.
I slice them, I don't mince them down.
I like my sauce to have,
you know, chunks. I'm a chunky sauce guy. My wife likes it that way too.
So, you know, you're going to sweat these things out is what you're going to do to start.
Remember we talked about sweating before. Low heat, moving it around a lot over medium-low heat.
Moving it around a lot over medium low heat. You don't want browning. No browning, right?
We want translucent onions. We want softened garlic.
That's the sweating process. It's essential. You know what I mean? If you're gonna make soup, if you're gonna make sauce, you gotta know how to sweat.
So we're sweating these things out.
Once we get them where we want them, this is where we add the wine.
Cup of red wine now if you were doing meat you'd brown the meat first
Take the meat out of the pot
Right brown it up real good the way you want it. We use I last night
I used a half a pound sometimes I do a whole pound when i'm doing sauce like this quick of ground turkey boom brown
Out into the but you could use ground beef.
Awesome, awesome, right? Pull the meat out, sweat out your vegetables. All the
brown bits on the pan are gonna start to get dark, you know what I mean? They're
almost gonna like start to burn a little bit. They won't burn, but they'll get dark,
you know what I mean? And that's the flavor. De-glaze that whole pan with
your olive, with your red wine, right? Cup of red wine. I don't know if it's the flavor. De-glaze that whole pan with your olive, with your red wine, right? Cup of red wine.
I don't know if it's a cup. I dump it out of a bottle, but that looks good. I just put a cup.
And maybe cook that down to about half, you know, reduce it down to about, it'll happen fast because your pot's gonna be hot.
All that kind of stuff.
And then you're gonna add your crushed tomatoes, diced tomatoes into that.
San.
I have very popular, a very popular brand of canned crushed tomatoes with the lady
on the front with the basket of tomatoes.
I think she has the Italian cartoon woman.
They make one with basil.
It's like a canned crushed tomato with
basil and that's that's the one that's the one you want that one's tremendous
though I do buy the cheaper ones too you know I mean so when budget counts or
when budget is important I will buy the 89 cent can of crushed tomato, $1.29 or something like that.
So either one, either one works, but the basil, the one with basil, it's, you'll know it when you see it.
It's a difference maker.
So crushed tomatoes, Italian style diced tomatoes in there.
This is just, the reason that you could use regular diced tomatoes, it'll turn out great.
When I learned to cook, it's all about layers of flavor.
You know what I mean?
You add onions, you salt.
You add garlic, you salt a little.
Salt and pepper.
You add the crushed tomatoes.
You want something to go in there to add layers of flavor.
So I get the Italian style, crushed and diced.
We've got the red wine going in.
And then everything else basically on the list goes in next.
So stir it all up, add your ground garlic, your oregano, your Italian seasoning, your
sugar is essential. If you don't like sugar, use oregano or honey, use whatever
the hell else you use to sweeten, but canned tomatoes need sweetness. It's all
about balance. It's essential. You know what I mean? It's essential
and then I add another big tablespoon of olive oil like a I
Don't measure it, but I'll take that olive oil bottle a little bit of water, you know
Because I love that stuff. I not only do I love that stuff, but I know how good it is for everybody
Who's gonna eat it? You know what? I mean? I know how good it is for everybody who's gonna eat it. You know what I mean? I know how good it is for everybody who's gonna eat it. It's just amazing. This whole recipe is just filled with like incredible things for you. You know what I mean? If it's not the dead of winter, then I'm gonna add
a fresh chiffonade of basil, which is just finely sliced basil. I'm going to add oregano midway through the process, basil at the end.
And I'm going to just make it good.
So you could simmer this 30 minutes to an hour, something like that.
30 minutes to an hour.
If you got 30 minutes, give it 30 minutes.
If you can go an hour, go an hour.
Like I said, if you can put the meat in it,
then it's going to have even more flavor. but this recipe in and of itself will get it done
Like I said, you can cook it for 30 minutes to an hour or you could cook it for I'd recommend you cover it
If you're gonna do it this long for
four or six hours, right a
No stock no, you don't need anything like that. This is the core. This is the core l2 survive
What is up the nub is with us?
Go to YouTube l2 survive YouTube channel man. Check him out. Give him a thumbs up too, man
Sorry, we had a little bit of a talk about thumbs ups and likes and all that kind of stuff earlier today
So that's the commander sauce. That's it
You want to know exactly what I do when I come home
or when I wake up and I'm saying,
I want some good tomato sauce today.
This is how I do it with canned goods, with canned tomatoes
and stuff like that.
This is exactly how I do it.
I've been doing it this way a very long time.
My mother does it a little different.
She adds tomato paste to hers.
Probably just as good. It's one less thing to buy. So I don't do it. One less
thing to manage. All that kind of stuff. But this should be in your back pocket.
Everybody within the sound of my voice should be able to make a tomato sauce
like this. There's nothing hard about this. The hardest part is cutting the
onion. Literally. It's the hardest part. The hardest part is cutting the onion.
Literally. It's the hardest part. The hardest part is having the knife skills
to cut the onion. Like if you can cut the onion up into small pieces,
that's it. The garlic, smash it. Just smash it and throw it in. Smash. You don't even have to cut it if you don't want to. The only other thing you're doing is opening two cans. You're opening two cans
and then you're putting some spices into a pot
You know
You can cover it if you want to cook it for 30 minutes pretty quick and that'll help you keep it you can rock it
higher temperature
Without spitting all over the kitchen. You know what I mean?
If you really want to make it move fast and like I said for the meat side of things brown the meat first
Pound of meat for something like this is gonna be phenomenal I did a half a pound last night because my kids had already eaten it was just gonna be me and my
wife it's gonna like take the sauce up a whole nother level I think that's about
it but but this is a thing you should do this is thing you should try you should
become very comfortable with it and like I I said, every so often, every so often you go, when you got a little extra
money you go to the store, you buy four cans of crushed tomatoes, four cans of Italian
style diced tomatoes, right?
Hopefully you already have plenty of onions and garlic at home.
If you listen to my old advice, my old SHTF advice about buying the you know I think
there's eight no there what are they 12 ounce or something like the big spices
by the big stop buying the little jar by the big spice you're a cook now you
cook at home by the big spices then you're always gonna have ground garlic
you're always gonna have Italian seasoning you know what I mean so you're
always gonna have it you can take that you can do a four times of this recipe
you'll probably get I bet you get about eight to ten jars of sauce, you know, if you do it without meat and
Maybe six to eight jars of sauce and then you'd can them
You can them. It's a high acidity food. Very safe, you know with no meat in it. It's's a high acidity food very safe, you know with no meat in it
It's super safe high acidity food on the shelf and just like that. You've got preserved
Tomato, so I used to preserve tomato sauce on like a Wednesday just
Just out of extra sauce
I throw two jars in the in the cat in the cabinet pantry for later in the week or the next week or whatever like
You can do this stuff man. You can do this stuff. It's easy in the cat in the cabinet pantry for later in the week or the next week or whatever like
You can do this stuff man. You can do this stuff. It's easy
It's easy It's might be scary the first time you do it you do it two times. You'll be like, oh i'm a superstar. I got it
All right, folks
listen
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You know take food storage seriously you will sleep better at night and you should know how to pack up your own food storage
Forget about ready wise man. They charge so much money.
You know what I mean?
Do it yourself.
Yeah.
Support the people who support us.
And if you're into this SHTF chef stuff
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go to pbnfamily.com, sign up for a membership.
You can sign up for five bucks today five bucks a month. It's nothing
You know what? I mean, so if it's something you get the prepper fit and health you get the fitness you get the prepping
You get the bushcraft you get all the membership only stuff. Okay, all the courses are free to you five bucks a month
It's a no-brainer. All right. I
Think that's about it folks
I'll see you guys tomorrow, okay?
Surviving America. No idea what we're gonna talk about yet, but
I'm gonna go play in the snow. Alright? See you guys!