56 Comments

I’m old enough to have experienced rural life in the early sixties. Small villages where people exchange different skills whitout any money involved. And I think thats where we are going. And it feels like returning home.

Expand full comment

Absolutely, bartering skills, food and everything else. Can you please come to our village Peter?

Expand full comment

I would love to. In a way I guess I’m already there.

Expand full comment

Completely agree. This is why if I had a college-aged kid now I'd tell him or her to go into the trades, or become a farmer. College degrees are gonna become more and more useless soon.

Expand full comment

So agree…though I am college educated and now retired, I can do a lot of stuff that your average 20 year old wouldn’t have a clue about what to do. Like I said there are many people now ‘who couldn’t find their way out of a paper bag” if they had to. Many of the ‘life skills’ I have today, I learned as a teenager.

Expand full comment

Agreed!

Expand full comment

O kinda agree but if we could change all the blunders in funding academia it could again be a institution of insight.

Expand full comment

Well, that's not going to happen in my lifetime.

Expand full comment

You may be correct. I hope the future can be salvaged.

Expand full comment

I am afraid not. The whole edifice must come down.

Expand full comment

👏👏👏👏👍

In May 2020, I realised I ( & by extension my family) was not going to thrive within the covid experience in my then day job. So I changed roles- mainly to prove a personal hypothesis on the source of health and wellness for my continued studies in health and science, but also to learn practical skills-in growing food, selling food and building soil. Which in turn suprisingly quickly, generated further health and wellness for me and my family.

As the pandemania continues, I realise so little of what we call science, public health, or wellness is actually even understood, let alone practiced.

Expand full comment

Would love to hear your story, how and what you did over this period.

Expand full comment

Excellent post Celia! We will be sharing and bartering so much more. Soon "dollars" that we have to "earn" to spend on plastic crap from China will be in part replaced by bartered goods, and real things like silver, and that means we're diminishing -- our support through taxation on government spending, war, pharma, diabolical agendas, evil everything. There is no reason a unit of payment (dollar) should be subject to inflation, when left to circulate and benefit all in a local setting. If it were not for the banking system - you could bury $100 and it would still be worth $100 some 200 years later. Communities will not create "inflation". Local currencies may thrive. Things will evolve to get REAL again. Goodbye Fiat dollars. The world is waking up right now! Thanks for this!

Expand full comment

As I said in my own comment (before I saw yours), we’re going to have to make about a million things. :-)

Expand full comment

"you could bury $100 and it would still be worth $100 some 200 years later"

Yes, that was once true with US coin. Now, a US $20 gold piece is worth $1739.39 at gold melt value and a dealer can charge you as much as $200 over melt for one. The last one I bought was $1800. That was 900 times face value.

Expand full comment

No to crypto. Michael Hudson, one of my favorite economists said that it's volatility shows that it's mostly speculative (people wanna make money by having money, stupid Crapitalism), which means it is poor as a real currency which is used to trade for things.

Anyway, no matter how secure the crypto is, they can be taken down if the exchanges to normal currency are denied the banking system. It's happened in a few us states already. When the fed demands it, it'll kill crypto.

Expand full comment

What happens to crypto if the internet is killed, or restricted? The companies behind everything will surely have the power to switch off our supply of information and access to anything online.

Expand full comment

Good video; relevant and timely. Would that many of us had had that kind of education long before now.

One point: Cliff mentions Catherine Austin Fitts, a remarkably smart lady who can explain the Big Picture of the globalist coup d'etat as well as, or better than, any can, someone I encourage everyone to find and watch. She's done a number of interviews and appears in videos produced by Doctors for Covid Ethics, among others. Her take on what is happening is eye opening and revealing, albeit chilling in its implications. She, too, recommends "going local" in an effort to divorce ourselves from Mr. Global. One word of caution, though; she believes that crypto currencies have been allowed to expand by Mr. Global as a way for "them" to see how digital currencies work, and to allow others to work out the bugs, so that, eventually, Mr. Global can subsume them; i.e, get his puppet politicians and central bankers to regulate them, with a view to ushering in Central Bank Digital Currency (CBCD). As we know, it is through CBCD that Mr. Global will exert near-total control over our lives. Knowing that, she is not as big a fan of crypto currencies as some others are. And, if we've learned anything at all about how puppet governments work, there isn't much on this planet that is completely safe from their grasp. It is for this reason that I have not dipped my toe in the crypto markets and stick only to buying gold and silver, when I can. Just food for thought.

Expand full comment

👏👏👏💪👍

Expand full comment

Sure

But u know how to write my dear

I came across a quote from you in a chd article, brilliant

Thanks

Being able to think clearly and speak freely never loses currency...

And yes I do agree...

Regards

Expand full comment

Legend of The Woo. Best Bitchute channel. One of the 7 woonders of the woorld. Too Wooseful to ignore.

Expand full comment

🤔😂

Expand full comment

Got turned onto Clif High this past year…he is a bit of a ‘Woo’ guy (as well he calls his video podcasts he has on Bitchute the ‘Woo’,) but has some interesting ‘pay attention to’ types thinking we all could benefit from.

Expand full comment

The truth is that anyone not choosing the biometric ID will be removed from all of modern society. You will be lucky if you are not incarcerated or if you can maintain a private piece of property without having it confiscated. Most of the US is vaccinated. Those people will not stand up for your unvaccinated rights when they are under pressure. They will comply. History knows this already. It is human nature. If you are living in a community of like-minded individuals, you stand a chance of surviving through barter trade, but don't expect to be winning any gun battles when drone and infrared tech are your main opponent. I recommend having bush craft, foraging and plant medicine skills, as well. Having a permanent location may be difficult.

Expand full comment

Where does one buy gold and silver safely?

Expand full comment

In the USA? Apmex golddealer and other sites are good. I've used those two.

Expand full comment

Thanks.

Expand full comment
Comment deleted
Jan 8, 2022
Comment deleted
Expand full comment

Thanks.

Expand full comment

Intressting

Expand full comment

Hej Peter!

Expand full comment

Intressting

Expand full comment

Celia, thank you for this. I have followed Clif since he appeared on Coast to Coast many many years ago. He is a treasure.

Expand full comment

I do teach chain sawing, log splitting, pea planting and general bushwacking. Yes, and tire changing. all good!

Expand full comment

I agree with Cliff. The idea of buying silver coins is sound advice, though it might be a better idea to convert all your excess cash into silver coin ASAP instead of buying one at a time. I did that years ago and the price of silver coins has gone up a lot since then. I still buy as much as I can every time I can.

Expand full comment

That the price has gone up is just the mirror image of the currency going down, that is all.

Expand full comment

Yep. Rising prices across the board indicates a devaluation of the monetary unit. The USD has lost about 98% of its value since 1913, with 87% of that occurring since the close of the gold window, according to some sources.

Expand full comment