DO 289 - Beef, Bartering, and the Agorist's Guide to Not Starving with Nigel, Nate, and Jason
Doomer Optimism13 Marras

DO 289 - Beef, Bartering, and the Agorist's Guide to Not Starving with Nigel, Nate, and Jason

Nigel Best doesn’t have time for your bullshit. He’s too busy welding gates, rotating cattle, building spiral staircases, and conducting “illicit beef transactions” in Craigslist parking lots.

Missouri woodworker and regenerative rancher Nigel Best joins Jason and Nate to talk about what it actually takes to make a living on the land—without going broke, without selling your soul, and without waiting for Washington to save you.

In this episode:

  • Why coming up hard isn’t a strategy (but flat tires and crooked fingers are part of the deal)

  • The truth about rotational grazing: genius in wet years, dumbass in droughts

  • How to raise beef when customers complain about prices and the president says you’re greedy

  • The case for land value tax as the only moral tax (and why nobody’s entitled to your heartbeats)

  • Why the informal economy beats W-2 farms and digital surveillance every time

  • Meat packer monopolies vs. the last stand of independent ranchers

  • Two competing theories of change: political antitrust warfare or agorist opt-out

  • Why every kid should work construction with crotchety old men before graduating high school

Fair warning: Nigel solves exactly zero problems in this episode. What he does offer is three decades of hard-won wisdom from someone who’s actually been “out there in the rain at midnight with their hand up a cow.” No Instagram-perfect farm content. No verbatim regurgitation of regenerative ag books. Just the unvarnished reality of feeding yourself, your family, and your neighbors in a system designed to extract value from everyone who touches it.

If you’re tired of influencers peddling theories and want to hear from someone who’s actually dragging their knuckles through it, this one’s for you.

Guest: Nigel Best (@NigelBest5)
Hosts: Jason & Nate
Topics: Regenerative Agriculture, Land Tax, Agorism, Beef Industry, Rural Economics, Informal Markets


Jaksot(288)

DO 186 - Working with Purpose with Nathaniel Marshall and GG

DO 186 - Working with Purpose with Nathaniel Marshall and GG

Nathaniel Marshall sits down to chat with Going Godward on vocation, the good purpose of work, and rejecting ease as a means of becoming a more integrated person. Explore meaning, work ethic, and optimism in this warm and enlightening episode Nathaniel Marshall: Twitter handle: @‌oblatenate Editor: thebluescholar.substack.com, @‌bluescholarwork Going Godward: Twitter handle: @‌goinggodward

16 Marras 202348min

DO 185 - Growing Food in Sub/Urban Spaces with Zach Loeks, Tres, and Sim

DO 185 - Growing Food in Sub/Urban Spaces with Zach Loeks, Tres, and Sim

Tres and Sim interview Zach Loeks, and talk about the problems and opportunities around growing food in sub/urban spaces. Zach debunks many of the myths around maintaining food production in urban landscapes, and we dig into the secrets of lesser-known city fruits. Zach is an educator, author, artist, and farmer based in Canada. Zach Loeks (@zachloeks) - https://www.zachloeks.com/ Tres Crow (@dogeatcrow) - https://www.greenboxus.com/ Sim Gooder (@slimgoober) - https://permapeople.org/

14 Marras 20231h 1min

DO 184 - Ramp Hollow: The Ordeal of Appalachia with Steven Stoll and Jason

DO 184 - Ramp Hollow: The Ordeal of Appalachia with Steven Stoll and Jason

In this episode Jason speaks with Steven Stoll, the author of the excellent book Ramp Hollow: The Ordeal of Appalachia, about the history of land dispossession in Appalachia and the rise of industrial capitalism, manufactured dependency on wage labor due to land degradation or dispossession, The Whisky Rebellion, absentee land ownership and the initial squatters rights movement, coal towns and the how household gardens often served the interests of coal companies, a comparison of the experience of indigenous populations and early white settlers in losing access to land, his modern-day proposal for The Commons Communities Act and land reform more broadly, the potential of community land trusts, the broader international context e.g., modern-day land dispossession in Africa, and much more

9 Marras 20231h 3min

DO 183 - Doomer Optimism Literary Hour with Jordan Castro, Donald and Joey

DO 183 - Doomer Optimism Literary Hour with Jordan Castro, Donald and Joey

Donald and Joey talk to writer Jordan Castro about his new novel, the history of the Alt Lit literary movement, punk rock, and the Midwest. Jordan bio: Jordan Casto is the author of The Novelist (Soft Skull, 2022) and two poetry books. He is from Cleveland, Ohio.

8 Marras 20231h 32min

 DO 182 - Finding meaning in the chaos of life with Brian Fink with Going Godward

DO 182 - Finding meaning in the chaos of life with Brian Fink with Going Godward

Brian Fink chats with Going Godward, offering a unique perspective on finding meaning in the chaos of life. Explore existentialism, spirituality, and optimism in this enlightening episode of Doomer Optimism.

2 Marras 20231h

DO 181 - The Weird Wild Wonderful World of Biochar with Tom Miles, Kelpie Wilson, Myles Gray, and Josh Kearns

DO 181 - The Weird Wild Wonderful World of Biochar with Tom Miles, Kelpie Wilson, Myles Gray, and Josh Kearns

The Weird Wild Wonderful World of Biochar – with Tom Miles, Kelpie Wilson, Myles Gray, and Josh What is biochar and why should we care about it? A roundtable discussion with veterans of the biochar world. Tom Miles –  TR Miles Consultants (ag and bioenergy) and US Biochar Initiative Kelpie Wilson – Wilson Biochar Myles Gray – US Biochar Initiative Josh Kearns – A Field Guide to Biochar Water Treatment Interest in biochar – “charcoal, with a purpose” – has been growing for 20 years. Biochar can enhance garden and agricultural soils and improve crop yields, provide a mechanism for drawdown and sequestering of atmospheric carbon, and provide a tunable engineered sorbent for a variety of water treatment and environmental remediation applications. In this conversation, we discuss contemporary innovations and developments for using biochar to tackle a variety of sustainability challenges. 2024 North American Biochar Conference February 12-14, 2024 Sacramento, CA

31 Loka 202358min

DO 180 - Towards a Fourth Generation Civilization with Michel Bauwens, Ashley, and Jason

DO 180 - Towards a Fourth Generation Civilization with Michel Bauwens, Ashley, and Jason

In this episode, Ashley and Jason talk with Michel Bauwens about his work developing ideas for a ‘cosmo-local’ society through the power of horizontal P2P networks, a reimagining of the commons, and crypto. Along the way they talk about ascending and descending civilizations, why he thinks we’re in a descending one, and what that potentiates in terms of reinvigorating local societies and provisioning systems through the power of superlinear collaboration networks Michel’s work can be found here: https://4thgenerationcivilization.substack.com/ https://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/Category:Civilizational_Analysis

26 Loka 20231h 33min

DO 179 - Agroecological Enterprise in the Amazon - Lexie and Luis of Amisacho Restauracion with Josh

DO 179 - Agroecological Enterprise in the Amazon - Lexie and Luis of Amisacho Restauracion with Josh

For decades, indigenous communities in the Amazonian region of Ecuador have been impacted by petrochemical exploitation and monocultural ag for export. They have suffered from pollution and associated ill health effects, economic insecurity, and encroachment on their traditional territories from roads, oil wells, pipelines, and industrial ag plantations. Grassroots groups such as Amisacho Restauracion and La Clinica Ambiental have been working with locals to develop permaculture and agroecology approaches to preserving rainforest biodiversity and deriving sustainable livelihoods. In this conversation we delve into the environmental history of region and the work of Lexie Gropper and Luis Munoz at Amisacho. For example, they have developed a system for climbing morete palm trees and other large trees in the rainforest to harvest fruit without needing to cut the trees down. They have developed equipment for processing morete palm fruits and other foraged items from the jungle into preserved foodstuffs, skin and health care products, essential oils and natural medicines. And they’re developing new approaches to making biochar for water treatment and soil amendment from local waste biomass that otherwise is burned for disposal.

24 Loka 202354min

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