My wife headed out of town so I was on kid duty.
Had to take my youngest to her gymnastics class.
Was standing there watching her like the proud papa I am when another one of the dads noticed my shirt and started up a conversation with me.
Turns out he’s a California refugee who managed to escape.
For 45 minutes he told me about his awakening experience… without any prompting.
I’ve been at this for well over a decade now, folks, and this NEVER happens. NEVER.
People now want the red pills, and we’re here to distribute them. Congratulations, y’all, on making it this far. There are effectual battles to be won, for sure, but we are winning the war!
interesting, and makes me realize I never meet anyone who moves here from big cities. we're surrounded by cattle & corn, they'd probably find it 'boring' here.
Same here.
I grew up with a corn field in my back yard.
Or part of my back yard was a corn field.
Good times.
then you definitely know what I'm talking about especially in the spring and summer, so green and beautiful🌻
I think I want that boring place. We’re don’t live in the city... but want more quiet and less people. Where are you? I’ll add it to my candidate list
We moved to an unincorporated town of less than 300 people.
The whole county has about 12000. It's so nice. So nice.
Can recommend. Look into the Missouri Ozarks. It you can handle the humidity, you can get used to the rest of the region's quirks.
Melting a few weeks a year has been well worth experiencing actual freedom.
Humidity might kill it. We moved from Minnesota (humid) to Colorado (not humid) and my husband’s health has never been better. He used to get bronchitis at least 1x/year.... and now I can’t remember the last time he was sick.
The size of what you’re talking about is exactly what we want.
Missouri is one of those places that I believe is great for homesteading... so I wish it could happen. We aren’t desiring to go full homestead... but some chickens and a garden would be nice. Oh, and a garage big enough for several motorcycles, gun safes, and work benches
Unsolicited pro-tip: you dont wanna be keeping gun safes (presumably with guns inside) in a garage, much less a garage with a humid environment. First one's asking for a break-in (can be seen by any passerby from the street), and the second one is asking for constant cleaning due to rust/corrosion. Even the best safe out there is no bulwark against thieves or rust when out in the open.
Optimally: Climate controlled, in the house, will mitigate both problems caused by the garage solution. Alternatively, if you're willing to invest, a proper built underground bunker is also perfect.
I offer these things because I care about your safety, your family safety, and care of the firearms that will ensure both.
I've been looking online at properties in Lake of the Ozarks for about a month now. Very affordable. Very beautiful.
Great area. People are nice and it is nothing like the Netflix shows rendition. They do sell Pistachio ice cream there and people do brush their teeth.
yes, I can understand/could never live around a lot of people. sioux falls is our closest 'big' airport/city over 100,000 (SD has less than a million total population) we're close to the river/Lewis and Clark trail. it's beautiful here, the winters are rough, but think that keeps the spooks away.
watch the short video, lots of pretty scenery, and actually first time I've seen it/made me teary eyed; I love the Missouri River:) https://www.nps.gov/mnrr/index.htm
I said same thing about Minnesota... the cold keeps the riff-raff out! Now that I’ve moved to Colorado where I still get the seasons but it is so much more mild.... I realized I am the riff-raff!!
Forgot to mention. Gorgeous video. That is how I grew up, and those are my people. Blaze orange jackets at church on Sunday ❤️
Well as a hillbilly from Kentucky i find anything flat boring. But thats not a bad thing.
Before I realized I was a “conservative” I always dreamed of living in fields surrounded by no one. I enjoy socializing with people but I always wanted the peace and quiet of rural life. It never sounded boring to me even though I grew up in big cities with all the bells and whistles. I wonder if that’s a characteristic trait of conservatives.