00:01:01.000And I mean, a lot of guys want to counter-signal her.
00:01:05.000For me, it's like, you know, she's bringing attention to some problem.
00:01:08.000They're focusing a bit on the wrong thing, which is CO2.
00:01:13.000But she also has the power of certain, some of these individuals might end up looking into it deeper.
00:01:20.000So what would you say is a good next step for the more inquisitive of those youths?
00:01:26.000I think the CO2 thing is kind of used as a distraction, right?
00:01:29.000It's like, okay, I don't want to say that it doesn't happen or anything.
00:01:33.000But I think it's a fairly less significant point than, for example, more direct issues that are more easily solvable.
00:01:39.000Like the plastic in the oceans issue, chemical pollution in China.
00:01:43.000And then the main argument anyway against air pollution is that here in the Netherlands, like in America with the Green New Deal and so on,
00:01:50.000they've proposed legislation where they want to invest a thousand billion dollars.
00:01:54.000Like that is roughly a year and a half worth of our entire GDP into climate change, like stopping CO2 and energy transition and new technologies and so on.
00:03:07.000If you uplift the masses of Africa and Asia into the middle class and you give them access to cars and homes, there's no way that the entire 7 billion people on this earth can live on a sustainable level, on the same level as we live in Western Europe.
00:03:23.000In fact, we in Western Europe are probably living far too decadently.
00:03:42.000Yeah, and exactly in Africa, the main culprit, so to speak, in regards to overpopulation, it's a quite easy thing to understand that the more humans there are, the less animals there will be.
00:03:52.000Because humans take territory, and when they take more territory, less trees, because they cut it down to build fires, basically.
00:04:00.000And something to keep in mind, too, is that when the desert spreads, the ecosystem takes a hit.
00:04:08.000And who knows what will happen when one unique flower or insect or frog or whatever it might be, when that disappears, it may have catastrophic consequences.
00:04:27.000The funny thing is, it was part of the environmentalist agenda to talk about overpopulation up until about the 1970s.
00:04:33.000And then it was dropped as a talking point, because political correctness and cultural Marxism came up as, like, the dominant narratives and these sort of things.
00:04:40.000And overpopulation doesn't suit with the social agendas.
00:04:42.000And I find this very often with the left, that they have very contradictory agendas.
00:06:34.000To get a neighborhood to have sufficient solar panels and to have its entire underground system and transformator houses and everything rerouted so that it's independent.
00:07:52.000The other part of lithium mining is, of course, it's extremely polluting in Africa itself.
00:07:55.000Huge pit mines, child labor, all that, you know.
00:07:58.000If you look at a lot of the raw materials that we use for our advanced technologies like cobalt, lithium, even simpler things like gold and iron.
00:08:07.000They're mined in Bangladesh and Africa and Colombia by child labor in extremely poor conditions.
00:08:20.000So if we're talking about reducing the transportation because, yeah, as we talked about earlier off camera, the reason we can have a global economy is that it's so cheap to transport.
00:09:08.000If you want to go to live leaks and look up the kind of industrial disasters and poor infrastructure they have in China, you can have yourself a world over time.
00:09:18.000These two factors make it so that we can produce all of our clothing and all our heavy industry in China, all our steel and everything.
00:09:24.000But if, especially if the cheap oil goes away, or if, for example, another factor might be we have oil for a while, but the Chinese start demanding good labor conditions and better wages.
00:09:39.000But oil, like looking at the oil thing, these mass oil tankers, you can't replace oil really with anything,
00:09:44.000except perhaps nuclear, but it's incredibly expensive to start outfitting all your big cargo ships with nuclear reactors like they have on aircraft carriers and nuclear submarines.
00:09:57.000So there's possibly, there's a lot of research you could do.
00:10:00.000I'm not an engineer, so maybe there's technologies you could have to replace oil with in international shipping, but for the moment there is nothing.
00:10:09.000So part of this new environmental agenda, I think, is you have to reroute your entire economy back to a more local level.
00:11:50.000Solar panels might work for homes, but heavy industry and mass consumption is not as efficient.
00:11:55.000You need to fill fields and fields and fields of them.
00:11:58.000Then windmills run to the same problem you get with car batteries.
00:12:02.000They rely on neodymium and other magnetic metals for the core of the engine.
00:12:07.000And we also have a physically limited supply of that on it.
00:12:10.000We might be able to fill the entire North Sea with windmills.
00:12:12.000But the average windmill only generates 40 kilowatt hour.
00:12:16.000Now, nuclear power centers generate 2,000.
00:12:20.000So, nuclear power would be an actual solution.
00:12:24.000And there's technologies like dual fluoride reactors and thorium, which China is reversing.
00:12:28.000And we're not, because we've got this paranoia about nuclear, which we can blame on the left.
00:12:32.000And the left always is against nuclear.
00:12:34.000Well, nuclear, if you want to switch your entire system to an electrical system, like you want more public transportation on electricity, you want your cars on electricity, all this, then you need nuclear.
00:12:44.000You basically cannot generate enough power otherwise.
00:12:46.000Or coal power centers is still an option, because we have considerably more coal than we have oil.
00:12:51.000But then again, you're still basing it on a non-renewable resource, right?
00:16:53.000And I think there's something of a reactionary conservative attitude sometimes towards nature where they think we should keep it just as it is today.
00:17:03.000But that's just not the truth of how nature works.
00:17:05.000We as people aren't even the same people we were a thousand years ago.
00:17:08.000We've selected and self-domesticated in ways and we are transforming the Earth.
00:17:13.000And that's not that we're going to stop.
00:17:15.000Species that we cannot use are going to disappear.
00:17:20.000And I would like to add to this also a critique of Ted Kaczynski a little bit in that he says the industrial revolution is a disaster for mankind.
00:17:27.000Yes, perhaps, but it's also irrevertible.
00:17:30.000You can't blow it up because even if you were to kill most of the scientists and you would blow up all the power grids and so on.
00:17:37.000There are still so many libraries and hard drives full of technology and there are so many engineers and professors walking around that if in a case of a complete reset of society you'd have a base level of technological knowledge that would jump the start of society again.
00:17:50.000If you look at the Roman Empire, when the Roman Empire fell, it didn't revert all the way back to the Neolithic.
00:17:56.000The church is still preserving some knowledge and so on.
00:17:59.000Another point against Kaczynski is he looks at it at a very individual level and the problem is if one group is still bad on technology.
00:18:05.000Say the West says, okay, Kaczynski is right, we're going to stop with this whole technology thing, we're going back to a feudal society.
00:19:15.000You can develop more environmentally friendly technologies but the solution isn't a completely abandoned technology.
00:19:20.000The solution has many, many different aspects.
00:19:25.000Anyway, to end on a what can we do note, we have a lot of leftist or default normies slash leftists who are out.
00:19:37.000Now, young people who are, you know, probably most of them are good people, heart on the right place and they see, you know, mother nature is in danger.
00:19:47.000How do we as right-wing environmentalists, how do we get them to our cause?
00:20:16.000Yeah, like racing IQ and sports, sport differences in height and all these like SNPs, these little talking points that people that don't even fundamentally understand what the reasoning behind it is, they can still repeat them.
00:20:30.320Yeah, so we're going to do the same thing sort of with an environmentalist and economical platform for the ride, is to have these little talking point memes that even the most basal follower can repeat.
00:20:43.320Yeah, buy local, for example, buy local, support your local economy, support your local farmer, yeah, these sorts of things, but that's, so we need to work on that platform, work on these sorts of memeable ideas, and I think that's the project for a while we need to work on, you know, develop an actual proper platform, and then find places where you can talk about it, YouTube is one, but also the public square, and in politics and so on.
00:21:09.960Yeah, yeah, so good, good stuff, and yeah, it's something, as I said, I will continue talking a bit more about this, because it's important, and because if we want to form a complete worldview, a complete political platform, or cultural platform, we need to have everything in order, it's not enough to just talk about, oh, this group of immigrants are bad, or Islam is bad.
00:21:34.840We need to have, yeah, exactly, it's like, we base our worldview upon ourselves, we don't base our worldview upon being the opposite of leftists, or the opposite of Muslims, it's like, they are who they are, we are who we are, we form our own platform here,
00:21:49.660we try to make it as congruent with Mother Nature as possible, both the actual nature and the metaphysical part.
00:21:57.060I think that's the whole thing about rightist politics, is you're trying to stick as close as possible to natural law.
00:22:02.840Yeah, that isn't to say that some things can be changed by human hand, but some things also can't, like, human behavior can be changed somewhat to self-selection, we've done that as Europeans, we've reduced our aggressiveness, and so on, we've upped our IQ, basically, watch Alternative Hype's European Revolution video, he's got a very good material on this, and self-domestication talking points from the HPD community.
00:22:27.540So there are some things we can change, but human nature still has points that, if we are to change it, we become a different species, practically, and those points are immutable, and the same thing with certain things in nature, there's certain laws of gravity and motion that you cannot change, and that's right-wing politics, it's trying, I think, to stick as close as possible to the natural law, and to say, okay, this is immutable and unchangeable, this is what works best, and that's what we should base our politics on.
00:22:55.980Yeah, definitely, and just end on that note, for me personally, I talk a lot about self-improvements, obviously, for me, I don't want to be deterministic in any way, shape, or form, I always think you can change your own situation, but also being realistic about it, if you are 160, you will never become a pro basketball player, but you might be good at something else, so it's about believing in yourself, doing everything you can to better your position, but also taking biology into account.
00:23:24.980Yeah, so now we're going to see that biology and beat the shit out of each other.
00:23:29.640Yeah, definitely, so we're going to do some training now, some sparring, beautiful nature, good stuff, thank you.