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From YouTube: Alex Petroff 2
Description
Alex didn't want this published.
A
A
B
They're
expensive
to
maintain
then
there's
the
question
of
who
owns
them
and
what's
their
incentives
to
maintain
them
and
and
so
on.
I
just
you
drive
everywhere
and
you
see
broken
down
tractors
in
all
across
africa
and
then
you'll
see.
But
I've
been
there
long
enough
to
see
brand
new
tractors
and
to
see
those
same
tractors
broken
down
a
couple
years
later
and
then
for
them
to
stay
broken
down
and
then
for
them
to
start.
B
But
I
would
say
to
me:
it
looks
like
a
big
replay
of
the
1970s
and
I
I
the
green
revolution
again.
No,
it
looks
like
a
big
replay
of
the
1970s
in
africa
and
70s.
So
not
not
the
1970s
in
america.
Green
revolution
was
a
huge
success
in
in
north
america
and
europe
and
japan
and
australia,
and
places
like
that.
Green
revolution
was
not
a
big
success
in
africa,
so
it
did
not
work
for
a
lot
of
the
reasons
around
the
tractor,
so
you
had
problems.
The
tractor
breaks
down
who's
going
to
fix
it.
B
B
You
know
by
the
time
it's
fixed
you're,
just
not
going
to
use
it
and
it
takes
a
community
not
very
long
to
figure
that
out,
because
when
the
tractor
first
comes
in
tills,
up
all
kinds
of
stuff
eyes
get
glittery
people
are
excited,
they
see
the
big
future
and
then
you,
you
plow,
that
land
up
and
tractor
breaks
oh
shoot.
We
gotta
get
fixed.
Oh,
who
knows
how
to
do
that?
Nobody,
oh
this
guy,
thinks
he
knows.
Okay,
good!
What's
his
diagnosis,
we
need
this
part.
Oh,
we
don't
have
that
part.
B
We're
gonna
get
the
part.
Oh,
we
can
order
it
from
such
such
a
place.
Overseas.
Okay!
Well,
let's
get
that
or
from
such
such
a
country
and
then
there's
delay.
I
mean
we
have
delays
if
we
we're
in
we're,
as
in
in
the
razizi
valley.
Bukabu
is
not
that
far
from
us,
you
can
get
there
and
back
in
a
day,
we
need
a
part
for
a
generator
we
need.
We
need
something
that's
in
bukavu
and
we
have
a
hard
time
getting
it
and
we
have
a
lot
of
money
in
transport
and
it'll.
B
A
A
A
B
As
far
as
I
know,
the
big
steam
tractors
got
their
big
boost
after
world
war
during
world
war,
one
because
all
the
draft
animals,
the
horses
and
the
mules
were
all
sent
over
to
world
war
to
world
war
ii
in
world
war.
One
and
that's
when
the
big
subsidies
behind
agriculture
started
and
and
the
mechanization
started
in
agriculture
before
that
there
was
mechanization,
but
not
to
the
scale.
It
was
not
the
scale
like
what
happened
during
world
war.
One.
B
B
B
So
there's
a
there's.
A
big
difference
between
you
know
scaling.
A
B
And
and
and
what's
what's
a
small
program
and.
B
Even
I
mean
we
look
at
it
as,
as
you
know,
even
that
world
war,
one
thing
there
were:
there
were
tons
of
farmers
in
maine
that
were
still
using
horses
and
even
oxen
up
until
after
world
war,
one
and
the
biggest
shift
to
mechanization
of
agriculture
happened
in
the
korean
revolution
and
not
even
after
world
war,
one
after
world
war.
Two
they
were
still
in
this
is
the
green
revolution.
Yeah
well
fifties
and
sixties
was
when
it
started
to
really
really
take
over
and
so
from
draft
power.
B
B
B
Model
for
that
so
so
we
have
three
that's
what
I'm
saying
is
that
it
depends
on
the
circumstance.
So
our
first
one
was.
We
get
a
bunch
of
untrained
farmers.
We
have
a
piece
of
empty
land,
we
teach
them
how
to
farm
on
that
empty
land,
and
then
we
use
the
profits
from
that
empty
land
to
set
them
up
on
their
own
10
acre
farms.
B
B
We
get
them
plugged
into
our
network.
We
teach
them
how
to
how
to
train.
I
mean
how
to
work
oxen,
we
teach
them
how
to
we
even
get
them.
We
get
their
land
plowed
beforehand
because
they
have
to
understand
the
ox
and
why
it's
worth
learning,
but
eventually
we
teach
them
how
to
work
with
oxen.
B
We
loan
them
money
to
buy
land,
so
they
can
get
a
big
enough
piece
of
land
and
then
they
become
tanker
farmers
that
way
and
through
their
oxen
as
well
and
finally,
the
the
last
model,
which
we
don't
have
a
model
for
yet,
but
I
think,
would
conceptually
work
as
there's
a
big
land
owner
or
several
landowners
could
be
several
medium-sized
landowners
that
don't
farm
the
land,
they're
absentee
landlords
or
they're
too
old
to
farm
land
or
whatever
it
is.
B
And
you
know
a
young
guy
or
young
gal
will
learn
how
to
work
oxen
from
us
and
then
and
then
we'll
rent
the
land
from
these
landlords
farm
it
and-
and
then
you
know,
and
then
either
through
us
or
through
somebody
else,
will
have
a
distribution
network
they
can
plug
into
and
then
they'll
give
you
know
whatever
they
rented
the
land
for
to
the
to
the
landowner
and
they'll
get
to
keep
the
rest,
and
I
think
that
one
might
be
really
scalable
in
places
like
latin
america,
where
that
dynamic
does
already
exist.
B
B
B
That
we're
very
excited
about
the
fact
that
people
are
going
to
cities
because
of
all
these
great
things
that
can
happen,
they
can
get
services
and
so
on.
But
really
the
flip
side
of
that
is.
Is
that
there's
a
great
danger,
there's
going
to
be
a
lot
of
unemployed
people
in
the
cities,
and
I
think
in
fact
it's
not
even
in
danger.
It's
a
reality.
B
So
so
my
personal
belief
is
that
if
we're
going
to
employ
10
million
people,
there's
going
to
have
to
be
a
lot
more
people
farming,
and
I
think
that's
not
only
good.
From
that
perspective,
I
think
it's
potentially
good
ideologically.
B
It
was
benjamin
franklin
or
thomas
jefferson,
or
one
of
those,
I
think,
was
thomas
jefferson,
who
you
know
who
postulated
that
you
know
a
true
democracy
ought
to
have
a
bunch
of
independent
farmers
and
I
think,
to
have
20
15
of
your
population
as
independent
small
farmers
is
what
an
amazing
democracy
that
would
be.
These
people
are
free,
they're,
not
beholden
to
anybody,
they're
their
own
bosses
and
nobody's
going
to
push
them
around
or
make
them
vote
one
way
or
another
or
you
know,
is.
B
I'm
sure
that
there
are
people
who
accept
that
yeah.
Maybe
people
who
read
the.
B
Journal
might
accept
it,
but
I
don't
think
that
people
give
it
a
lot
of
thought,
because
I
think
we
have
more
people.
I
think
the
statistic
is
we
have
more
people
in
the
united
states
in
prison
than
we
do
on
farms,
and
that
means
that
the
majority
of
us
don't
actually
give
it
a
lot
of
thought
as
to
what
happens
day
to
day
with
the
farm
community.
We
just
go
in
the
store
and
buy
food,
but
it
has
to
be
grown
somewhere.