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From YouTube: Alex Petroff - Working Villages
Description
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A
A
B
A
B
A
B
See
now
I
mean
anything
can
be
crushed,
but
I
just
don't
see,
I,
don't
see
the
economic
model
of
big
AG
surviving
in
the
era
of
high
oil
prices
without
serious
governance
are
you
look
at
our
governments?
Are
cutting
their
subsidies
and
I?
Think
they're
going
to
look
at
agricultural
subsidies
in
Europe
in
the
United
States
before
too
long
and
when
they
do
so.
B
A
A
B
B
What
we're
talking
about
is
taking
an
energy
source
that
is
very
concentrated
energy
and
in
one
spot
and
and
refining
it
I'm
just
curious.
Why,
as
opposed
to
something
which
you
you
reduce,
the
energy
are
oei
intensely
when
you
farm
a
huge
area
of
land
have
to
collect
all
of
them.
You
can't
then
ship
that
mass
very
far
in
order
to
transform
in.
B
Maybe
in
some
instances-
but
you
know
in
theory-
yes,
if
you
want
to
remove
a
lot
of
people
from
the
planet
I,
just
don't
think
that
we
should
be
I.
I,
see
that
if
you're,
if
you're
holed
point,
is
tillage
of
land
right,
you're,
far
better
off
using
land
to
have
grass
on
to
be
eaten
by
cows
and
then
have
the
cows
fly.
Your
Lana
provide
a
fertilizer
for
your
fields.
Then
you
are
to
have
very
good
farmland
that
could
be
growing
food
growing
fuel.
What's.
A
B
I
think
tree
crops
are
great,
I
mean
it.
If
people
can
can
figure
out
how
to
how
to
work
it.
We
just
don't
have
a
long
history
as
a
species
of
doing
that,
I
mean
we're
talking
fruit,
trees,
that's
one
thing,
but
if
you're
talking,
if
you
talk
to
these
just
like
trees
for
wood
for
lumber,
that
didn't
really
start
Germany
and
what
was
it
the
late
seventeen
or
early
1800s
is
when
the
first
time
humans
started
to
have
sustainable
forestry.
Until
then,
it
was
basically
got
cut.
Would
you
do
in
dumfries
plan
yeah?
B
I
mean
I
mean
if
you
can
do
stuff
like
that,
it's
just
when
you're
talking
about
running
the
world
economy,
it's
a
little
different
than
then
you
know,
village
I
mean
a
village
can
do
whatever
it
wants
to
do.
What's
going
to
run
the
world
economy
is
a
different
thing
and
that's
more
what
I'm
concerned
with
what's
a
viable
solution
producing
food
for
10
billion
people
and
I,
don't
see
I,
don't
see
us
getting
there
on
tractors.
Are
you?
Are
you.
B
I
can
see
that's
the
beauty
of
aux
power.
Is
you
can
do
decentralization?
You
can't
do
decentralization
of
tractors
at
least
not
currently
come
in.
It's
you
need
to
get
the
steel.
You
need
to
get
the
parts
you
need.
It
I
mean
maybe
some
of
the
things
you're
working
on
you
know
it
can
be
one
thing
but
I
guess
for
me:
win-win
planning
I,
like
the
general
rule,
that
if
5,000
people
aren't
doing
it
somewhere
in
the
world,
it's
it's
on
the
drawing
board.
It's
not
proved
so
once
some
things
wants.
B
5,000
people
are
doing
something
you
can
say,
because
you
can
have
a
perfect
there's
a
there's.
A
book
called
perfected,
yet
rejected
that
basically
goes
about
a
fantastic
piece
of
piece
of
agricultural
equipment
and
how
nobody's
using
it-
and
it
does
everything
it
does
everything
that
you
know
an
agriculture
piece
of
equipment
should
do.
What
is
that
piece
of
my
mom?
It's
plows
it.
You
know
it's
it's
a
connector
for
a
car,
you
hook
a
card
on
it
can
hook.
You
know
you
know
whatever
it's
called
then
runs
the
engine.
You.
B
Thing
you
have
pto,
so
you
can
do
every
you
can
do
everything
with
this
and
they
developed
it
for
a
draft
rental
power
for
for
africa,
and
the
book
is
essentially
about
going
around
the
world
then
trying
to
figure
out
hearing
stories
about
how
successful
this
is,
because
it
does
great
in
all
the
field
tests
and
then
going
out
to
actually
see
how
it's
working
in
communities.
They
can't
find
it
anywhere
nobody's
using
it,
and
so
it
can
be
great
in
theory,
but
but
once
practice.
A
B
Gotten
a
lot
of
really
good
ideas
that
we
haven't
been
able
to
scale
up
or
people
aren't
adapting
I
mean
you
know.
I
came
up
with
the
idea
that
we
should
get
people
cooking
using
something
other
than
wood
in
our
area,
and
so
we
have
a
lot
of
rice,
hulls
and
so
I
said
rice,
whole
stove
sound
like
a
great
idea.
I
was
convinced
on
early
and
we
tried
this
and
people
didn't
like
them
and
it
amusing
they'd
rather
cook
with
wood.
It
was
like
no,
this
is
efficient.
It's
you
know
dead.
B
B
B
Once
we
get
5,000
and
but
will
probably
be
around
five
or
six
thousand
when
when
I'll
say
now,
I
think
we
have
something
until
we're
at
that
stage.
I
don't
feel
like
I
can
tell
people.
This
is
what
you
should
be
doing,
because
I
wouldn't,
if
somebody
told
me
you
should
be
doing
this,
how
many
people
are
doing
it
thousand
yeah.
So.
A
B
B
You're
there
far
do
the
funders
actually
support.
That
idea.
Are
they?
Oh
one
of
them
in
particular,
really
sees
it
for
Africa
as
being
a
big
thing,
I
think
I
think
it's
still
it's
a
hard
step
for
people
to
say
you
know,
there's
a
lot
of
technologies
that
people
are
very
happy
to
throw
in
Africa
and
then
you
say,
would
you
use
that
at
your
house
they're
like
no.
A
B
Didn't
really,
you
know,
composting
toilet
you,
mad
I,
know
some
people
who
walk
the
walk
with
that
who
say
like
I
and
I
do.
But
you
know
we,
you
know
where
I
think
the
reason
why
I'm
doing
this,
because
it
works
not
because
I'm
preachy,
because
in
the
u.s.
we're
totally
have
no
right
to
be
preachy
on
anything.
We
waste
more
energy
and
resources
than
anybody.
So.