Nice list of useful links. Well worth learning a few things there, although personally I live in a place where it's still possible to purchase vegetables directly from the growers.
We're under full spectrum attack, however, and GMO frankencrops are being promoted in every corner of the world. My preference would be to get a little chunk of land and grow inside a pourous greenhouse enclosed mainly to keep animals and GMO seeds from wandering in - sort of like a mosquito net rather than a glass enclosure. Depends on climate.
Does this tie-in to the SWAT-team going into mannastorehouse.com ?
I've overcome a lot of inertia and have really gotten going towards being starvation-proof at the very least, as long as clean water is available. I've fasted numerous times in my life and know it doesn't take much to sustain life and even attain vibrant health.
In searching for information and experiences I keep running into all these cut-outs in their jewelry, burlap clothes, long hair, body piercings and sandals. Most of the sites I have gone to have entire sections about "global warming" (oops, now "climate change") loads of hysteria about going "carbon neutral." It reinforces just how obvious it is that people fall into such clear divisions based on some kind of ideology or lifestyle choice, and then give up their sovereignty to groupthink. Just like sports fans outfitted head to toe in their team's uniforms they don all the trappings of their ideology and stop thinking for themselves, while all the time projecting themselves as fierce individuals and free thinkers. Ba humbug.
[/rant]
All ranting aside, in my research I have come across an invaluable library of materials on homesteading, gardening, social issues, and politics that includes many works that follow the lineage of living and medicine extant before the corruption introduced by the Rockefellers and Flexners. I've gotten books on composting and soil there, and you can also find Eustace's Murder By Injection and Secrets of the Federal Reserve there:
http://www.soilandhealth.org
The librarian's name is Solomon. He's a true tzadik!
I agree with you guys. Breaking dependency is the key to our freedom. Great information.