Again, I, I just spent maybe 40 minutes recording a video but my laptop, uh had some serious issues with Google and it all just shut off. So, let's see if I can do this again and it works. Um, I want to use a recent road trip. I went on to illustrate some principles that you should think about as you
consider where you live and where you should live and also how things are going, going to go in the near and long term. I've been reading articles left and right about some of the effects of the Feds dropping tens of thousands of illegals into random cities and towns. And this is just one of many things
that you've been warned about and it's happening. And so imagine living in a place your whole life or you've, you've expended major investments to, to set yourself up, well, you and your family in a place and then all of a sudden the feds make some shift and your life as you know, it is over and you
suddenly have to move, you know, and in the past, you didn't have to worry about this much outside of some dam failing or, you know, some other crazy unlikely thing. But now the Feds are pumping illegals into all these cities and towns across the country and surprise, it's not a great place to live anymore
. And so one of the themes I would like you to think about and hopefully the context of this video assists you in doing is how to live in a place or select a place, identify a place that is less governable. That's less um corruptible by the Feds or the county or the state or any government entity. So
, um what, what I'm not telling you is, is uh go find a place to do Ruby Ridge 2.0 that's not what I'm saying. What I'm gonna show you is how to use geography in, in, in, in this specific example, how to use geography to find a place that's harder to mess up. That's basically what I want to show you
today. So, on my road trip, I actually started, I live east of Missoula, but as you're coming out of Missoula, which is south of the map here, what happens is you come up this very narrow mountain pass and then it's a plane and you hang a left onto this other highway and this is one highway with one
lane in either direction that goes all the way here. And this is several 100 miles. It's AAA three hour trip from here to hear. Well to here at 70 miles an hour. Ok. So from Missoula to Sand Point, that's the speed limit. It's one lane in either direction. And what I want to show you is that this narrow
valley, it's, it's kind of carved, it's a pass carved by the river, I suppose. But there really isn't much on either side. In fact, along this whole drive for three hours, you're not gonna see a single mcdonald's, the, the closest mcdonald's is right here in Sandpoint and even Sandpoint itself is very
small. They only have one mcdonald's right. I mean, we'll zoom in maybe, but you can check that out for yourself. It's a small place. So what, what happens is when you're in a place I'll switch now. So we're gonna zoom into this area here. You, you see how this is a big old plane, what's covered in farms
. If uh, if we zoom in here, get rid of this and we got the satellite view. Look at all these farms here. If it ever loads, come on. Ok. Do you see all these farms? It's nothing but farms in that valley. Now, what's happening is right here, they're starting to build luxury houses and they're packing
them in wherever they can. The problem is the problem is that so I, I came up here on my road trip to buy some seeds in bulk from a farmer. I buy and buy the ton for my, my animals and, and for growing here. But the farmer said that the, the city keeps pushing to rezone these farms so that they can build
houses on them. And of course, the farmers have lived here in some cases for generations. The, the guy I buy from his parents were there and there was a very long stretch of time where all along this path that I've shown you, the only people that lived there were folks that loved that lifestyle and lived
it at a very high cost because there are no jobs through here. You have to be very creative to spin something up and there was no high speed internet and no working from home for the most part, for years and years through here and that all changed with COVID. And so what's happening is people are moving
out here by the droves and um they're packing them in wherever they can fit them. Ok. So whether it's wealthy people moving in and grabbing up all the land that used to be inexpensive, productive and beautiful farmland. The, the views from this area, you can look over the lake. It is absolutely gorgeous
. You wouldn't believe it unless you saw it and the climate because you have this enormous lake here. It's beautiful. Ok. But, and that helps with the farming because it's a more constant temperature. This, this region of the country is notorious like where I live, the, the temperature swings we have
are insane. It's, it's brutal for plants. It's almost impossible to grow anything but here it's, it's idyllic. Ok. And they're packing people in. Ok. So if you wanna live in a place where you're not gonna get flooded by wealthy people from California or illegals, you can't live in a place like this.
Now. Sandpoint is not a big city. Look at the, the sparsity of stores here. Right. There's a mcdonald's. There are, I think two grocery stores don't quote me on that. But there's nothing here. Folks. This is a tiny, tiny little city. Look at the scale. That's 1000 ft, right? And yet these are the very
small towns that the Feds are pumping ridiculous numbers of illegals into and fundamentally changing the culture of the place. Crime goes through the roof. They can't teach anybody in schools because they don't have all these translators. Um The people are coming from countries where they're, they probably
grew up malnourished. They have very low iqs for the most part and that's absolutely gonna change things. All right. So let's go back to the map now, if I zoom out a bit, maybe be careful because I can't afford to make this video again. Time wise. Look at all these mountains. OK. Remember Sodom and Gomorrah
, they are cities of the plain. People build cities in flat spots for the most part where there's room to grow. So if you go to a place where there's no room to grow, let me, let me zoom in here on the, on the satellite view. Ok. So we follow highway 200 down and I'm not saying you should move here.
I'm saying this is one thing to think about when you're thinking about where to move is look for room to grow because you don't want it. All right. So if we just zoom in to this, which is kind of more of a wider part of these passes, what do you see lots of farms? What about the towns? They are so little
. Look at this. It's like five houses here. People now driving down this road, there were for sale signs. But the point is, and, and it's gorgeous. By the way, you have the view of the, with the river there. The point is if you're in a position where you can move to a place like this out in the middle
of nowhere where there really isn't room to grow, then you're cushioning yourself from this insanity. Now, what's the key here? The key here is to be in a place, it's to look for a place that can't survive with the infrastructure cut off. Now, that's backwards from how most people think of it. Ok. But
that's actually a really good thing. If there were no infrastructure in a place like this where there are really cold winters and it snows a lot. What's gonna happen? Did we lose our? Oh, I'm on the wrong map. Let me go back to this one, what's gonna happen to this highway with one lane in either direction
when it's covered in 3 ft of snow and no one's coming to plow it. And do you think people from, say Spokane, which is the closest moderately sized city? You think that they're gonna walk all the way up here and all the way down here to get to you? If you live in Trout Creek, Montana, there's no way,
there's no way that's gonna happen. What about walking up from Missoula, all kinds of elevation gain and just cranking through here? Why would they do that? Why would they do that? You've got these giant valleys with plenty of space here and down here. Ok. This is the Bitterroot Valley. This is the Flathead
Valley. Now, that's kind of specific to this area. But you see these like fingers of valleys, right? And, and if you overlay population densities onto this, you start to see some really interesting things. For example, there's like 200 people in this area right here. And that's, that's, uh, maybe 10
people, people per mile averaged out. I just happen to know that. Ok. But you zoom out to the broader United States and we come over, oh, I don't know. Let's check out Utah just for the heck of it. How many people live in this strip of I 15? How many millions of people live in Utah? Ok. And they're all
concentrated right here. What's gonna happen if the lights go out, where are these people going to go? Because if you look at the population density, good luck you say, well, up into the mountains. Ok. Well, guess what, how, how big is that? This is like two miles. This is like four miles across Tilla
. I'm very, very familiar with. I used to be a company commander in the National Guard there. Like this is all getting built up. There's nowhere to run. There's nowhere to go here. You're surrounded by people till you get way up here. All right. And even then it's still like if you average out the number
of people in the, in the square miles you've got and there you're still out west when you head east, boy, you're in trouble. You know, let's just randomly jump down in any place. Like, where are you gonna go around here? There are people everywhere. So some people think that they've gotten out of the
fray because they live in a small town. That's not enough. That's my point here. It's not enough. Things like geographical barriers are very helpful to establishing good places to be when everything falls apart. Now, it's a double edged sword because just like these people who lived, I've lost my, my
road here. It's this past, just like the people who lived in this past before high speed internet, you need to have something you can do for money and the, the properties are getting more and more expensive by the day. So that becomes a big challenge. However, if you can solve that equation, then you
find yourself in extremely low population density areas with geographical barriers that aren't going anywhere and it becomes harder and harder for the government to mess it up. So I invite you to think about that.