Video scenes shots:

Watch the video:
| URL: | |
| Embed: |
Display Video Comments | Hide Video Comments | Add Comment
Other videos by this author:
![]() |
Planting Seeds for a New Society Posted by: peakmoment
Video duration: 1654 seconds Related: N/A Display Video Comments | Hide Video Comments | Add Comment |



Latest comments made on this video:
By: 144jr144. on 27 Feb 11, 15:33:17
@believeyouwould By the way, boom and bust preceded 1913 even in North America. As for your critique of The Fed, are you condemning them, like with contempt? Governments influence the behavior of many people at the direction of a few. That's? just what they do. That governing governors could be biased in accord with their own interests is evidence of nothing special. Governing happens by parents, churches, governments and other associations that do not call themselves governments or influencers
By: 144jr144. on 03 Dec 10, 06:16:32
@peakmoment re "pay US debt" if by "US Debt," you mean the unfunded liabilities that the US government has promised to pay to it's citizens like in social security payments,? consider that the USSR and the Confederacy and the Mayan Empire made lots of promises and kept several but not all. Insurance companies like AIG keep SOME of their promises. When the US Military was "negotiating" with native americans... or with mexican nationals during the mexican-american war, SOME promises were kept.
By: 144jr144. on 03 Dec 10, 06:12:34
@pm re "what is pay the US debt?" If by "US debt" you mean the bonds of the US treasury, remember 1933. The underwriters of the US treasury's debt are the US CITIZENS which legally includes all corporations. In 1933, ownership of gold coins by US CITIZENS was criminalized,? constituting a huge confiscation. Consider what the USSR and other places did re debt: they "socialized" private property, like actual cars and buildings and mineral rights and water rights.
By: 144jr144. on 03 Dec 10, 06:08:35
@pm Hi. If $1 trillion of debt disappears in bankruptcy court quickly, which it can, that deflating of prior credit inflation is huge. Remember, currency is simply a financial contract. It symbolically represents some external capacity to do work. Oil (among other things) is the actual capacity to do work. Money is quite secondary. Considering that governments can be swamps of propaganda and incompetence, who cares what governments attempt to do? Deflation is here. What? is "pay the US debt?"
By: peakmoment. on 03 Dec 10, 05:33:03
@144jr144, this was taped in fall of 2008. However, with the quantitative easing going on -- printing? more money to pay the US debt -- inflation seems alive and well. I've understood that the US and the Euro and others are all working to devalue their currencies. I think that's different than the bursting of the credit bubble you mention.
By: 144jr144. on 02 Dec 10, 01:48:01
This content is slightly off. One misconception is about inflation: that there is plenty of? inflation now. There isn't. Rising prices of fuel and of goods shipped long distances isn't the same as currency inflation or credit inflation. Also, after decades of speculative credit inflation, that bubble has been deflating recently, bringing down prices of credit-dependent markets (such as real estate) in Japan, US, UK, & EU. BTW, I wrote "worth its weight in... oil" (published on Jim's site in '05).
By: pohjalo. on 07 Dec 09, 08:21:07
and now itīs? 78/bbl.
By: hoser4. on 24 May 09, 05:22:23
You are aware that we are in the least active solar cycle in recorded history, right? The last time something like this happened, England experienced a mini-ice? age. All things considered, we should be in an ice age right now, but yet, our polar caps are melting, California is desertifying with all the droughts, ocean currents changing, etc. How ironic, that our CO2 levels just might be helping to keep this atmosphere in a temperate state.
By: believeyouwould. on 18 Apr 09, 19:35:01
The atmosphere left? to it's own devices absent man made electromagnetic intervention is certainly stable. Solar cycles are THE reason for the latest global warming. Humans on this planet are criminally ignorant of their home planets natural occurrences throughout the ages. It's an inconvenient truth that humans are deliberately susceptible to nonsensical mainstream media mind control. It's beyond pathetic. So pay your New World Order tax increases when they inevitably arise as the bankers laugh.
By: peakmoment. on 17 Feb 09, 21:48:33
Regardless of the sources -- including possbily the many technologies you list, as well as carbon emissions and livestock? flatulence -- the bottom line is to look at what's happening in the physical world. Ice caps melting, rising CO2 levels, and more extreme weather patterns (not just warming) are indicators that the atmospheric geology is no longer in a stable state. And human activity can change that, if it's not too late.
By: believeyouwould. on 16 Feb 09, 02:32:37
Keep an open mind on peak oil. Information on the true nature oil origination is not forthcoming as depicted by mainstream science for more than a century. Back in the 1950's the Russians struck oil 7 miles below the surface of the Earth. You won't find dead dino's and foilage at that depth. The last thing the powers want is disclosure on what this Earth is truly? about. And eternal 30 cent/gallon gasoline is not in the cards. Besides, humans proliferate like wildfire even at current prices.
By: believeyouwould. on 16 Feb 09, 02:19:09
Commit yourself to additional scrutiny concerning global warming. Aside from the fact that recent solar activity has enhanced global warming in our solar system, there is clever clandestine electromagnetic machination occuring right here on Earth. It involves a combination of technologies entailing artificially induced atmospheric changes. Chemtrailing, Scalar Interferometry, ELF's, Microwaving the sky etc. The signatures above are blantant once one becomes aware of the? farce and fraudulence.
By: believeyouwould. on 16 Feb 09, 02:08:17
Mr. Puplava is a gentlemen who offers a service at no charge to his listeners. If? on the other hand you're a participating client of his... well. I've listened to the man for years and find him to be sincere in his convictions. Beyond that, I diverge from the his thinking regarding the peak oil scam. It is a scam. And reading 90 books on the subject corroborating one another does not make a truth. Mr. Puplava's due dligence is incomplete at best. His definition of inflation is spot-on however.
By: believeyouwould. on 16 Feb 09, 01:55:51
Yes, and it doesn't help to repeatedly cite the works of Council on Foreign relations member Matt Simmons. An individual who attended Dick Cheney's secret energy task force meeting in 2001 and it's subsequent permanent US military Middle East occupation. Simmons never once conceded in any Puplava interview? the possiblity of a FED induced demand destruction on all commodities. By merely restrictiing M1 money flow to the middle class, utterly predictable economic downturn ensued.
By: Jacobrester. on 16 Feb 09, 01:26:32
You may be correct.......because the technology now exists that will allow the USA to become energy? indedependent....
By: believeyouwould. on 16 Feb 09, 01:09:57
It's intentionally kept that way. It's not to the interest of glabalist bankers to have the U.S. independent of anything, much less oil. The Redshields along with the British crown re-aquired their colonies in 1913. It has been boom and bust ever since. The FED mandate was never to stablize US finance but rather extract wealth and ultimately deconstruct a soveriegn constitutional republic into a? former nation state to be regionalized into a NAU via Mexico & Canada. By design & intentional.
By: nemnaisa. on 11 Jan 09, 02:08:28
While his contribution to educating the public about macro economic issues are admirable, his investment advice has absolutely? devastated the wealth of his investors and loyal audience. I am not disputing the ultimate eventuality of Peak Oil, I am critical of the timing on his forecast.
By: nemnaisa. on 11 Jan 09, 02:08:04
If he cannot predict this down turn due to credit contraction, he is no better than ordinary conventional wall-street commentators. Clearly, if we are currently experiencing S/D imbalance, this would directly be reflected on high oil price. The fact that oil price is heading below $30 tells me that JP and other? Peak Oil advocates did not do they homework on properly analyzing the true S/D of oil.
By: peakmoment. on 10 Jan 09, 05:54:04
In the last six months I've listened? to Pulava he has also interviewed Matt Simmons and Chris Nelder on Peak Oil, and they both did an excellent job. I think a lot of investors, not just Jim's, have been whanged by the volatility in oil prices. Last summer the huge selling off of assets by big institutions needing to stay solvent was a major contributor to the precipitous drop in oil prices. I think it surprised almost everybody, because it didn't reflect the fundamentals (supply & demand).
By: nemnaisa. on 10 Jan 09, 02:31:59
Puplava and his investment group PSF has not done any serious original research on oil. All they rely on is so-called research written by other energy agencies such as IEA,? resulting in his prediction on oil price and macro pictures being totally off base, causing tremendous lost in his client's wealth. The public must be informed of Puplava's past record on inaccurate macro economic forecast and ill advising his clients on wrong investment strategy.
By: nemnaisa. on 18 Dec 08, 02:14:22
Jim Puplava totally lacks the credibility and credential to say anything about Peak Oil and the oil industry. He is an incompetent money manager and financial adviser who is totally wrong on the timing of Peak Oil and as a result has destroyed the life savings of investors? who followed his investment advice.
By: jojo808. on 09 Dec 08, 21:59:24
Sounds personal. The market isn't so much the bottle neck as much as refineries, one reason why gas is low(for)now .Price goes Up,we cut usage. Supply/demand. More time and effort need to be spent on making Gas the alternative energy. The science behind Peak-oil? is Sound and simple. Oil is Old World.
By: nemnaisa. on 06 Dec 08, 05:34:15
Jim Puplava is an old fool who simple got? the big pictures wrong...or at the very least his timing is way way off. Jim invested people's money into gold and oil junior companies. Look where they are now. I used to have respect for the man but he should be totally discredited. He does not deserve the respect that he created for himself. If Peak Oil is an immediate issue, it should be reflected in market pricing. So Jim should just shut up with his disinformation.
By: Jacobrester. on 29 Nov 08, 23:12:14
Oil dependency is a huge problem, especially here in the USA. I truly hope President elect Obama pursues alternative energy. Every President for the last 40 years has said they would. I also hope the USA starts? to produce oil shale, which we have over 1 trillion barrels. However, I know the environmentalists hate this idea. Peak Oil is a real problem, and it appears it is upon us right now.
By: johnknoefler. on 25 Nov 08, 18:51:25
Well actually those banking elite are brilliant. But they are ruthless and there is no end to thier greed. If this guy actually believes the junk coming out of his mouth he is truly a moron. The ones who benifit are the federal reserve. Think of it... they loan money...Fiat money that costs them just the paper and ink.? They create money out of thin air. This devalues our dollar. It's a theft of the value of our money. With this tool they don't need to tax us to steal.