Higgenbotham's Dark Age Hovel

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Expand view Topic review: Higgenbotham's Dark Age Hovel

Re: Higgenbotham's Dark Age Hovel

by Higgenbotham » Sun Nov 30, 2025 12:40 pm

This is consistent with what I see here (Central Texas). While I hear a lot of talk about growing gardens from neighbors and parents at the school, I've seen zero actual results (besides what I've done).

Re: Higgenbotham's Dark Age Hovel

by Higgenbotham » Sun Nov 30, 2025 12:18 pm

percentage of food grown by americans in backyard gardens 1945 vs today

AI Overview

In 1945, Americans grew approximately 45% of their food in backyard gardens, while today they grow about 0.1%. This drastic decline is due to factors like the increase in large-scale, mechanized "mega farms" and a shift away from food self-sufficiency towards a more centralized agricultural system.

1945 (During WWII): "Victory Gardens" were a national effort to supplement the food supply. By 1943, an estimated 20 million gardens were producing over 40% of the nation's fresh vegetables. By 1945, the overall production from home gardens had reached an estimated 45% of the food Americans consumed.

Today: The percentage is very low due to a highly productive commercial agriculture system. While there has been a recent increase in home gardening, especially since 2020, the amount of food produced is a tiny fraction of the national total.

https://www.google.com/search?q=percent ... tkPjPXciQQ


percentage of fruits and vegetables imported into the US

AI Overview

In the US, approximately 54.8% of fresh fruit and 29.3% of fresh vegetables available to consumers were imported in 2022, with those percentages steadily growing over time. Mexico is the leading supplier, especially for fresh fruit and vegetables, and the imports are critical for providing year-round availability of many products.

Fruit and vegetable import statistics

Fresh fruit: 54.8% of total fresh fruit supply was imported in 2022, a significant increase from 36.6% in 2000.
Fresh vegetables: 29.3% of total fresh vegetable supply was imported in 2022, up from 9.5% in 2000.

https://www.google.com/search?q=percent ... s-wiz-serp

Re: Higgenbotham's Dark Age Hovel

by tim » Sat Nov 29, 2025 3:02 pm

https://locallibertyletter.substack.com ... determined
Your expiration date will be determined by your ability to pay taxes
Two engineers walk in to Western University, London, Canada. One is a Materials engineer trained in the US, the other his student, a recent immigrant from Pakistan. Together they author and publish a ‘study’ where they explore how much money will be saved if around 16,7 million vulnerable Canadians are euthanized over a period of 20 years. With an estimated 2.6 million deaths in the voluntary scenario, this means 14,1 million Canadians are murdered (‘involuntary euthanasia’); not by licensed doctors but by outsourcing to non-medical contract killers.
The Journal of Death and Dying then publishes their cost-benefit analysis which amounts to around 1,3 trillion dollar but, the authors warn, their findings highlight a need for ethical scrutiny of MAiD (Medical Assistance in Dying).

Isn’t it crazy that in a time that people get offended and arrested for grammar mistakes, a science journal presents the mass murder of millions of Canadians as an ‘ethics’ issue? 16,7 million Canadians represent 41% of the population which is currently estimated at 41,5 million.

I wish this was satire, but this is a real study in a real peer-reviewed academic journal. Murdering 41% of Canadians using an army of hitmen, is an atrocity and of course, unlawful under Canadian and International law. It has nothing to do with MAiD or science or ethics.

Studies like these are intended to introduce, normalize and manufacture consent to genocide the vulnerable, while steering the conversation to ‘slippery slope’ and ‘ethics’. It’s difficult to grasp the level of sociopathy here.

Re: Higgenbotham's Dark Age Hovel

by aedens » Mon Nov 24, 2025 8:02 pm

https://nci.university/opt-in-page-page
Consensus says its to late and they already knew.
Not accidental.
Your just seeing the exhaust fumes that consumed them being deceived.
Then infiltration process is in plain view.
Your three choices to protect capital as we did before is now here.
We only relayed know it better than your Wife as 0DTE was told as to the result just seen.
The PUT wall was enough to trend instability and basic math as margin.
The leveraged lost there head also know as the face ripper and beta risk ignored.
I would only convey it worked as designed since 1974 to the actual intent. We just read Human Action also.
As we navigated before the dead cats all over the damn place as you suspect will not really repeat.
The three peaks and dome formation is our suspected map as we seen before and forwarded.
H seen it also and had extensive input to the next rendition that formed looks rather spot on correct.

Avarice the spur of greed was forgotten as before.

pretext: We left some time ago and we are sweeping BLM Harkonean mentats also since they are deranged and
co opted virtue signaling heart plug reptilians. For those who listened since dragonfly you preserved capital.
Wed Jul 08, 2020 6:45 am
Result: https://x.com/RobertBluey/status/1993034768745660758 This is the face of it.

Re: Higgenbotham's Dark Age Hovel

by tim » Mon Nov 24, 2025 3:26 pm

https://gregreese.substack.com/p/algori ... e-american
Algorithmic Pricing and the American Social Credit Score
A quote commonly attributed to Benito Mussolini, “Fascism should more properly be called corporatism because it is the merger of state and corporate power,” clearly explains the form of today’s emerging fascist state in America. Last week we reported how the Digital ID will be deployed by private companies and the customer’s consent:

“The government doesn’t need to mandate biometric ID, which would most likely be considered a violation of American rights, and so it outsources the mandate to private companies, who are legally required to get consent, while the government is free to collect and utilize this data under legal immunity. Just like the COVID era, you will be free to give consent, but if you choose not to, you will have to leave the Reservation and find a way to fend for yourself.”

This week we will look at what is commonly known as the Social Credit Score and its active deployment in the U.S..

Communist China’s Social Credit System is a compliance framework that was launched in 2014 with the official goal of building “trust in society” by punishing individual behavior. This system has allowed banks to shut off people’s money and prevent them from traveling or leaving their neighborhood. It allows the Communist Chinese government the ability to condition people’s behavior on an individual basis. And it is now being deployed in the United States.

Here it is being called, “Algorithmic Pricing,” and uses automated computer programs to dynamically set the price of goods and services in real-time and on an individual basis. The algorithms are based on large amounts of data, including customer behavior, and can charge one individual more than another for the same product based on their willingness-to-pay and all of their personal data.

Where ever you live in the U.S., you are likely being subjected to this Social Credit Score system right now, but the only way you would know is if you reside in the State of New York.

On November 10, 2025, New York’s Algorithmic Pricing Disclosure Act was launched. The Southern District of New York upheld the Act as constitutional because it compels private corporations to notify you that you are being charged based on “personalized algorithmic pricing,” which the courts define as “dynamic pricing set by an algorithm that uses personal data.” “Personal data” is defined as “any data that identifies or could reasonably be linked, directly or indirectly, with a specific consumer or device.” And the law does not consider whether that data was voluntarily provided or not, which means that every aspect of your life can be used to determine what a company charges you for their service.

With the New York Disclosure Act, certain industries are exempt and do not need to tell you that they are charging you based on your personal data. This includes regulated financial institutions and entities regulated under state insurance laws.

New York’s Algorithmic Pricing Disclosure Act is the first of its kind and we can expect to soon see the same in all fifty states, but one thing is for certain, the Social Credit Score is now a real thing in America, and it’s a safe bet that the Carbon Tax isn’t far away.

An AI run cryptocurrency economy is the only solution being pursued by the United States government and the Big Banks, who see it as the only way to save America from it’s crippling debt and claim victory in the Artificial Intelligence arms race.

“In 2027. What we depict happening is special economic zones with zero red tape that the government basically intervenes to help this whole thing go faster.”
-Daniel Kokotajl

“Because the promise, the promise of gains is so large that even though there are protesters massed outside these special economic zones who are about to lose their jobs as plumbers and be dependent on a universal basic income, the promise of, you know, trillions of more in wealth is too alluring for governments to pass up. That’s, that’s your…”
-Ross Douthat

“That’s what we guess. But of course, the figure is hard to predict, but part of the reason why we predict that, is that we think that at least at that stage, the arms race will still be continuing between the US and other countries, most notably China. And so if you imagine yourself in the position of the president and, you know, the super intelligences are giving you this wonderful forecast with amazing research and data, backing them up, showing how they think they could, you know, transform the economy in one year if you did X, Y, and Z. But if you don’t do anything, it’ll take them ten years because of all the regulations. Meanwhile, China, you know, like it’s pretty clear that the president would be very sympathetic to that argument, you know.”
-Daniel Kokotajl

Re: Higgenbotham's Dark Age Hovel

by FullMoon » Mon Nov 24, 2025 1:05 pm

https://youtube.com/shorts/8AVTxwwnh7c? ... 10dHdKwjFJ

I wish John was alive to give his take on what Bannon is saying. John mentioned Bannon as a student of generational theory. Bannon is quite controversial but what he's saying here needs more investigation. Because it's so outlandish there must be a hidden message of sorts. I mean, Trumpy is already quite old and showing his age as Biden did before. Perhaps he really is just some doped up puppet doing whatever he's told. We had all hoped otherwise but it's getting pretty obvious. Another old man puppet to keep the agenda in place. But what is the agenda? We're in the cross hairs of something beyond devious. Collapse and dark age might be the best case scenario. Some people obviously hope to capitalize on the obvious collapse coming out way soon.

Re: Higgenbotham's Dark Age Hovel

by FullMoon » Mon Nov 24, 2025 12:54 pm

Higgenbotham wrote: Fri Nov 21, 2025 11:40 am tim,

Thank you for posting these. The team at Collapse Life understand collapse very well, I would say.
It's a sad thing to see that the youthful negative outlook coincides with what we can all see. As a young person, I thought something was awfully wrong but I was definitely an outsider. It's sad that it's actually true and our children will inherit a worse world than the one that we were raised in.

Re: Higgenbotham's Dark Age Hovel

by aedens » Sun Nov 23, 2025 11:15 pm

https://storage.googleapis.com/msgsndr/ ... track=true
Mentioned was a 400 year head start.
Much longer...

Also make sure you back up all files.

Re: Higgenbotham's Dark Age Hovel

by Higgenbotham » Fri Nov 21, 2025 11:40 am

tim,

Thank you for posting these. The team at Collapse Life understand collapse very well, I would say.

Re: Higgenbotham's Dark Age Hovel

by tim » Thu Nov 20, 2025 11:46 am

https://www.collapselife.com/p/borrowed ... en-society
Borrowed trust in a broken society

In the West, we used to live in a genuine high-trust society. No longer. Today, we're a low-trust society, masquerading as a high-trust society, fueling a booming 'trust industrial complex.'
In a high-trust society, the machinery hums quietly. People know the guardrails are intact, the institutions (mostly) work, and the people operating them, flawed as they may be, act in good faith. You don’t need to second-guess every contract, every handshake, every oral promise. You assume the wheels won’t come off.

Many people in the West still live inside that assumption. But that façade is long gone.

We no longer live in a high-trust society. Instead, we’re living in a low-trust society with trust industry scaffolding — an entire ecosystem of highly-paid intermediaries whose full-time job is to simulate the trust we no longer have in each other.

Before going any further, credit where it’s due: this line of thought belongs to Limina of The Human Responsibilities Tribunal and Riff Raft podcast. She mentioned flawed trust in an email after she got soaked for $5,000 on a real estate deal that went sour. Her conclusion was stark: whole classes of professionals (real estate agents, lawyers, title companies, home inspectors) exist today not because trust is strong, but because it has utterly collapsed, and we’re patching the void with contractors, paperwork, fees, and legally drafted repair clauses.

Once you see it, you can’t unsee it.

The realtor who stands between two people who no longer take each other’s word, working just hard enough to secure the commission.

The lawyer turning human betrayal into billable hours, stretching a 15-minute phone call into an invoice. Don’t forget the fax charges (yes, they still exist) and ubiquitous “document fees.”

The inspector issuing a certificate of safety not because the structure is or isn’t sound, but because the ritual demands documentation.

The insurance adjuster who arrives after disaster not to help you rebuild, but to determine how little their employer will have to pay.

The mediator whose very presence signals that a community can no longer bear the weight of resolving its own disputes.

In a truly high-trust culture, most interactions run on norms — shared values and clear consequences for betraying those. You don’t need a 70-page contract to buy a house from someone you grew up with. You don’t need a platoon of compliance officers to make sure employees aren’t laundering money or gaming the system in your mom-and-pop shop. You don’t need five layers of sign-offs to hire someone whose character your community can vouch for. And if you’re the one being hired, you don’t torch your reputation by acting badly, because people will remember — and that memory has weight; behaving badly isn’t just a reflection on you, it’s a reflection on your family, too.

We’ve traded human bonds for institutional girding in the name of ‘safety’ and ‘convenience.’ And like every substitution, it comes with a cost. When trust becomes something you rent rather than something you grow, the center of gravity shifts. The relationships that once held people together are replaced by nameless, faceless intermediaries who, more than any reputational or community motivation, exist to fatten themselves on the transaction.

The irony is that the more we hire brokers, gatekeepers, and credentialed middlemen, the less we trust. The bigger the trust industry grows, the more brittle the society beneath it becomes. And when the notaries and lawyers and inspectors and regulators prove to be no more reliable than the people they were supposed to replace, societies rarely return to organic trust.

They turn to surveillance instead.

You can already feel the pivot: digital IDs to prove who you are. Biometrics to prove you belong. Social scoring to prove you deserve access. Programmable money to prove your intentions are pure. Everything verified, everything logged, everything tracked — not because trust has been rebuilt, but because its absence has become intolerable.

Low-trust societies don’t drift gently into collapse. They lurch toward total control, mistaking monitoring for safety, renaming restriction as ‘responsibility,’ building a panopticon and calling it public service.

What Limina grasped — and what so many miss — is that we’ve forgotten what real trust even feels like. We’ve lived so long with synthetic trust that the original has become almost unimaginable. Worse, a sizable portion of society doesn’t even realize the rupture happened. Or they do, but their own mortgage and car payments require just the right amount of ‘blind eye’ to get through the day.

The trust industry is a monument to what we’ve lost — and like all monuments, it is both a tribute and a warning. A tribute to something gone that perhaps we should have preserved, and a warning that the more we rely on figureheads instead of one another, the faster what little trust exists begins to fade.

In our age of convenience, there’s an app for everything — except the glue that actually holds a society together. Real trust comes from time spent in the real world, with real people, really talking, laughing, forgiving, sharing, carrying a little weight for each other. It’s slow, it’s human, it’s sometimes messy and even a bit inconvenient.

We should all get back to trying it sometime, ‘cause it sure beats a ‘thumbs up’ on Facebook.

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