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    Your best country to live in?

    The Junkyard
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    • AndrosclerozatA
      Androsclerozat
      last edited by

      Spain? Fake friendly people good weather
      Germany? Fake serious people bad weather
      Italy? Beautiful country Black epidemic no economy
      USA? No unique ethnicity easily brokey
      Russia? Peaceful Hard to integrate
      Japan? Easily suicidal good sushi
      Romania? Good food good nature no medium sized city without pollution
      Costa Rica? Good nature also weather low economy
      Mexico? Good nature square cities

      My guess would be Romania in the mountains if you prefer cold weather
      Or Costa Rica, mexico if hot weather
      All need job remote

      Without job remote idk

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • JenniferJ
        Jennifer
        last edited by Jennifer

        I would be happy with any of the following countries:

        • USA—specifically, the coastal towns of New Hampshire, Maine and the Carolinas
        • Canada—specifically, the Atlantic provinces and British Columbia
        • Iceland
        • New Zealand

        I have stood on a mountain of no’s for one yes. ~ B. Smith

        deadkaczynskiD AndrosclerozatA 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • oliveoilO
          oliveoil
          last edited by

          Switzerland, if you can afford it.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • deadkaczynskiD
            deadkaczynski @Jennifer
            last edited by

            @Jennifer IF sunlight and length of day, access to fresh fruit, and general social stagnation aren’t mission critical, then I might agree. Also keep in mind that early industrial America did a real # on New England. PFAS laced raw milk, for example.

            JenniferJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • AndrosclerozatA
              Androsclerozat @Jennifer
              last edited by

              @Jennifer said in Your best country to live in?:

              I would be happy with any of the following countries:

              • USA—specifically, the coastal towns of New Hampshire, Maine and the Carolinas
              • Canada—specifically, the Atlantic provinces and British Columbia
              • Iceland
              • New Zealand

              You like cold places I see, but aren't those places full of chemtrails?

              JenniferJ DakotaD T 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • B
                bot-mod
                last edited by

                England obviously.

                By the way the 22.3 year rule is now 22.3 seconds.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • thyroidchor27T
                  thyroidchor27
                  last edited by

                  Nepal / Greece

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • JenniferJ
                    Jennifer @deadkaczynski
                    last edited by Jennifer

                    @deadkaczynski said in Your best country to live in?:

                    @Jennifer IF sunlight and length of day, access to fresh fruit, and general social stagnation aren’t mission critical, then I might agree. Also keep in mind that early industrial America did a real # on New England. PFAS laced raw milk, for example.

                    Sunlight was critical for me when I was sick so I supplemented during darker periods of the year with incandescent light but now that I’m thriving, I prefer less sun and cooler temps like I did as a child. When it comes to fresh fruit, I was on a fruit-based diet for two decades, and roughly 8 of them fruitarian, while living in New Hampshire, and my diet is currently abundant in fruit. I just posted this pic of my grocery haul for the week in Andrew’s Show Your Grocery Hauls thread:

                    e792f611-b7b2-4bc5-bb74-5bca01020a88-image.jpeg

                    Even grocery stores in a country as cold and dark as Iceland have fresh fruit, however, I would want to grow my own so I would do like others I know of and have a greenhouse powered by geothermal energy. My Dad has worked in the field of alternative energy for over 50 years and his biggest clients are in Iceland so…

                    Regarding industrialization’s impact on New England, I don’t know of any place in which I would realistically want to live that hasn’t been impacted by industry. There was a time while on a fruitarian diet that I call my fruitarian delusion where I, as a person in a first world country who had grown up with modern amenities, tried to convince myself that I could live in the jungles of Borneo, but in all my years of climbing and camping out in the mountains, I couldn’t even bring myself to poo in the woods so while I’m earthy, I’m not that earthy. I need a certain level of cleanliness, organization and modern conveniences to be my happiest so knowing that remediation and prevention of future contamination has been taking place—for example, since 2020 Massachusetts has had one of strictest limits on the amount of PFAS in public drinking water in the country and glyphosate use in this region is the lowest in the country—is good enough for me.

                    And regarding PFAS laced raw milk, this is just my n=1 but the studies I’ve seen indicate that exposure to PFAS is associated with thyroid and liver disorders and I overcame both, and a pretty devastating injury, on a diet of predominantly raw milk and yogurt (4+ liters daily) from farms in NH. And unlike the majority of other states and possibly other countries (?), the sale of raw milk not just at farms but also retail stores is legal here (NH) so I have no problem acquiring it. Less than 10 minutes from my house, I have an immaculate, 100% grass-based, biodynamic, certified A2/A2, calf-at-foot farm that has been owned by the same family for 300 years/9 generations, and numerous markets that sell raw dairy from another outstanding farm so between that, the climate, laid-back beach towns in close proximity to mountains for climbing, and the lowest crime rates in the country, NH and ME continue to be at the top of my list.

                    I have stood on a mountain of no’s for one yes. ~ B. Smith

                    T H 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • JenniferJ
                      Jennifer @Androsclerozat
                      last edited by

                      @Androsclerozat said in Your best country to live in?:

                      @Jennifer said in Your best country to live in?:

                      I would be happy with any of the following countries:

                      • USA—specifically, the coastal towns of New Hampshire, Maine and the Carolinas
                      • Canada—specifically, the Atlantic provinces and British Columbia
                      • Iceland
                      • New Zealand

                      You like cold places I see, but aren't those places full of chemtrails?

                      Sorry, I’m not sure what you mean by chemtrails. Do you mean chemicals in the contrails that are formed when vapor and soot particles from burning jet fuel freeze? Since the ice crystals persist in higher humidity but dissipate in low humidity, is it a case of there being more contrails in wetter climates than drier ones, but the chemicals are still in the atmosphere even if we don’t see a trail? I’ve read that high humidity means that contrails can last for long periods and become thin layers of cirrus clouds found at such high altitudes that they’re unlikely to reach ground level.

                      I have stood on a mountain of no’s for one yes. ~ B. Smith

                      AndrosclerozatA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • T
                        tubert @Jennifer
                        last edited by

                        @Jennifer Jennifer, could you please elaborate on your 4+ liters daily milk diet to overcome liver and thyroid problems? For how long did you do that? No fruit eaten at the same time?

                        JenniferJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • H
                          happyhanneke
                          last edited by

                          I like it where I live. Central Washington State. Beautiful scenery and lakes. Lots of fruit and vegetables. We grow our own. Dry high desert but plenty of cheap water because of the Columbia river.
                          My power bill is never more than $40. Even running the A/C all day with 100 degree days. Also because all the rivers and dams, power doesn't have to travel far.
                          WA is not just Seattle which completely sucks, not even worth a visit anymore in my opinion.

                          If I I would have to live cheaper I would probably go to elevation in Mexico or any other central/south american country. That way there will be lots of produce and moderate climate.

                          I'm from the Netherlands and wouldn't go back. But I also love it there, so that's a two edged sword.

                          I've also lived in Canada, Italy, and Israel. I certainly would never go back to live in Canada.

                          GreekDemiGodG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • JenniferJ
                            Jennifer @tubert
                            last edited by Jennifer

                            @tubert said in Your best country to live in?:

                            @Jennifer Jennifer, could you please elaborate on your 4+ liters daily milk diet to overcome liver and thyroid problems? For how long did you do that? No fruit eaten at the same time?

                            Sure. Hopefully, no one minds me elaborating or else I can delete my post if they do.

                            I resolved my thyroid and liver/gallbladder disorders in less than a year, but continued with the diet for another 4 years because I enjoyed it, and just this past March reintroduced more fruit, became addicted to banana ice cream and flourless banana crêpes and my diet has been abundant in fruit ever since. I didn’t consume much fruit when my diet was dairy-based. Some periods I had none at all and the rest of the time only a minimal amount, mostly just some sukkari dates covered in white chocolate that I had with a cup of sweetened tea for snacks, and zucchini soup topped with scramble eggs and strained yogurt for meals—but I always had plenty of carbs from lactose, of course, and different varieties of honey, raw sugar and golden maple syrup that I consumed straight or had in yogurt, ice cream, milky coffee, hot white chocolate and tea. I also ate quite a bit of cheese, some eggs in the form of cheesy omelettes and homemade crustless quiche, and seafood (scallops, crab, tuna). I kept a log on the old Ray Peat Forum and posted some grocery hauls periodically and you can see that pretty much the same foods comprised the diet throughout, with some of the raw milk coming from goats (white jars) and some from Jersey and Guernsey cows (golden jars):

                            88250190-bb13-43c0-9285-c705684c4917-image.jpeg
                            c99d28c9-3a6b-45c0-a81c-514d84af79d2-image.jpeg
                            956d94b5-2c0d-4fb6-a89b-27ac717178cb-image.jpeg
                            5a0d04d8-b92e-45d5-bfc9-a11f822a9d54-image.jpeg

                            I have stood on a mountain of no’s for one yes. ~ B. Smith

                            T L 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • GreekDemiGodG
                              GreekDemiGod @happyhanneke
                              last edited by

                              There was an interesting thread on X recently and a "theory" was proposed that warm climates make people lazy and not willing to work and be motivated (think southern europeans, italians, turks, spanish..). And that the reason America has more economic power is the widespread use of AC. Colder temperature makes humans more motivated, more ambitious to get things done.
                              AC is not widespread in Europe.

                              https://x.com/AJA_Cortes/status/1820677465418674444t

                              AndrosclerozatA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • H
                                happyhanneke @Jennifer
                                last edited by

                                @Jennifer

                                Very interesting story. There's plenty of raw milk and other dairy available where I live. But it's always (as far as I've seen) full fat.
                                Is that what you bought?
                                Also did any of this make you gain a lot of weight?

                                JenniferJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • JenniferJ
                                  Jennifer @happyhanneke
                                  last edited by

                                  @happyhanneke, it’s full-fat dairy, yes. I started out removing the fat from the milk (with a turkey baster) and once I stopped experiencing gallbladder attacks, I left the fat in. I didn’t gain any weight, but aside from the last year or so that I was on the fruitarian diet and the year and an half I refed, my caloric intake has stayed fairly consistent throughout the years.

                                  I have stood on a mountain of no’s for one yes. ~ B. Smith

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • T
                                    tubert @Jennifer
                                    last edited by

                                    @Jennifer thank you so much and sorry to the OP if the thread got temporarily derailed!

                                    JenniferJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • L
                                      LetTheRedeemed @Jennifer
                                      last edited by

                                      @Jennifer

                                      Woah what are these?

                                      956d94b5-2c0d-4fb6-a89b-27ac717178cb-image.jpeg
                                      5a0d04d8-b92e-45d5-bfc9-a11f822a9d54-image.jpeg

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                                      • DakotaD
                                        Dakota @Androsclerozat
                                        last edited by

                                        @Androsclerozat I think those are the last of our concerns at this point. There are so many more toxic things in our environment that we actually have control over.

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • JenniferJ
                                          Jennifer @tubert
                                          last edited by Jennifer

                                          My pleasure, @tubert. 🙂

                                          @LetTheRedeemed, the top pic is crustless quiche (eggs, raw cream, honey, orange zest, onion powder, garlic powder, chives, parsley, cinnamon, nutmeg, pepper, salt and topped with slices of raw cheddar) and the bottom one is zucchini soup (peeled zucchini, coconut cream, honey, lime zest, onion powder, garlic powder, pepper, salt) topped with scrambled eggs and a mild yogurt strained until it’s as thick as quark/cream cheese.

                                          I have stood on a mountain of no’s for one yes. ~ B. Smith

                                          L serotoninskepticS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • L
                                            LetTheRedeemed @Jennifer
                                            last edited by

                                            @Jennifer ok nice. Thanks so much for sharing!

                                            JenniferJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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