Japan has the grassroots and large elderly voter base that both REJECTS mass immigration.
We need to shut it down at the source, part of that is getting Trump in but a greater part is doing things like buying direct from farmers where you can, voting for anyone who you KNOW won't support it or spoiling your ballot (would be humiliating if all those who usually don't vote actually spoiled their ballots instead) and showing the normies who's responsible for their shit entertainment with things similar to SBI detected.
We basically need some websites set up and logistics set up for delivery.
City folk seem more dependant on deliveries and services like Hello Fresh so if farmers can sell more directly than to supermarkets, it'll probably be a win even with delivery fees.
I remember going to the farmer's market before it got ruined. You could get tons of good vegetables from what was very obviously like the farm family selling the stuff they'd grown. As I got older, more and more Mexicans were getting in buying cases of foreign stuff from food distributors and undercutting the farmers by something like a nickel, and instead of making them go broke of course they buy the 20 cent tomato instead of the 25 cent one. Last time I went to such a thing in a city, that's about all that was left and all the actual farmers were replaced by women selling their etsy shit.
Japan has the grassroots and large elderly voter base that both REJECTS mass immigration.
We need to shut it down at the source, part of that is getting Trump in but a greater part is doing things like buying direct from farmers where you can, voting for anyone who you KNOW won't support it or spoiling your ballot (would be humiliating if all those who usually don't vote actually spoiled their ballots instead) and showing the normies who's responsible for their shit entertainment with things similar to SBI detected.
how do you get city slickers to do that?
We basically need some websites set up and logistics set up for delivery.
City folk seem more dependant on deliveries and services like Hello Fresh so if farmers can sell more directly than to supermarkets, it'll probably be a win even with delivery fees.
I remember going to the farmer's market before it got ruined. You could get tons of good vegetables from what was very obviously like the farm family selling the stuff they'd grown. As I got older, more and more Mexicans were getting in buying cases of foreign stuff from food distributors and undercutting the farmers by something like a nickel, and instead of making them go broke of course they buy the 20 cent tomato instead of the 25 cent one. Last time I went to such a thing in a city, that's about all that was left and all the actual farmers were replaced by women selling their etsy shit.
You have to live in a place where small scale agriculture is still prevalent. You want to go to a real farmer's market?
Northeast Wisconsin. Any of the fox valley cities.