nostr:nprofile1qqsz8gk0v0kgrej4vxk2l3j43xxjl580ryqggefl53fyz0m4uk3at0qpz4mhxue69uhk2er9dchxummnw3ezumrpdejqzxrhwden5te0d35kw6r5de5kuemjv4kxz7fwvdhk6qgjwaehxw309ahkvenrdpskjm3wwp6kyzr5eea yes, however iMHO organic and natural should be the standard.

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Discussion

Yes. A thousand times yes!

But with the increased pressure to produce cheaper, organic went out of the window and a few billion extra people could be fed cheaply.

My ideal world would be one where we all have our own plot of land and do our own farming and gardening ๐Ÿฅฐ

This requires a big global shakeup ๐Ÿค” and possibly we need to geo-engineer our planet to make Siberia, the Mongolian desert, the Sahara and all of Australia not just habitable but positively blooming.

I think maybe gardening should probably be taught in school. We don't need to change the environment but moreso how we think and approach health.

If, and that is a big if, I know, if we donโ€™t need to work in the โ€œfiat minesโ€ to get money because we live a simpeler life on a farm-ish place, we could homeschool our kids. No need for dedicated schools at all, unless you want to learn a speciality later in life ๐Ÿค”

Iโ€™m dreaming again, i know. For now, learning a bit about farming would be a net positive. But unless we teach kids about regenerative and organic farming, all they will remember is how the slaw they tried to grow in school was eaten by snails ๐ŸŒ.

It's free to dream. ๐Ÿ™‚

Also, maybe people need to be able to opt out of school tax if they want to homeschool their child.