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Showing posts from March, 2026

THE REAL REASON1950s Families Never Got Sick

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What if the reason families were healthier in the 1950s wasn’t medicine… but the way they lived? In this video, we travel back to 1955, to a warm kitchen where dinner is cooking, children are doing homework at the table, and life moves at a slower, more human pace. Long before modern wellness trends, 1950s families were unknowingly practicing habits that protected their immune system, mental health, and overall well-being. So why did people seem to get sick less often back then? The answer isn’t one secret. It’s a lifestyle that modern society has almost forgotten. In this journey through the past, you’ll discover: • Why waking with the sun kept the body’s circadian rhythm healthy • How simple daily movement strengthened the immune system • The surprising health benefits of real home-cooked food • Why bone broth, real butter, and whole foods were powerful nutrition • How sunlight and Vitamin D protected families from illness • The science behind gardening and soil bacteria improving mo...

America Had the Perfect Manufacturing Industry — Until One Decision Ruined It

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We are retelling the history of the 20th century through the eyes of the people who lived it.  Remember the gas lines, the blizzards, and the hard work that built this country. Read the comments and you will learn how we got here.  

The End of Car Ownership: Why Mechanics Beg You to Avoid 2026 Cars

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In this video, we explore the challenges and complexities of car ownership in 2026, focusing on why mechanics are urging consumers to avoid the newest models.  We discuss the increasing difficulty of repairs, advanced technology integration, and the rising costs associated with maintaining modern vehicles.  Viewers will gain insights into the future of automotive ownership, the impact of electric and autonomous cars, and why traditional car repairs are becoming more complicated and expensive.  Stay informed about the evolving automotive landscape and what it means for drivers and mechanics alike.

Why Your New Lawn Mower Dies After One Season (And Who Killed Small Engines)

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They knew the cast iron was gone. They knew the plastic would snap. They knew the ethanol would eat through the aluminum. They just didn't care enough to stop replacing quality with cost cuts.  In 2020, Briggs & Stratton—the largest small engine manufacturer in America—filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy carrying $900 million in debt. Days before filing, executives took $5 million in bonuses while terminating retiree health benefits for the workers who built that company.  A private equity firm bought the remains for $550 million in 63 days. Meanwhile, four parent corporations quietly absorbed every lawn mower brand on the shelf—Cub Cadet, Troy-Bilt, Husqvarna, Ryobi, Craftsman—painting different logos on machines engineered to hit the same rock-bottom price points.  The engines inside went from cast iron flatheads that lasted 2,000 hours to bare aluminum throwaways rated for as little as 125.  This video exposes the triple threat that killed the American lawn mower:...