The Poor Prole’s Almanac

A podcast by The Poor Prole’s Alamanac, Bleav - Mondays

Mondays

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237 Episodes

  1. A New Future for Old Growth Forests with Kentucky Heartwood

    Published: 9/5/2022
  2. The Hidden Legacy of American Groundnuts; The LSU Groundnut Project with Dr. Bill Blackmon

    Published: 8/29/2022
  3. The Solutions are Already Here with Peter Gelderloos

    Published: 8/22/2022
  4. Endangered Maize with Helen Anne Curry

    Published: 8/15/2022
  5. The Future of Wild Buffalo with Buffalo Field Campaign

    Published: 8/8/2022
  6. Fossil-Free Farming & Food as a Public Work with Maseualkualli Farms

    Published: 8/1/2022
  7. Indigenous Stories with Joe Yates of Molly of Denali

    Published: 7/25/2022
  8. The Decolonizing Diet with Dr. Martin Reinhardt

    Published: 7/18/2022
  9. Community Skillsharing with the Cempazúchitl Collective

    Published: 7/11/2022
  10. Reclaiming Ancestral Farming with Ancestral Acres of Seeding Sovereignty

    Published: 7/4/2022
  11. Beyond Land Acknowledgements with Redbud Resource Group

    Published: 6/27/2022
  12. Community Resilience with Linda Black Elk & Ruth Plenty Sweetgrass-She Kills

    Published: 6/20/2022
  13. Reclaiming Indigenous Foodways with NATIFS

    Published: 6/13/2022
  14. The 2023 Farm Bill with GC Resolve

    Published: 6/6/2022
  15. A Brief History of Corn

    Published: 5/30/2022
  16. A Brief History of the Alliance for A Green Revolution in Africa part 2

    Published: 5/25/2022
  17. A Brief History of the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa part 1

    Published: 5/23/2022
  18. A Brief History of Foraging Laws in the United States

    Published: 5/16/2022
  19. A Brief History of Prohibition

    Published: 5/9/2022
  20. A Brief History of Hydrogen Power

    Published: 5/2/2022

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Climate Change got you down? Worried about the fact that *everything* seems to be getting worse? Wondering how we got to this point in the first place, and what can we do to build a more resilient future? We take a look at historical pastoral & agricultural societies to see what worked and what didn’t, as well as what resources we have today to make better decisions to build equitable systems. We don’t just discuss ecology and history but also take a leftist perspective on prepping, foraging, homesteading, weapons, community-building, and basically anything that needs discussing during late-stage capitalism.