In “Alone Out Here,” by Philip Bfield and Le Cornish, an Atralian rancher who is openly gay a nservative dtry fights to rce rbon emissns through his ttle farmg.
Contents:
A GAY FARMER ON LOVE, ISOLATN, AND DISPTG THE MEAT INDTRY ATRALIA
[Interviewer] Hey, why don't we startwh you scribg the work you're 's been 22 years, I've been workg on this le of ttle that we've 've put this science on topof what we do that mak so we're dog somethg that nobody else rponsibily is to look after the landbut jt a shame, I missed out on a gay a small untry town, I gus, wh s biggt thg is the difficultyof havg a partner, meetg a mother passed away about 10, 12 years agoand my father's got Alzheimer'sand is the lol nursg I'm the big boy the hoe now, which is very sad. [dramatic mic]As sorry, as I felt about myselfbeg a sgle gay, man the untry, the sorry was never strong enough to make me changeand go and do somethg as much as the torment 's jt pros and know, do you want the farm? Whether people know that I'm gayand whether that means people won't eand buy bulls om meor people know we're talkg about climate changeand they won't e and buy bulls om sends the market and the dtrythat you're workg and tryg to work out, is all right to say .
And was this sort of eternal stggle, I gusto get to space where a might meet then if you didn't the prsn that me day that I me home and told my parentsthat I was gay at the age of 28and my mother jt asked all the right qutnsand did everythg betifullyand properly and my dad sort of sat there and didn't say much at 's hard father and sons workg togethern be really, really that's two people makg one cisnor old bull and young bull and all that sort of built the hoe that I now live created my whole world I gus.