124

The ‘Food Transition’ Is a War on Food, Farmers and the Public 

Colin Todhunter

This article begins with a short video based on an interview with researcher Sandi Adams, who describes the plans for agriculture in the rural county of Somerset in south-west England and the UK in general. It’s an important clip because what she describes appears to be part of a wider United Nations agenda handed down by an extremely wealthy unaccountable, unelected elite.

This elite thinks it can do a better job than nature by changing the essence of food and the genetic core of the food supply (via synthetic biology and genetic engineering). The plan also involves removing farmers from the land (AI-driven farmerless farms) and filling much of the countryside with wind farms and solar panels. Although the food system has problems that need addressing, this misguided agenda is a recipe for food insecurity that no one voted for.

Throughout the world, from the Netherlands to India, farmers are protesting. The protests might appear to have little in common. But they do. Farmers are increasingly finding it difficult to make a living, whether, for instance, because of neoliberal trade policies that lead to the import of produce that undermines domestic production and undercuts prices, the withdrawal of state support or the implementation of net-zero emissions policies that set unrealistic targets.

The common thread is that, by one way or another, farming is deliberately being made impossible or financially non-viable. The aim is to drive most farmers off the land and ram through an agenda that by its very nature seems likely to produce shortages and undermine food security.

A ‘one world agriculture’ global agenda is being promoted by the likes of the Gates Foundation and the World Economic Forum. It involves a vision of food and farming that sees companies such as Bayer, Corteva, Syngenta and Cargill working with Microsoft, Google and the big-tech giants to facilitate AI-driven farmerless farms, laboratory engineered ‘food’ and retail dominated by the likes of Amazon and Walmart. A cartel of data owners, proprietary input suppliers and e-commerce platforms at the commanding heights of the economy.

The agenda is the brainchild of a digital-corporate-financial complex that wants to transform and control all aspects of life and human behaviour. This complex forms part of an authoritarian global elite that has the ability to coordinate its agenda globally via the United Nations, the World Economic Forum, the World Trade Organization, the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund and other supranational organisations, including influential think tanks and foundations (Gates, Rockefeller etc).

Its agenda for food and farming is euphemistically called a ‘food transition’. Big agribusiness and ‘philanthropic’ foundations position themselves as the saviours of humanity due to their much-promoted plans to ‘feed the world’ with high-tech ‘precision’ farming’, ‘data-driven’ agriculture and ‘green’ (net-zero) production – with ‘sustainability’ being the mantra.

Integral to this ‘food transition’ is the ‘climate emergency’ narrative, a commentary that has been carefully constructed and promoted (see the work of investigative journalist Cory Morningstar), and net-zero ideology tied to carbon farming and carbon trading.

The ‘food transition’ involves locking farmers (at least those farmers who will remain in farming) further into a corporate-controlled agriculture that extracts wealth and serves the market needs of global corporations, carbon trading Ponzi schemes and institutional investors and speculators with no connection to farming who regard agriculture, food commodities and agricultural land as mere financial assets. These farmers will be reduced to corporate profit-extracting agents who bear all of the risks.

This predatory commercialisation of the countryside uses flawed premises and climate alarmism to legitimise the roll-out of technologies to supposedly deliver us all from climate breakdown and Malthusian catastrophe.

In society in general, we also see the questioning of official narratives discouraged, censored and marginalised. We saw this with the policies and the ‘science’ that were used to legitimise COVID-related state actions. A wealthy elite increasingly funds science, determines what should be studied, how it should be studied and how the findings are disseminated and how the technology produced is to be used.

This elite has the power to shut down genuine debate and to smear and censor others who question the dominant narrative. The prevailing thinking is that the problems humanity face are all to be solved through technical innovation determined by plutocrats and centralised power.

This haughty mindset (or outright arrogance) leads to and is symptomatic of an authoritarianism that seeks to impose a range of technologies on humanity with no democratic oversight. This includes self-transmitting vaccines, the genetic engineering of plants and humans, synthetic food, geoengineering and transhumanism.

What we see is a misguided eco-modernist paradigm that concentrates power and privileges techno-scientific expertise (a form of technocratic exceptionalism). At the same time, historical power relations (often rooted in agriculture and colonialism) and their legacies within and between societies across the world are conveniently ignored and depoliticised. Technology is not the cure-all for the destructive impacts of poverty, inequality, dispossession, imperialism or class exploitation.

When it comes to the technologies and policies being rolled out in the agriculture sector, these phenomena will be reinforced and further entrenched – and that includes illness and poor health, which have markedly increased as a result of the modern food we eat and the agrochemicals and practices already used by the corporations pushing for the ‘food transition’. However, that then opens up other money-spinning techno-fix opportunities in the life sciences sector for investors like BlackRock that invest in both agriculture and pharmaceuticals.

But in a neoliberal privatised economy that has often facilitated the rise of members of the controlling wealthy elite, it is reasonable to assume that its members possess certain assumptions of how the world works and should continue to work: a world based on deregulation with limited oversight and the hegemony of private capital and a world led by private individuals like Bill Gates who think they know best.

Whether through, for instance, the patenting of life forms, carbon trading, entrenching market (corporate) dependency or land investments, their eco-modern policies serve as cover for generating and amassing further wealth and for cementing their control.

So, it should come as little surprise that powerful people who have contempt for democratic principles (and by implication, ordinary people) believe they have some divine right to undermine food security, close down debate, enrich themselves further courtesy of their technologies and policies and gamble with humanity’s future.

Colin Todhunter specialises in development, food and agriculture and is a Research Associate of the Centre for Research on Globalization in Montreal. You can read his free e-books Academia.edu or the e-book section on the Centre for Research on Globalization homepage.

SUPPORT OFFGUARDIAN

If you enjoy OffG's content, please help us make our monthly fund-raising goal and keep the site alive.

For other ways to donate, including direct-transfer bank details click HERE.

Categories: latest, war on food
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

124 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Ian
Ian
Mar 13, 2024 1:59 PM

Carlson tucker got it right he went to a non gmo mc Donald’s in Russia and said the organic mcdoh in Russia was better than gates gmo mcdoh in amerika,that shows why we have to ban genetically mutated and meat grown in containers ,it is disgusting,we need to ban un natural foods for our future generations and for the sake of the planet we need to stop the nerds from interfering with
Nature.

Ian
Ian
Mar 13, 2024 1:51 PM

We need to ban genetically mutated food ,and any thing un natural, we need to ban roundup and poisons from the soil,and the air,we need to protect the bees for future generations, if we go down the un natural gates route,we will destroy God’s perfect creation, for the future of mankind we need to ban un natural food,itsly has done that,we cannot let these rich people with their stupid ideas ,mess up the world forever,we are on the Brink we either look after nature and protect everything on a cellular level,or we let the mad lunatic frankenstein biotech engineers destroy everything that has been created by a real god ,not a Dr jeckyl character from a horror movie.

Rico
Rico
Mar 8, 2024 8:22 PM

Why is Gates buying up range land? Because he will have steak and the rest of the world will eat lab grown shit and be forced to like it or the beatings will continue.

Dick
Dick
Mar 8, 2024 12:55 PM

Blablabla…stupid propaganda bullshit!!! Shove it up your goddamn ass and fuck the hell off, moron!!!!

bob
bob
Mar 8, 2024 3:43 AM

This elite thinks it can do a better job than nature …”

No they don’t they just want to kill us all – it’s about time our Colin here got with the programme and stopped letting ‘them’ off

mgeo
mgeo
Mar 6, 2024 2:16 PM

what should be studied, how it should be studied..
Also, what the findings of The Science shall be.

The plan is to extend the “gig economy” to farming – if the farmers are lucky.

Apart from self-transmitting jabs (breakthrough infection in the unjabbed), we read c. 2021 of plans for inhaled (air-borne) “vaccines” in 3 countries.

Grafter
Grafter
Mar 6, 2024 12:05 PM

Any MP’s going along with this criminal agenda to be removed from office.

Htos1av
Htos1av
Mar 6, 2024 12:02 PM

They did it (LEGAL murder) of 30 million white Christian kulaks in Ukraine, doing it NOW to euro farmers, you DON’T want to know what’s planned for American farms….

Just a heads up.

George Mc
George Mc
Mar 6, 2024 7:00 AM

BBC:

“Rock star Bruce Springsteen has been thanked for supporting striking miners 40 years on from the dispute.
The musician surprised two miners’ wives with a $20,000 cheque at his gig in Newcastle in 1985.”

An indication that no amount of one-off “kindness donations” from celebs can make a difference to a political programme decided in advance.

But why are we being told about this Springsteen donation now?

Because

A: it’s conveniently distant and

B: because it’s now OK to be “Left”, now that the whole ruling class programme has adopted this “communal solidarity” stance.

George Mc
George Mc
Mar 6, 2024 7:39 AM
Reply to  George Mc

According to the article,

“Springsteen did not seek publicity at the time and did not respond to the BBC’s request for comment.”

Which goes to show how these celebs know their place and dare nor risk REAL dissent.

But the issue about “Why tell us now?” still stands.

Raoullo
Raoullo
Mar 6, 2024 6:54 AM

I think the UN and all its agencies should be dismantled. It’s proven to be an utterly corrupted, useless, and costly organization.

How anyone could lend any credibility to the UN is beyond me. Not only has the UN not stopped an ongoing genocide for 5 months, but it has even insulated the perpetrators through its ridiculously archaic and inefficient Court of Justice, it’s General Assembly and Security Council!

There should be a worldwide movement to Boycot and Divest from anything directly related to the UN, including its mad dystopic agricultural plans. The fatmers’ protests should be bolstered with general boycott of all 17 ‘sustainable development goals and all governments and institutions invested in them. All options should be on the table since our lives are on the line.

mgeo
mgeo
Mar 6, 2024 11:11 AM
Reply to  Raoullo

Instead of being distracted by the slavering ultra-rich and the UN orgs they have subverted, always remember the traitors in governments, acceding to treaties that have no exit option and not even ratified by national legislatures.

les online
les online
Mar 6, 2024 5:02 AM

That Thin Blue Line that protects democracy from
revolting workers has become so sensitive…
If only it had been so sensitive back during the
1980’s the Miners would have won…

George Mc
George Mc
Mar 6, 2024 7:35 AM
Reply to  les online

Synchronicity strikes. The BBC just reported a donation from Bruce Springsteen to the miners 40 years ago (cf. My comment elsewhere on this thread). This donation could not be mentioned at the time – reputedly Springsteen himself did not want it mentioned. He must have changed his mind!

Johnny
Johnny
Mar 6, 2024 2:17 AM

A German bloke has had (so they claim) 217 Covid vaccines. With zero side effects:

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-03-06/german-man-receives-217-covid-vaccinations/103551990

Line up, line up, be a Big pHarmer pin cushion.
(There must be a buck in it).

George Mc
George Mc
Mar 6, 2024 8:02 AM
Reply to  Johnny

He “becomes focus of new immunisation research”. Another gravy train. Everywhere you look, money siphoned away to provide jobs for the boys. Just as the C of E is now sinking God knows how many million into “reparations for slavery”. Total bullshit squandering of resources to shore up somebody’s future holidays in the sun.

Edwige
Edwige
Mar 6, 2024 10:12 AM
Reply to  Johnny

A few days earlier (3/3 to be precise) it was man eats record number of Big Macs:
https://www.businessinsider.com/man-eaten-record-34k-mcdonalds-big-macs-people-thought-dead-2024-3?r=US&IR=T

Their toxic concoctions are safe because… big numbers!

Propaganda this bad is insulting – they usually make at least a bit more of an effort.

Erik Nielsen
Erik Nielsen
Mar 6, 2024 2:27 PM
Reply to  Edwige

Some people have a natural immunity that can eat 34 big macs while they are being injected with corona 217 times, ……………….all without getting hurt.

Some people cannot. Sad life, but thats just the way it is.

toranon
toranon
Mar 5, 2024 11:43 PM

Just another useless factoid:
did you know that prior to the year 1934 it was totally illegal to slaughter a cow in Japan? Big penalties.
Somehow Japan survived for many centuries with this law in place.

mgeo
mgeo
Mar 6, 2024 11:15 AM
Reply to  toranon

In most parts of the “largest democracy” (India), slaughtering a cow – however old – will almost certainly get you slaughtered.

Htos1av
Htos1av
Mar 6, 2024 12:04 PM
Reply to  toranon

Called “seafood’…

Sean Harvey
Sean Harvey
Mar 5, 2024 11:37 PM

Food insecurity is the tip of the iceberg. The real problem is that people are a part of the biosphere, rather than separate and apart from it, and getting our food from corporations and tech rather than nature is gonna make the jab seem benign. The ‘updates’ to our food supply thus far with seed oils and artificial this and that has been a slow-motion holocaust. They don’t want to just control us – they want us weak and sick.

mgeo
mgeo
Mar 6, 2024 11:34 AM
Reply to  Sean Harvey

Food insecurity is a euphemism for the veiled threat of starvation. The Arab Spring and the petroleum price spikes were the result of many years of manipulation, though the perpetrators were uncoordinated. During Operation Covid, especially in 2022, there were protests over food across Europe and in at least 7 other countries.

We are some of the carbon targeted under Net Zero, i.e., depopulation. Look at how much effort went into deflecting from the harm of Operation Covid. Look at the stuff being sold as food and medicine that directly undermines reproduction. E.g., research found the agro-chemical chlormequat prevalent in oats and related foods (Nature 2024-02-15). 90% of those tested had it in their urine, even though the body supposedly excretes it within hours. Animal tests show that it undermines male fertility and the fetus.

Kenneth Thorberg
Kenneth Thorberg
Mar 6, 2024 2:05 PM
Reply to  mgeo

Operation Covid is a very good name for the , ehm…operation.

JoeC
JoeC
Mar 5, 2024 10:37 PM

I suspect most people don’t want to give up meat. I’m a meat eater but I’d be lying if I said I feel no guilt as to how this meat is sourced in today’s world. I’m not hunting and I’m not killing for it. I certainly don’t farm the animals. I simply go to a supermarket and buy it there. Most vegans or vegetarians I know do it out of good conscience. They’re not militant about it but they feel strongly about animal cruelty and I can understand their perspective. My vegan friends don’t give me a hard time but I’ve come across vegans that are militant about it to the extent that I’ve been personally vilified in a social setting. That doesn’t deter me from all vegans or their choice of life. It’s an admirable one as far as I see it.

Erik Nielsen
Erik Nielsen
Mar 5, 2024 11:57 PM
Reply to  JoeC

In simple terms. Personally I find fresh home grown fruits and vegetables very delicious. This doesnt need a label.
I stick to cow steaks and fish, and avoid industry chickens, industry swine and industry salmon. Steaks will, as you say, be difficult to take off the table.comment image

Paul Watson
Paul Watson
Mar 6, 2024 6:35 AM
Reply to  JoeC

Sadly most are also pro abortion.
Okay to murder a baby but not a pig or chicken for food.
More about virtue signaling these days than any concern for animal welfare.
It’s why so many can’t resist the temptation to inform they are vegan within 60 seconds of meeting them.

Edwige
Edwige
Mar 6, 2024 10:18 AM
Reply to  Paul Watson

The distress vegans supposedly feel at witnessing the consumption of animal products is a button just waiting to be pushed when they want to move on to the next stage of their elimination.

BTW and FWIW I broadly agree with the Erik Nielsen comment about what to eat and not eat. Farmed salmon, for example, is massively toxic.

mgeo
mgeo
Mar 6, 2024 11:38 AM
Reply to  JoeC

Many farmers don’t eat their animals, maybe with the exception of poultry and fish.

Amphy64
Amphy64
Mar 6, 2024 1:21 PM
Reply to  JoeC

Thank you, as a vegan. Seems crazy to suggest animal agriculture should be actively propped up by state subsidies. Don’t think most people, vegan or not, ever agreed with this! (And we did vote out of the EU)

Here’s a real example of the farmers the article is talking about:

‘The Duke of Westminster – Britain’s richest man, with estimated wealth of £4 billion – has received £3m in taxpayers’ money to help boost his farm’s profits.’

https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.theguardian.com/uk/2001/may/20/ruralaffairs.theobserver

And a UK-focused documentary on animal agriculture:
https://www.landofhopeandglory.org/

There’s simple, known facts about this, after all. If someone would rather focus on future hypotheticals, not sure they’re as interested in the truth as they might like to think.

Geo Martin
Geo Martin
Mar 8, 2024 12:34 PM
Reply to  JoeC

Every vegan/vegetarian I know gladly queued up for the jabs on offer in the last 4 years, when everyone knows they contains cultured animal and human cells, and like all other pharmaceutical product are tested on animals and humans.
They cry a river for a slaughtered baby pig while giving a hoot for a human baby torn to shreds in their mother’s womb. At least meat production is not funded by the taxpayers and performed in public institutions, unlike abortion.
A bunch of hypocrites if you ask me.

Veri Tas
Veri Tas
Mar 5, 2024 10:11 PM

Why the happy, cute cow in a pasture picture as a representation of food? The reality is: Factory farming, a form of intensive agriculture, designed to maximize production while minimizing costs by keeping livestock such as cows, pigs, chickens and fish at high stocking densities, at large scale, and using cold machinery, biotechnology, chemicals and global trade.  It’s not only bad for the planet (heavy use of chemicals and GMO feed; toxic effluents polluting soil and waterways) but their products are also bad for human health because sick (heavy use of antibiotics, etc) and hyper-stressed animals make for sick and hyper-stressed consumers of dead animal bodies and their secretions (it’s the oxidised adrenaline that the stress and misery these animals endure produce which humans ultimately ingest along with the protein). I won’t even go into the transportation and slaughtering processes.. Here’s a collage of typical factory farms. If you’re okay with… Read more »

rubberheid
rubberheid
Mar 5, 2024 10:29 PM
Reply to  Veri Tas

agree wholeheartedly, but tending your own dear beasts, to heart, until slaughter . .
well that is function, not profit, nor cruelty.

nothing wrong with eating earned meat, and honouring its Life.

Everything is wrong about agribusiness and supermarket consumerism.

Amphy64
Amphy64
Mar 6, 2024 1:37 PM
Reply to  rubberheid

What do you think about Elwood’s Dog Meat Farm? The dogs are treated really well, almost like pets, before being sent to be killed and eaten, that shows how dear they really are to the farmers, right?
https://www.elwooddogmeat.com/

We have to keep in mind though, that the vast majority of meat is not from ‘small farms’, and if it were, production would drop so much that meat consumption would have to drastically drop anyway.

Veri Tas
Veri Tas
Mar 6, 2024 9:19 PM
Reply to  Amphy64

It took me a while and I haven’t gone through all the pages … but this is satirical, riiight?

Johnny
Johnny
Mar 5, 2024 10:44 PM
Reply to  Veri Tas

Spot on Veritas.

• Humans eat meat because they can.
• Humans eat meat because the Animal Slaughter Industrial Complex is extremely profitable.
• Humans eat meat because they don’t have to slaughter, slice and dice a sentient creature themselves.
• Humans eat meat because their parents, siblings and friends do.
• Humans eat meat because they can’t be bothered to research the FACTS and _ _ _ “NO ONE’S GONNA TELL ME WHAT TO EAT !!”

https://nutritionstudies.org/are-humans-herbivores-or-omnivores/

rubberheid
rubberheid
Mar 5, 2024 11:07 PM
Reply to  Veri Tas

what is that thing between piglet’s ear and sow’s ass??

brian of nazareth
brian of nazareth
Mar 7, 2024 8:56 AM
Reply to  Veri Tas

There’s no doubt that industrialisation and the pursuit of profit have been a disaster for natural agriculture. As well as the abuse of animals on a vast scale, the soil, air and water on which we depend is being poisoned by agricultural chemicals. While this onslaught can be most easily and emotively observed with animals, soil organisms and the creatures that live in, on and around fields are quietly disappearing. The collapse in insect numbers during my lifetime is appalling, yet who is defending the rights of insects and birds in rural areas? It is not enough to point to the worst excesses of animal abuse when the production of industrial/chemical vegetables and grains is causing tragic consequences as well. Vegan/veggie folk should consider this: if you buy food from a major supermarket you are complicit in the disaster of industrial/chemical agriculture and are supporting a business that profits from… Read more »

George Mc
George Mc
Mar 5, 2024 10:02 PM

One of the most depressing things I have had to come to terms with us how little the vast majority of people actually think. Their voiced opinions are regurgitations of media memes which are even voiced in exactly the same words. That recent events have thrown up inarguable contradictions bothers them not at all. They have achieved an inner dissociation whereby they can use a noise like “conspiracy theory” to banish unwanted strain which would interfere with their myopic routines. Behind it all is an infantile faith that those “upstairs” will take care of the big issues.

Thom Crewz
Thom Crewz
Mar 5, 2024 11:14 PM
Reply to  George Mc

“conspiracy theory”

I haven’t heard those words uttered in 3.5 years.
Probably because those that spoke the media language when I engaged with them about to talk about the rebranded Flu and impending needle are now dead.

George Mc
George Mc
Mar 6, 2024 6:30 AM
Reply to  Thom Crewz

I hear and read the “conspiracy” lexicon all the time. That it’s pure mind control bollocks doesn’t matter. The media churn it out like it’s still and always will be 2020.

les online
les online
Mar 6, 2024 7:50 AM
Reply to  George Mc

I regard all propaganda & marketing via the SMS
as a psyop… Though the terms’ specific applications
are just as important…

Thom Crewz
Thom Crewz
Mar 6, 2024 9:23 PM
Reply to  George Mc

Thanks. I switched the TV and radio off years ago and only ingest small amounts of local propoganda these days. My Apologies for the mess I typed earlier. Copy & Paste doesn’t always go my way.

Johnny
Johnny
Mar 6, 2024 6:43 AM
Reply to  Thom Crewz

Conspiracies?
Here’s some:

• The Commies are coming!!
(Three million dead in South East Asia).

• The Iraqis have WMDs !!
(One million dead in Iraq, half of them children).

• The Taliban are a threat to democracy !!
(Two hundred thousand dead).

• The Commies will take over !(Insert name of South American country here).
(Tens of thousands dead).

Conspiracies?
They are the MASTERS.

Kenneth Thorberg
Kenneth Thorberg
Mar 6, 2024 2:12 PM
Reply to  Johnny

Masters ??
Elites ???
Psychopaths!!!!

NickM
NickM
Mar 8, 2024 5:55 AM

“O! what an ass was I to call thee master!” — Caliban to Trinculo, The Tempest.

David McBain
David McBain
Mar 5, 2024 9:40 PM

It’ll be useless food for the useless eaters.

Dana
Dana
Mar 5, 2024 9:20 PM

As long as a man can feed his family at the end of the day, the lawyers, judges, “educators” “health care” providers, and the lawgivers are relatively safe..
When a man can no longer feed his family, and his children cry for food,, then, By God Jehovah/Yahweh, despots will pay.

May Hem
May Hem
Mar 5, 2024 9:38 PM
Reply to  Dana

Please include ‘women’ in your language. We’re sick of being left out. I like to write wo/men as it includes all of us.

Jenner
Jenner
Mar 5, 2024 10:32 PM
Reply to  May Hem

Entertaining the way Dana takes a hasbara, Rev. John Hagee knee to the Biden/Hollywood god of Israel by writing “Yahweh” (the one who smote the Amalekites/Hamas?). Why no Allah, btw?

Whereas May Hem, being some sort of feminist claims that “we” are sick of being (alllegedly) left out. The (merely) current endpoint of this is gynophobe transmen being sick of being left out too, https://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/posie-parker-tour-of-nz-anti-trans-activist-kellie-jay-keen-minshull-poised-for-rally/EOWRBWVHK5HY3KV4XJ7TECCE2E/

Johnny
Johnny
Mar 5, 2024 10:46 PM
Reply to  May Hem

Especially when one considers that women still do 80-90% of the food preparation around this besieged planet.

Erik Nielsen
Erik Nielsen
Mar 6, 2024 12:13 AM
Reply to  May Hem

You are right: When a man and woman can no longer feed the family, and their children. Fixed.

But the reason why man is especially mentioned, is that man due to our biological differences has special duty and obligations here on earth.

As men are quick to run away and leave this his duty to women, we do frequently only mention man to remind him of this his obligations.  🤗 

Rob
Rob
Apr 12, 2024 4:35 PM
Reply to  May Hem

Do you want us to include people who don’t know whether they’re a table or a cat as well???

mgeo
mgeo
Mar 6, 2024 11:44 AM
Reply to  Dana

That is why they are taking their time in setting this trap.

rubberheid
rubberheid
Mar 5, 2024 8:42 PM

Yo, where’s old Wardropper these days? i mean that question…

unless it’s oor Geo at it again, LOL ; )

Thom Crewz
Thom Crewz
Mar 5, 2024 11:21 PM
Reply to  rubberheid

He was here a few days ago. He made one short comment. I cropped up, asked where he had been, he said nothing and he hasn’t posted since. I have that effect. Sorry.

C Blom
C Blom
Mar 5, 2024 8:10 PM

Thank you for your commitment to humanity and natural, sustainable food production! I am located in the U.S., and wondering if there is a comparable organization to educate (warn) and organize farmers in my country?

Sally James.
Sally James.
Mar 5, 2024 7:41 PM

The war on European food is a US war against Europe, to make Europe dependent on US supplied GM food. over home grown food. The Americans destroyed the NS2 pipeline to make Europe dependent on them. so they are using the CIA funded Greens to make Europe a victim of US food supplies too.

rechenmacher
rechenmacher
Mar 7, 2024 3:37 PM
Reply to  Sally James.

At the same time they are destroying family owned butchers, bakers, grocers. They want only those huge structures to remain (Walmart/US, Tescos/UK, Carrefour/France, Rewe/Germany etc.). Regional dairies and slaughter houses are being shut down (even burnt down if they prove too resilient). Industrial food production and industrial sales structures will be integrated and there will be no room any more for real meat, butter, vegetables. At least that’s the plan. I buy milk, butter, meat products, vegetables at farmers’ markets only. Wine makers are happy to sell to individuals. There are still quite a few lokal breweries left if you know where to look. Same goes for bread and cakes. Don’t by at supermarkets! Don’t use food deliveries.

sandy
sandy
Mar 5, 2024 7:00 PM

I think their GR and this FT, the transhumanism, the AI (artificial imitation machines) and the GOD COMPLEX of GE, GMOs, xxxRNA, nano whatever altering Life, and now demanding centralized corporate control over Earth, is the result of 75 years of incremental, compounding capitalist frustration with their inability to get, not just MORE, but EVERYTHING. Like Frank Herbert’s DUNE series, when someone becomes omnipotent, nothing is ever enough and ego becomes totalitarian to assert godhood in abstract vacuum. They used to sell us their “things” we desired that imprisoned us, and, we had limited choices. Now, they’ve incrementally reduced down any and all discretionary income and choice we had. They are trying to sell us their corporate crap we don’t want, we don’t need, without income, without ability to produce income, and wondering why we are not buying. We don’t want their future, so they are forcing us to consume… Read more »

John Goss
John Goss
Mar 5, 2024 7:57 PM
Reply to  sandy

The problem is how do we remove these world manipulators from power? But of course you are right, they are attacking us from so many different angles. And the general public is oblivious to what is happening. Or wilfully blind. Or compliant in the attacks.

On Saturday I took some leaflets I printed off into Birmingham of a pie chart showing the massive number of deaths from the Covid “vaccines” in comparison with all previous vaccine deaths from 1988. Hardly anyone would take one. One person even said “Don’t want any of that conspiracy shit.”

These were official reports to the CDC.

sandy
sandy
Mar 5, 2024 8:22 PM
Reply to  John Goss

Imho, it’s going to take a long time because these folks have to self-educate since they will not listen. But reaching just a few does multiply too the many. The PTB are fucking stuff up so badly, read the news each day with incomprehensible elite actions, the Dem voting public can’t miss the train running over their face, finally. Look at elections where only 60% max to sometimes 20% eligible voters vote. They now have nothing the offer Humanity and people will just stop voting, obeying or participating. It’s the only option left. Just stop feeding them our money, our work, our participation. Bankrupt them. Collaborate locally with neighbors, farmers and businesses to create our own localized communities. We work for our own self respect and that of our descendants. We have to be on our toes as things progress.

mgeo
mgeo
Mar 6, 2024 12:33 PM
Reply to  sandy

In this article, Colin is giving us a glimpse of how they are trying to preempt communal independence and resilience. The Paris Agreement on climate change emphasized the vital role of sustainable farming, but that subject has been buried because the money-bags say so.

George Mc
George Mc
Mar 5, 2024 9:33 PM
Reply to  John Goss

The legacy media (radio, TV, newspapers) is the totalitarian killer. I have avoided it since covid but recently watched a confrontation featuring Graham Linehan speaking out against the ferociously imbecilic transgender crap. And I couldn’t believe how viciously slanted it was, how drearily spineless the hacks sparring with Linehan were. But this is the drivel shoved out by this media. And I have no doubt at all that a vast number of viewers will go away thinking, “Oh that frightfully rude Linehan!”

Erik Nielsen
Erik Nielsen
Mar 6, 2024 12:18 AM
Reply to  John Goss

Living in denial.

mgeo
mgeo
Mar 6, 2024 12:26 PM
Reply to  sandy

It could be capitalist frustration with (a) increasing resistance to the crap sold, and increasing exposure of scams, due to alternative info (b) falling return on capital (profit) as some economists say.

NickM
NickM
Mar 8, 2024 6:07 AM
Reply to  sandy

“They are trying to sell us their corporate crap we don’t want, we don’t need, without income, without ability to produce income, and wondering why we are not buying.”

Same thing happened in the 1920-1930s: financial crash and economic depression because the wages of the industrialized proletariat were not high enough to purchase the goods they produced. This unbalance was briefly corrected in the “thirty glorious years” after WW2, when the spectre of Communism hanging over Europe frightened the Capitalists into allowing the spread of Social Democracy.

Then the Empire struck back with Raygon, Snatcher and their Gospel of Greed. Which, as Sandy says, is where we are now.

Balgorg
Balgorg
Mar 5, 2024 4:43 PM

As a countryside worker (I plant trees for a living) I visit a great many places, including farms as well as forests, and it’s really true what this article points out. Already vast swathes of land have been taken out of production, and animals out in the fields is going out of fassion. I often look out at the empty green fields and wonder how on earth we got to the point when farmers are paid to not far. Most farmers I talk to though don’t seem to know what’s going on, they just carry on with their business. When I refer to points in this article, they give me a blank look. My guess is that they have had lots of hastle over the years, and are very thick skinned. They think in timescales the rest of us don’t, and always operate with the conviction that the hood times… Read more »

rubberheid
rubberheid
Mar 5, 2024 8:12 PM
Reply to  Balgorg

You seem to ignore that most of these farms, SHOULD be wild land.

You suggesting that upland sheep farming is somehow a benefit to humanity or the biosphere? did you miss the point of “clearance” or agent orange?

nothing to do with food production, merely profit and genocide.

You might plant trees (allegedly), no doubt just for the money- given your level of comprehension of landscape, history or ecology.

Stop talking shite without context.

If you want to talk about why they would put first class arable land under Sitka spruce, well then you start to have a point, only then.

rubberheid
rubberheid
Mar 5, 2024 10:52 PM
Reply to  rubberheid

2 thumbs down have only that. ballgorge is a failed farmer i might suggest? or just took the subsidies and resents forestry/ecological restoration of the (up)land, whilst finding an alternative source of income allegedly planting ?sitka?. You do not sound like a professional tree planter ballgorger, more like an ignorant urbanite or embittered sheep farmer. Try another tact old bean, for credibility at least. Maybe you’re one of those trendy hip tree planters, a la turderberg? no doubt you plant 3000 a day, eh? [presuming balrog is UK based.] farmers are “thick skinned” is an understatement – thick skinned to all the dogs they’ve shot and peasants they’ve threatened to shoot, disposessed and outraged, lol, . . to save a sheep or lamb- that represents -ve equity to the public purse that pays them, if you remove subsidy (parasite class antics), that they would have sold to european markets at… Read more »

Balgorg
Balgorg
Mar 6, 2024 6:49 AM
Reply to  rubberheid

Wow, I thumbed up your comments because they were funny. Needed a good laugh.

Just so you know, I am a squatter of 26 years, a tree planter for the same, now over a million in the ground, and I keep a herd of ten native ponies.
Not a failed farmer, but a townie gone wild and finding my roots.

I support farmers because I live on an island, and I like to eat food, real food.

Rubberheid, how about you? Bedsit in a dirty street me thinks. Alcohol habit? Bored and meaningless life?….

Balgorg
Balgorg
Mar 6, 2024 7:24 AM
Reply to  rubberheid

A lot of people make assumptions upon tree planters.
But planting is actually an industry.
Nearly all trees planted are put in the ground by professional planters, not volunteers.
Most of my work mates are not in anyway associated with the crazy views of extreme environmentalusts.
The opposite Infact, working close to nature demonstrates that there is not a nature crisis in the way extremists describe, rather it is the strength and resilience of nature you notice most.

The UK wildlife is adapted to a semi-natural countryside. Rewilding will disrupt that system that’s already thousands of years old, and the so called wild places will not suddenly appear.

Tree plantations are monicultures, not some panacea.

rubberheid
rubberheid
Mar 6, 2024 9:22 AM
Reply to  Balgorg

and you assume i’m not a tree planter and know nothing of which you speak. lol
carry on benny hill.
and, it’s monocultures,… and nature enjoys monocultures too.
You really should learn more before spouting off crap.

mgeo
mgeo
Mar 6, 2024 1:54 PM
Reply to  Balgorg

In the hostile cold of Japan, they wrap each of certain trees to protect them for winter. In arid West Asia, underground tunnels were invented to transport water. My point: people will overcome, if not for the poison of big money.

NickM
NickM
Mar 5, 2024 4:00 PM

“Throughout the world, from the Netherlands to India, farmers are protesting. The protests might appear to have little in common. But they do.”

What the New Boer War has in common with the Boer war of 1898 is the same enemy: Anglo Zio Capitalism. Only now on a Global scale, with fewer Oligarchs being Anglo or Zio; for instance, Britain now has an unelected Hindu prime minister, “little Nishi Sunak in his built-up shoes” who belongs to an Oligarch family in India). The global scale of modern Capitalism explains why the New Boers do not come only from a small part of Africa; farming communities all over the world are now under attack from Global Capitalism.

Joe
Joe
Mar 5, 2024 3:21 PM

Any ideas of who exactly these ‘elite’ people are and how exactly do they operate?

Meaning names, quantity, where they meet, what do they tell each other? Do they do PowerPoint presentations to each other on the options for worldwide crisis available for instigation, each with pros and cons?

These people must have names, phone numbers, walk around, etc.

NickM
NickM
Mar 5, 2024 4:32 PM
Reply to  Joe

Good question: name them and shame them. Start with Britain’s new — and unelected — Prime Minister Rishi Sunak. “Little Rishi Sunak in his built-up shoes” belongs to what Colin Todhunter calls “an extremely wealthy unelected” family of Oligarchs who are wrecking the agriculture of India.

vanusha
vanusha
Mar 5, 2024 4:45 PM
Reply to  Joe

It is the royals – the Habsburg, the Windsors, the Hessen, the Savoy, etc. The Vatican and aristocracy. They created front corporations to fake capitalism and now they want to impose global corporatism and serfdom. These are “the globalist”. They also control the financial system behind the BIS and the IMF.

Roger
Roger
Mar 5, 2024 5:03 PM
Reply to  Joe

You can find many of the names and organisations on this mind map The Going Direct Paradigm Mind Map For the most comprehensive research base on the UN Agenda 2030 Here is The Technocratic Tyranny web site node on the Going Direct Paradigm mindmap. Colin tod hunter did an excellent article published in Counter Punch on an excellent Paper by Denis Ranacourt. GEO-ECONOMICS AND GEO-POLITICS DRIVE SUCCESSIVE ERAS OF PREDATORY GLOBALIZATION AND SOCIAL ENGINEERING: Historical emergence of climate change, gender equity, and anti-racism as State doctrines April 2019 In the report, Rancourt references Michael Hudson’s 1972 book ‘Super Imperialism: The Economic Strategy of American Empire’ to help explain the key role of maintaining dollar hegemony and the importance of the petrodollar to US global dominance. Aside from the significance of oil, Rancourt argues that the US has an existential interest to ensure that opioid drugs are traded in US dollars,… Read more »

mgeo
mgeo
Mar 6, 2024 1:58 PM
Reply to  Roger

Narcotics money saved some US and other banks in 2008.

toranon
toranon
Mar 5, 2024 11:39 AM

I was raised in a meat eating culture but having been a lacto-vegetarian (interspersed with long periods of veganism), for about 50 years now and being really well into the rigours of old age having outlived almost all my carnivorous peers it is obvious to me that there is almost no necessity to eat a flesh based diet. So I am surprised to find myself, on this one issue to be vaguely aligned with the WEF. The issue on which I disagree with the WEF is this: While I think it is advisable that humans (particularly in the “developed” world} reduce their flesh consumption, both for health and environmental reasons there is absolutely no need to industrialise this process. We don’t need huge vats processing vegetable matter into meat products. We already have an instrument, the human gut, which is already admirably suited to this purpose. One of the observations… Read more »

Rhys Jaggar
Rhys Jaggar
Mar 5, 2024 1:02 PM
Reply to  toranon

I am nearing 60 and have been happily omnivorous all my life. I have vegan/vegetarian family members whose gut health is appalling, who suffer constantly from allergies to this, that and the other. So I think it’s all a little bit more subjective than you suggest, as my omnivorous health is far superior to Labour-voting, vegan proselytising numpties whose ignorance of climate science is a feast to behold.

Good health is much to do with exercise, appropriate diet, good social relations and, often, having a supportive family.

NickM
NickM
Mar 5, 2024 4:38 PM
Reply to  toranon

Agreed. The problem is industrialization of agriculture, as you say. I am sure that industrialized insects, when they come, will be as flavourless as today’s battery chicken, farmed salmon and industrialized strawberries.

sandy
sandy
Mar 5, 2024 6:15 PM
Reply to  toranon

YOU don’t need meat, or rather you’ve FOUND you don’t need meat. However i don’t know nor have I met one vegetarian who did not eat eggs, chicken, turkey or fish at least once or twice every two weeks. Including myself when i was vegetarian. As i got older grain carbs and starches caused inflammation and piled on dead weight. Those of us who’ve gone paleo, keto, and finally majorly carnivore, have gotten thin and healthy without the addictive constant hunger of wads of food, the body baggage and stiffness. We know WE need meat and veggies and we have the divine right to eat as we see appropriate for ourselves, as do vegs or vegans or anybody. Bodily autonomy, free choice does not dictate to others like our neo-overlords.

Big Al
Big Al
Mar 5, 2024 7:00 PM
Reply to  toranon

I agree. I trusted my gut last night and it told me to eat pizza. With meat on it. And cheese. So I did. Live life, man.

George Mc
George Mc
Mar 5, 2024 9:26 PM
Reply to  toranon

The argument from habit is vacuous. Anything can become habit so …. what?

NixonScraypes
NixonScraypes
Mar 5, 2024 10:47 PM
Reply to  toranon

India? Nice caste system they have there, eh? How have they kept the population so docile? Diet perhaps? Reminds me of Russell’s Impact of Science on Society and his suggested method of control by “diet, injections and injunctions”, all of which are highly topical these days.His Lordship was a great socialist, you know. I wonder why? (Rhetorical if you need to ask.)

underground poet
underground poet
Mar 7, 2024 11:32 AM
Reply to  NixonScraypes

There is no law stopping people from being quite while on top of the heap, the shouting starts when people are told they are not at the pinnacle, but sliding down a slippery slope of denial into the darkness below.

Johnny
Johnny
Mar 5, 2024 10:53 PM
Reply to  toranon

Long intestine = herbivore.
(Breaking down cellulose and fibre).

Short intestine = carnivore.
(Faster digestion, less putrefaction in gut).

Simple, ain’t it?

Rolling Rock
Rolling Rock
Mar 5, 2024 11:20 AM

The war on farming either has short-term goals, long-term ones or a combination of both. Short(er) term could lead to rationing, starvation, famine and easier population control, eventually resulting in depopulation. As Henry Kissinger said in 1973: “Who controls the food supply controls the people; who controls the energy can control whole continents; who controls money can control the world” Longer term, the goals we keep hearing about suggest a world of highly centralized, low nutrient, GMO and synthetic food production. Land previously used for farming with be ‘rewilded’ and along with the countryside and nature be out of bounds to ordinary people. Cramming 8 billion souls into stack and pack smart cities would take decades to construct and would be prohibitively expensive. Therefore, these plans strongly suggest a much lower global population to feed and would be only be workable after a mass die off. Either way, food as a weapon,… Read more »

rubberheid
rubberheid
Mar 5, 2024 12:37 PM
Reply to  Rolling Rock

yep, that mass die off has to happen for any of Their plans to come together meaningfully. Just too many people.
Less people is the key to Their purpose, preferably only lobotomised covidians or even better, gender bent mental messes, who only know the virtual world, below the age of ?16? ?

What an anticipation.

Jos
Jos
Mar 5, 2024 3:02 PM
Reply to  rubberheid

Like they did last time and the time before and …

rubberheid
rubberheid
Mar 5, 2024 8:15 PM
Reply to  Jos

aye, maybe . .

Rhys Jaggar
Rhys Jaggar
Mar 5, 2024 1:10 PM
Reply to  Rolling Rock

Most of it is about seizing the land, since many western countries have inheritance arrangements that allow farmers to bequeath their land to the next generation without government taxes breaking up the unit.

That’s what scum like Gates want to attack: the stable holding of large amounts of rural land by those that are committed to farming, not to billionaires making yet more money that they don’t need.

Rolling Rock
Rolling Rock
Mar 5, 2024 2:39 PM
Reply to  Rhys Jaggar

I would agree with that about seizing the land, since it has real intrinsic value.

The controllers (the shadow trillionaire class) do not need more wealth but they desire more power which comes with control of ALL or most of the tangible assets.

The billionaire class (including front men like Gates and Musk) all understand the value of tangible assets eg land, property and natural resources even as far as the water, air and sunlight.

The vast amounts of quantative easing which cost nothing to ‘print’ and found itself into the hands of chosen preferred partners (e.g. Blackrock, Vanguard etc) is being exchanged for tangibles bought up from the middle classes and business owners including farmers.

Once the fiat monetary system collapses, either by design or by accident, those holding paper currency will find it worthless unlike the ‘hard’ assets they owned previously.

rubberheid
rubberheid
Mar 5, 2024 8:30 PM
Reply to  Rhys Jaggar

being cynical, we’d do well to bear in mind that our “farmers” are the select first line of the alleged nobility – placed and paid to keep the majority of us peasant/proletariat OFF the land, post “improvement”, a long time ago. We were all farmers once upon a time. Reduce a “farmers” subsidy… demand better diffuse pollution and environmental management, animal welfare, etc under duress of a fine… then farmers riot. Never saw them riot for the miners or dockers or railway men, but then when’s the last time you saw nurses or teachers demonstrate for zero-hours workers? NEVER. these paid gimps are all peas in the same .gov handout pod. And, those of you who know farms well: all that shite getting dumped on europa’s streets is all the liability waste that farmers would have to pay to get “disposed of” otherwise. How convenient, as the riot pigs stand… Read more »

rechenmacher
rechenmacher
Mar 7, 2024 4:09 PM
Reply to  rubberheid

You may have a point here. Many farmers are indebted. They don’t own their machinery which costs upwards from 100k for a rather simple tractor. If the banks called in the loans they’d go bust overnight.
But then, the fields are too small for a decent yield, at least where I live. And if the Big Owners manage to drive the smallholders off the land our wheat will come from, say, Argentina whereas on our fileds will only grow a bit of grass under rows and rows of sun collectors.

underground poet
underground poet
Mar 7, 2024 11:35 AM
Reply to  Rhys Jaggar

I never met a billionaire who didn’t want more money, or a tax man who didnt want to tax more.

NixonScraypes
NixonScraypes
Mar 5, 2024 10:54 PM
Reply to  Rolling Rock

“Who controls money controls the world” The BIS controls China and Russia too, not just the West. DECENTRALISE.

Erik Nielsen
Erik Nielsen
Mar 6, 2024 1:58 PM
Reply to  NixonScraypes

Who controls rice controls the world.
When there is lack of rice, BIS and all the big Bankers and their fiat money are done!

NixonScraypes
NixonScraypes
Mar 7, 2024 5:01 PM
Reply to  Erik Nielsen

Is this the time for the Revolution of the Cereal Killers?

mgeo
mgeo
Mar 6, 2024 2:06 PM
Reply to  Rolling Rock

The world has passed the 50% stage of urbanisation. Providing for all those people uprooted from resilient communities will not satisfy “decarbonisation”. Perhaps a really nasty infectious disease is on the cards.

niko
niko
Mar 5, 2024 11:16 AM

comment image

The science is settled, on depopulation (zero people).

niko
niko
Mar 5, 2024 11:11 AM

comment image

You will eat nothing and be happy.

mgeo
mgeo
Mar 6, 2024 2:10 PM
Reply to  niko

After all those decades, they discovered that gas stoves are unhealthy.

underground poet
underground poet
Mar 7, 2024 11:40 AM
Reply to  mgeo

It was always a known, but not a concern, to those who were not concerned, just one of the thousands cuts needed to kill a person.

underground poet
underground poet
Mar 7, 2024 11:38 AM
Reply to  niko

Like a rolling stone who gathers no moss, he needs nothing and is happy.

Cliff Lind Hjulskov
Cliff Lind Hjulskov
Mar 5, 2024 10:35 AM

Many thanks, Sandi Adams, for this important work of informing the public. I think why so few can’t see – Agenda 2030 and The Great Reset – recognize it for what it is, perhaps because it is exactly what it is, is a lie smeared in so many fairy-tale illusions and lies, mask upon mask, generated by a pseudo-perception of reality by a paid academic insanity with no scruples, the work of crazy people who think they are superhuman. You and I are subhuman, yes, their cattle and now to be slaughtered. These evil idiots are allowed through the wickedness of democracy, a majority that can always be controlled/bought with an iced soda and a bag of popcorn. First: The dilemma or the truth is that I feel like I’m going to the guillotine, and it’s not because I’ve committed a crime, but because ‘everyone’ around me is bewitched and… Read more »

Xavier Delacroix
Xavier Delacroix
Mar 5, 2024 1:35 PM

The Great Reset is indeed what it’s all about.
 
However, it is occluded from the general public precisely because to understand it involves a gargantuan paradigm shift – causing lesser mortals to undergo meltdown.
 
As you observe, TPTB are acting without apparent compunction or scruple, but once you understand that they are philanthropic rather than evil (as most naively conclude), then you can understand why they are doing what they are doing.
 
They are funnelling mankind through Fermi’s Great Filter.

NixonScraypes
NixonScraypes
Mar 5, 2024 11:05 PM

Philanthropic? I think that needs a bit of explanation, to colossally understate.

Xavier Delacroix
Xavier Delacroix
Mar 6, 2024 12:10 AM
Reply to  NixonScraypes

What it needs, is a bit of research – on your part.

Or even just a tad of deductive reasoning.:-)

NickM
NickM
Mar 5, 2024 4:46 PM

Your first Link shows a green heart; so does your second Link.
Your third Link shows two red hearts.

All You Need is Love:

Erik Nielsen
Erik Nielsen
Mar 6, 2024 2:08 PM
Reply to  NickM

Someone from reliable VIP sources says CIA and MI6 wrote all the Beatles songs and that Beatles was produced from Tavistock.

Meaning Beatles are all in it too, and we should take everything that Beatles sing about as mind control of the entire global vaccinated population!  😎 

NickM
NickM
Mar 7, 2024 5:20 AM
Reply to  Erik Nielsen

“Meaning: Beatles were all in it too”

Irony alert!

NickM
NickM
Mar 5, 2024 9:22 AM

“It’s an important clip because what she describes appears to be part of a wider United Nations agenda handed down by an extremely wealthy unaccountable, unelected elite.”

As usual Colin hits the nail squarely on the head. The United Nations has not only sunk into the same ignominy as the old League of Nations; it has descended even further. The UN is becoming an executive HQ of Global Capitalism, like the EU. Seeing that Russia and China are fully on board the UN bandwagons of “Climate Change” and Con-19, I agree with OffG that the human race is in for an uncomfortable and even retrograde century unless sane people can wrest the reins of power out of the hands of incompetent nephews, nieces and footlings of “an extremely wealthy unaccountable unelected” (but by no means “elite”) Global Oligarchy.

brian of nazareth
brian of nazareth
Mar 5, 2024 9:05 AM

The true purpose of agriculture is to provide food for yourself, your family and the local community. This was broadly the pattern for hundreds of years. Since the Industrial Revolution, technology has increasingly eroded this basic principle. It is now quite normal for “farmers” to grow industrial crops, (oilseed rape for example) which have no food value without processing. These people now get their food from supermarkets. After 20 years work in organic farming, it’s hard for me to respect “farmers” who are not producing healthy food for local people.

rubberheid
rubberheid
Mar 5, 2024 8:34 PM

indeed. agribusiness is another evil racket and these “farmers” are just missing their hand-outs, they don’t really give a flying one about food (quality) production.
see comment above.

Xavier Delacroix
Xavier Delacroix
Mar 5, 2024 9:03 AM

The motivation for the transition from fossil fuels to electricity (sustainably generated) is precisely the same as that to transition away from livestock & crop farming to any alternative, e.g. insect based food generation.

Once you understand the motivation, you understand why TPTB have no choice in the matter.

Xavier Delacroix
Xavier Delacroix
Mar 7, 2024 11:01 AM

As for “solutions” – interestingly conference participants were told (or rather took it as an assumption) that populations would have to be weaned off meat. Let them eat bugs

From:
https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/europe-alarmed-enough-begin-wargaming-food-crisis

Johnny
Johnny
Mar 5, 2024 8:51 AM

Water- privatised.
Power- privatised.
Food- monopolised.
Health systems- privatised.
Education- privatised (at least high quality education).
Military forces- being outsourced and privatised by stealth.
Police forces- being outsourced and privatised.
Public Media- outsourced and/or beholden to government censorship.

Yep, there’s a pattern emerging here and it ain’t pretty.

Rhys Jaggar
Rhys Jaggar
Mar 5, 2024 8:46 AM

Bill Gates:

  1. Knowledge of medicine: zero. Murders committed: millions.
  2. Knowledge of agriculture: zero. Potential for destroying human health: incalculable.
  3. Innovation in ICT: minimal. Theft of IP from competitors: copious.

Just what qualifications does Bill Gates have in anything other than being a robber baron, pray????

NickM
NickM
Mar 5, 2024 3:33 PM
Reply to  Rhys Jaggar

Gates may not have any other qualifications but his qualifications for being a robber baron are excellent: His grandfather was head of the U$ Fed, his aunt was on the board of IBM and his ancestry includes a bloodline to the Rockefeller crime family.

Johnny
Johnny
Mar 6, 2024 2:31 AM
Reply to  NickM

So it’s in his genes, except when he was on Epstein island.

Nicholas Creed
Nicholas Creed
Mar 5, 2024 8:31 AM

Net zero insanity is bad enough, to learn how hard and forcibly the next phase of synthetic food and farmerless farms is being pushed, is incensing. Here is a piece with a supercut of the video footage from the latest farmers protest at the EU HQ, and lots of questions you could ask any true believers in the climate alarmism and green agenda (many sources provided) – Farmers Stand Up to EU Green Tyranny