Posted on 11/03/2024 4:21:52 AM PST by MtnClimber
By getting governments to over-regulate farming, elite oligarchs like Bill Gates and Klaus Schwab aim to take control over food production in the name of sustainability.
Besides ‘degrowth’ and ‘net zero,’ one other dangerous buzz phrase being bandied about by proponents of the Great Reset is “nature-positive food systems.” The stated goal of moving to new food systems is to reduce nitrogen emissions, livestock production, and meat consumption. This is to be achieved by consuming plant-based products, lab-grown foods, and insects (as a source of protein). The moot question, however, is whether such a change is at all necessary?
The U.N., the World Economic Forum (WEF), the Rockefeller Foundation, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and other NGOs would have us believe so. These institutions are controlled by the global elite, who aim to create monopolistic markets for themselves and enslave people, turning them first into captive consumers without choice, and eventually, without free will. So, the U.N. and its co-conspirators have manufactured a food crisis, and by linking it to their other fabrication — an exaggerated climate crisis — they are using it to reset the world’s food system.
Their plan to “transition to net zero, nature-positive food systems by 2030” translates into a war on traditional farmers. Unable to absorb the added costs of new regulations and controls, small, independent producers are being squeezed out of farming. Their place is being taken by multinational agribusinesses. Unchecked, these multinationals will dominate farming in a decade or two.
Were this to solve the problem of global hunger, there might be some reason for those who oppose the transition to make concessions. But the evidence is to the contrary. For several years now, the Gates Foundation’s Alliance for A Green Revolution (AGRA) has been coercing farmers in Africa to give up...
(Excerpt) Read more at americanthinker.com ...
Not so much about local farming as it is about hungry people taking and killing
do you raise the chicken’s food?
Someone at church today told me that trail cams in VT and NH are picking up groups of camo clothed fighting age men crossing the border from Canada into VT and NH.
“The first study showing red meat to be supposedly harmful was sponsored by . . . wait for it . . . THE POULTRY INDUSTRY!”
Red Meat is a big business too and I’m sure that they would like to sponsor studies...but they have to sign up ‘credible’ organizations to perform those studies. Funny, seems none of these ‘credible’ organizations will take their money. I wonder who’s stopping them (as if I don’t know).
Happened to my family. Back in the early 1980’s, my folks strongly encouraged my two brothers and I to look elsewhere rather than our farm and ranch. We went on to become a banker, Professor and Petroleum Engineer.
Fast forward 40 years. My father passed and the farm was sold. We have kept the ranch but lease it out. Could have seen this one coming.
MFO
They are pastured when they can be, weather permitting - and we have a good friend that GIVES us chicken feed that is expiring - but still perfectly fine - from his feed store. Right now we have enough on hand to feed them for the next year. The chicks themselves cost me a total of $24 at the Farm & Fleet.
They get ‘treats’ just about every day from the garden (Kale, Spinach, veggies scraps from the kitchen, etc.) and I compare their production to what store bought eggs cost, locally.
Right now, pastured, organic eggs around here are running almost $6 a dozen, so my ‘girls’ are more than paying for themselves. I have 5 dozen in the fridge right now, so $30.00 worth of top-quality eggs on hand. (I do share with my Mom and my Sister; I don’t charge them anything.)
I raise Buff Orpington and Barred Rock hens. They are hearty birds that lay brown eggs even in the winter months. They have smaller ‘combs’ so they are not subject to frost bite, as are other breeds. I’m in SW Wisconsin and it gets cold and snowy here! The coop is inside the barn & has lights and heat; egg production depends upon daylight, so I kind of ‘trick them’ into laying all winter with the added lighting, though the breeds I’m raising will do so on their own without additional lighting. Lighting is MUCH more convenient for me when I go to the barn to do chores in the winter months.
We also raise a beef steer every year and a half - it takes 18 months to get them to butchering size. He is pastured from April to November, but we feed him mixed grains and hay in the winter months. Just got our latest one - his name is ‘Stew.’ ;)
And deer love them. Meat
You can...black soldier flies are easy to raise for the chickens.
“Our future is in famine”-
Damien Thorn
Oooo, venison with the turnips.
Yum!
Rabbits are easy and consistent meat for backyard farmers. Also their dung does wonders for your garden. Chickens for eggs, not meat so much.
I think eggs are easier than butchering rabbits, tho
That is why humans raise chickens first. You get tasty eggs daily and they eat bugs.
But rabbits are a good second animal to raise for meat.
With two does and a buck you would have enough rabbits to have meat at least twice a week.
Eva Vlaardingerbroek Says the Global War on Farming Continues
https://rumble.com/v5lktf3-eva-vlaardingerbroek-says-the-global-war-on-farming-continues.html
Has anyone else reported this? Any ideas what kind of Camo clothing these fighting age men were wearing as they crossed from Canada into our VT and NH forests?
No I have not but I have read that the northern border through Canada is an issue that gets little attention
Even though most of the resources on the southern border are acting as door men and registration desk employees, the northern border is just as spacious and much less protected if that word is even appropriate for southern border
No, just word from a friend but I have heard similar reports in the past.
I saw a recent video on the southern border issue and it showed men on the Mexican side approaching one of these vertical post walls with a 20 foot ladder. Also saw in the past those same vertical posts with holes cut in them. There are battery powered power tools that can cut metal. The video itself was about how these walls are leading to the death of migratory wild animals who can no longer migrate to deal with bad climate conditions and seasonal changes. Birds can fly but not deer and antilope. I wonder how much more effective various types of electronic equipment might be for identifying illegal crossings, and those who are doing or guiding it. Those walls really need to be monitored 24/7/365.
(“Our (profitable) future ... (lies also) in famine”-
Damien Thorn)
Thank you for posting. One of my favorite scenes because it rings true IMHO
Actually it was Paul Buehler if memory serves - the new chairman or CEO of Thorn Industries
I have it on the computer 🖥️💻🖥️💻
Gotta switch devices
Oops 😬 got the character’s name incorrect
Robert Foxworth as Paul Buher
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