Food lovers, be warned because meals made from insects are coming to a plate near you, Country File warned in 2018. The reason they gave:
“It’s been well documented that the world’s population will hit nine billion by the year 2050. Which means a vast number of extra mouths to feed, a massive increase in the demand for meat, and enormous pressure on our existing land and food resources. So, the search is on to find new types of protein to feed us and our animals. That’s where the farming of insects for food could provide the answer. Soon, Sunday lunch might be crickets, grasshoppers, caterpillars or termites.”
This reads eerily similar to a 2013 article, ‘Future of Food’, published by Bill Gates pushing his fake meat:
By 2050, the world’s population will grow to more than 9 billion and our appetite for meat will grow along with it … Put simply, there’s no way to produce enough meat for 9 billion people … That’s why we need more options for producing meat.
For the time being, cricket products, in particular cricket powder, seems to be their product of choice.
Horizon Edible Insects has a cricket farm located in West London. If there’s suddenly an infestation of crickets in West London you know where they escaped from. Its website banner displays a large red cross with the words: “Edible insects made illegal in GB. Consultation deadline 14 August.” Their blog states they want edible insects to be regulated under general food law, as in many countries outside the EU. “Please feel free to copy paste from our answers, if you agree” and send them to the Food Standards Agency. It’s doubtful many agreed.
Instar Farming’s website displays no such warning. Located in Blankney, Lincoln, Instar is “farming crickets for food in the UK” and is funded by the European Union. It heavily promotes the Green Agenda.
This Green Agenda is the same agenda that is bribing farmers in the UK to stop farming while, according to the International Monetary Fund (“IMF”), a potential world food crisis looms:
The Covid-19 pandemic, interruption in international supply chains, and the war in Ukraine have severely disrupted food, fuel, and fertilizer markets, which are interlinked. By June 2022 the number of acute food insecure people – whose access to food in the short term has been restricted to the point that their lives and livelihoods are at risk – increased to 345 million in 82 countries according to WFP.
Joint Statement by the Heads of the Food and Agriculture Organization, International Monetary Fund, World Bank Group, World Food Programme, and World Trade Organization on the Global Food Security Crisis, Relief Web, 16 July 2022
And it is the same agenda that is forcing farmers off their land in the Netherlands and any other countries that are members of the European Union.
Other parts of the world are also seeing farmers systematically moved off their land, for example, the USA.
Read More: The Next Big Experiment on Western Populations
