The WHO, WEF, United Nations, et al, have an epicurean adventure waiting, just around the next bend. If you’re tired of the usual fare, you can soon dig into a nice helping of steaming Dung Beetle Casserole.
It has been estimated that, if it weren’t for birds and other bug predators, the surface of the earth would be covered in eight feet of insects. (No, I don’t remember were I read that; it was years ago. Could be wrong. But don’t worry, there’s plenty of insects for all of us.) The point is, if we start eating insects and make entomophagy both a spelling bee word and the guideline for school lunches, the experts claim the earth will be able to outlive us. (I figured it would, anyway.) My question is, “Will we outlive the ideas of the ‘experts?‘ ” You know, those folks who have empowered themselves recently by riding the wave of pandemic panic and now presume to use their ill-gotten power to change our eating habits?
But, Let’s Be Serious …
While the above text might excite your appetite, and home chefs worldwide are sharpening tiny cutlery and dreaming of getting onto Gordon Ramsay’s Masterchef competition, I am probably going to say, “No, thanks,” when offered a Mealworm Burger Combo or Scarabaeus Sacer Soufflé.
(Our friend Stenopelmatus, above, or Ammopelmatus fuscus, in the Western US, is also called a Jerusalem Cricket, and more commonly, just the “reglar ol’ Potato Bug.” It might not make an enjoyable meal, though, since it has a foul smell. Probably better, all things considered, just to order the Dung Beetle Casserole. See an amazing Dung Beetle working, here.)
But the folks over in Davos, the WHO, WEF, and in the U.N. building we Americans provide and pay for, are determined to institute the bug menus worldwide. Here’s a half-minute video, a devotee of Ze Bugs holding forth for the WEF agenda.
Maybe we can eat them? But, why? The video claims over two billion people now regularly eat insects. That’s nice for them. If they’re doing it because they enjoy it or want to impress someone, or possibly have no other choice, it is still their choice—and my choice is not to eat insects. According to the United Nations’ Universal Declaration of Human Rights, you and me and everyone else should be accorded that choice, not coerced to wait in line for the Scarab Soup of the day.
How much positive impact will bug munching have toward reducing greenhouse gasses in the world’s atmosphere? How many bugs do we need to eat—instead of beef, fish or fowl—in order to offset the private jet-caused atmospheric problems from Klaus Schwab’s sycophants traveling to Davos? When just one Gulfstream V jet emits more harmful gasses in one flight than my family’s gas-powered sedan does in a full year1, I’d wager we’ll need to chow down bigtime on those crawly critters to make any difference at all.
A Big Pharma-like Ploy
That cricket grinding, that’s in Europe for now … but wait! It will likely be in the USA soon, too. It will probably show up on the required ingredients label as “natural food products” or “animal products.” Sorta recalls the way Big Pharma has incorporated undisclosed components in recent vaccine-type shots.
So, we’re called upon to give up one of life’s true pleasures, eating foods we know and like, and replace that privilege with repulsive foodstuffs, because Klaus and his cronies want us to? Will they publish the menus for their next Swiss confab, and pledge to serve BBQ Mealworm and Vegetable Skewers, with Crispy Cricket Taco appetizers and Chocolate-Covered Cricket Energy Bites for dessert? (Actual recipes available from ChatGPT.)
“Embracing entomophagy can indeed be a marvelous way to explore new flavors, support sustainable food sources, and add nutritional variety to your diet. … Happy cooking and bon appétit!” ChatGPT
Maybe I’m giving away my bias, here, but … We’re supposed to not complain when the elites’ private jets emit more greenhouse gasses per flight than our car does in a year, and beef cattle emit too much methane …so we have to eat bugs? What a shame we can’t reverse the 500,000 tons of methane lost into the atmosphere when someone carried out Joe Biden’s February 7, 2022, promise about consequences for Russia invading Ukraine: “There will be no longer a Nord Stream 2. We will bring an end to it.” Methane, the main component in natural gas, traps 80 times more heat than carbon dioxide, though that effect lessens with time. So, we were curious about it. A grown-up cow belches (90%) and farts (10%) methane at about 220 pounds per year. To equal the one billion pounds of methane that erupted from the Nord Stream sabotage, you'd need approximately 4,545,455 normally active cows.
Maybe I’m going far afield here to equate entomophagy with greenhouse gas control, but here’s part of the illogical picture in my mind: they want us to eat bugs, in part, so they can cut down on methane-producing cows. But they proceeded to cause methane emissions equal to over 4.5 million cows. At the same time, they’re still flying all over the world in jets that far exceed a year’s bad gas production from a passenger car. The lack of logic and their self-serving attitude and actions are beyond description. And their answer to this is, “You vill eat ze bugs!”
Huh-uh. NOMP.
Food Rights, Digital Identification, and CBDCs
But wait! Did you think the powerful few would stop at suggesting we eat ze bugs? Hardly! These are just baby steps. First, they introduce the concept of eating insects rather than our normal diets, claiming many people are eating bugs and loving them (which is unproven, by the way). Next, we know that the worldwide digital identification is coming, and on its heels, central bank digital currencies (already in the late stages of development and implementation). Soon, we will be taken full circle, back to the point where we are penalized or blocked if we try to order a steak in a restaurant or buy actual chicken at the grocery. Conversely, possibly perversely, we’ll be rewarded somehow if we opt for the Scorpionfly Soup and Water Beetle Balushka.
With the digital I.D. and currency right around the corner, the control of our spending is only a short step away from the control of our spending for food. Don’t think it won’t happen. It will.
And, even if cows and cash become things of the past from their efforts, they’ll still somehow use their jet planes and hold international meetings, because, well, gee whiz … they can. So eat your bugburger and don’t complain, peasant!
Big Picture
The food aspect of the New World Controllers is only a part of our near future, but some food—the varieties we like, enjoy, look forward to having—will soon be controlled and limited. What can we do about it? We can give in and eat ze bugs, or we can rebel and speak up at every step they take. Eventually, they will be defeated by the will of the people.
In the United Nations’ Universal Declaration of Human Rights, an interesting document that somewhat echoes the United States Constitution in its favoring of individual rights over “states,” “entities,” and “stakeholders,” we find various statements that claim we cannot be forced or coerced by governments in many areas of life. I believe food choice must be one of those areas.
We, the people, did not cause this situation. We, the people, do not have the power or influence to overcome it. We will not change our ways merely because we are called upon by the elite powerful to do so—not until they change their own incredibly more harmful habits.
Choose Your Own Nutrition … To Each Their Own
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US EPA estimates: Gulfstream V jet, round-trip NYC-BRU-NYC, 5.6 tons of greenhouse gasses per flight, vs typical passenger car, 4.6 tons per year.