October 9, 2024 Global Warming
One of many subscription-based services offered by agribusinesses.
Growing your own vegetables is bad for the planet
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Another step in the now daily war on food.
A new study from the University of Michigan has reportedly found that urban crops are significantly worse for the environment than “conventional crops”.
What does this mean for the average person?
More regulation, more commodification, less freedom.
All once again in the name of “fighting climate change”.
Anyone who doubts that this is an article in support of the well-known “Agenda 2030” can do a check on the government research agencies that “supported” this research project :
“The project was supported by the UK Economic and Social Research Council, the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research, the French National Research Agency, the U.S. National Science Foundation, the Polish National Science Center, and the European Union’s Horizon 202 research and innovation program.”
This is a study that was published only to be used on some TV talk show so that sooner or later some hotshot pundit would mention it in some prime-time political debate and thus start a discussion about “regulation”.
It certainly does not take a genius to understand where they are going with this.
They will never make it illegal to grow vegetables for personal use, they will simply make it more and more difficult.
They will start requiring licenses, for some “food security” reason, perhaps the excuse will be some food pathology due to people sharing food from “unregulated” land.
Licenses will become more and more expensive over the years and, as usual, there will be severe restrictions on obtaining them.
Perhaps it will be possible to use only seeds from certain approved suppliers, seeds from GMO plants that will “mitigate the effects of climate change”.
These seeds will most likely be “terminal,” that is, sterile to the second generation.
Thus, over time, growing your own vegetables will no longer be possible and will become just one of many subscription services offered by multinational agribusiness corporations.