The Dutch farmers have arrived in Brussels. Their livelihoods are on the line because of restrictions enforced by their own government and technocrats. Yet, magnificently, they continue to hold their line. đ#dutchfarmers #NoFarmsNoFood pic.twitter.com/RXIHii2NhB
— James Melville (@JamesMelville) March 11, 2023
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‘The Dutch Minister for Nitrogen, Christianne van der Wal, announced that 3,000 farms will be forced to sell their properties to the government for immediate closure after âvoluntaryâ measures failed.
Christianne van der Wal, who incidentally is a member of the Freedom and Democracy party, does not understand that if a person is offered two choices that both end with the government snatching their farm â thereâs nothing âvoluntaryâ about the outcome.
Chairman Mao did a similar thing in China during his âGreat Leap Forwardâ and it ended with citizens eating their children. His regime forced collectivised farming across China, promising that it was âfairerâ and more âcommunity-mindedâ than all that self-interested private agriculture.
Learning nothing from the deaths of 45 million Chinese, the Dutch Minister for Nitrogen moved closer to the limelight and allure of giddy, climate-worshipping reporters.
âFor agricultural entrepreneurs, there will be a stopping scheme that will be as attractive as possible.â
This is the villainous conclusion to the Dutch Net Zero scandal that forms part of an approaching global food shortage manufactured entirely by the United Nations and its unsustainable âsustainability goalsâ. Other victims include Net Zero poster child Sri Lanka which collapsed earlier this year and was all-but erased from the Climate Cult hive mind.
In addition to the Dutch government demanding 30 per cent of livestock in the Netherlands to be (literally â not figuratively) burned at the stake of Net Zero, Christianne van der Wal went on to offer âpeak pollutersâ a future involving a torture chamber of tailor-made permits and taxes.
These âpeak pollutersâ are better known as essential manufacturers and suppliers. They include Tata Steel, which announced that it would âbecome a world leader in decarbonization for the third timeâ and intends to switch to hydrogen steel production, even though the industry is not expected to become competitive until 2035-50 (maybe) and requires huge amounts of power (which Europe no longer has).
Letâs be fair, âgreen hydrogenâ production, storage, and use is an energy black hole. Fellow battered company Ford has agreed to buy âgreen steelâ from Tata â assuming it manages to make any â for its cars that no one will be able to afford because of â15-20 minute citiesâ like Oxford which want to trap people in tiny car-free bubbles.
None of these green-agreements with the government saved Tata Steel from a criminal investigation held by Dutch prosecutors into alleged pollution from two of their plants. According to AP News, âProsecutors said that their investigation was into alleged âintentional and unlawful introduction of hazardous substances into the soil, air, or surface waterâ.â
The problem is not nitrogen or carbon dioxide â but an actual pollutant, lead. Creating steel causes vast quantities of emissions. Thereâs no irony in steel plants working overtime to create âNet Zeroâ technology, polluting small villages so that rich celebrities can fly over North Sea wind farms and marvel at the âcleanâ technology.
Tata Steelâs Port Talbot plant in Wales, for example, created hundreds of tonnes of steel to build the worldâs largest offshore wind farm, the Dogger Bank Wind Farm. âHuge amounts of steel will be needed to help the UK achieve its Net Zero goals â to build everything from renewable energy and low-CO2 transportation to hydrogen production and distribution.â Virtuous climate warrior Tata owns coal mines in Jharia and West Bokaro but also managed to buy 75,000 tonnes of Russian coal during the Ukraine-Russia conflict and has large holdings in North America and Australia.
Over a decade ago, Tata purchased a 5 per cent interest in the Queensland Carborough Downs Coal Project for a 14-year initiative involving 58 million tonnes of coal with options to delve into the 100 million tonnes of unexplored coal sitting in deeper seams. Tata now says it is âwilling to underwrite coal developments in Queensland to spark a resurgence in investment and development it needs for its booming steel industryâ.
Tata is frustrated by the Labor government in Queensland demonising coal which has led to a severe lack of investment. Tata managing director TV Narendran said that this soft environment of investment stems from the conflation of thermal coal and coking coal. This is not surprising given the rhetoric of the Left dumbing it down to âcoalâ. Coking coal remains the only industrially viable way to make steel for pesky things like wind turbines, but you wonât hear a Labor premier say they âheartâ coal.
âOne thing I hear from industry is that there is a bit of concern about the increase in royalties, which obviously has come up and that it will eat into profits and hence investments. The second concern is the questioning of the future of coal and not distinguishing between thermal coal and coking coal. Given coal is such an important part of the economy in Queensland I think there is an opportunity for industry and government to work together.â
Narendranâs comments donât bode well for Queensland.
âWe are not looking at investments in Australia, but we are happy to underwrite capacity.â He added, âThe company [Tata] bought about $4 billion a year in coal from Australia and there was an expectation that it would double over the next decade. I think itâs not about anything specific that the government has said ⌠if Australia was not seen as a stable reliable supplier, then Indian suppliers would be forced to go to places like Russia.â
Mate, youâre barking up the wrong tree. Didnât you see the Labor, Greens, and Tealsâ election messages? Queensland is completely abandoning coal and instead spending billions on wind farms which require â oh⌠Coal.
Todayâs politicians are some of the most âpro-coalâ in decades, the difference is that they hide their love of coal beneath words like âwind turbinesâ and ârenewableâ while presiding over the largest mining boom in a century. Theyâd also rather the coal come from the third-world where no one can see it being mined. Guilt-free âout of sight, out of mindâ bird mincing machines delivered in time for the next electionâŚ
While there is a lot of money running around in the âgreenâ industry, somehow these places are still crying poor with their paws out for public money. For example, despite the Netherlands Tata site being instrumental in providing steel to high-demand ârenewablesâ projects, Tata steel âthreatened to shut down the operation unless it received a 1.5 billion pound subsidy to build two electric arc furnacesâ.
âGreen steelâ is many things â economically âsustainableâ is not one of them.
It is not only the worldâs energy sectors that are stuck in an idiocy feedback loop. The same government order in the Netherlands Parliament that threatened to kill steel production has also made thousands of private farms âillegalâ overnight.
The Dutch people are living through a nightmare pseudo ânitrogen futures trading schemeâ where farms are killed to allow the government to build â900,000 desperately needed homes with wind farmsâ without exceeding EU-mandated nitrogen emissions.
Who is going to feed all these people?
Thatâs a problem for tomorrow. As for closing farms to improve âbiodiversityâ â howâs that biodiversity look in the middle of the 900,000 new homes? Or is that mostly concrete and steelâŚ? Imagine being a farmer, dragged from green fields and told that the grey, lifeless city is the climate virtuoso.
Our children have been taught by publicly-funded teachers that the farms that feed them are âevilâ and the city is âsustainableâ â that giving up meat in exchange for bugs and lab-printed food is âhealthyâ â and that cows are a bigger threat than billionaires counting their money on private islands that (somehow) havenât been inundated by the same water that Pacific Islands use to blackmail Australian taxpayers.
Ralph Schoellhammer, Webster University assistant professor, spoke to Spectator Australia editor Rowan Dean on Outsiders about the convulsions of madness running through Western governments.
âThe Dutch are doing to their agricultural sector what the Germans did to their energy sector â and we all saw the consequences there. We get the promises that âOh, this is not going to be a problem⌠we can move to alternative modes of production!â and in the end they never work,â he said.
âIn Germany, it is even more insane. They want 30 per cent of their agriculture to go organic, which means that they would turn from a net exporter of agriculture to a net importer of agriculture. During times of global food insecurity, it is complete insanity.
âThe Dutch are doing the same thing. These 3,000 farms are just the beginning â and the Dutch government is saying this.
âIt has to be stressed for your viewers that Nitrogen is a crucial ingredient for synthetic fertiliser and without synthetic fertiliser we could not feed the world. About four billion people simply would have no access to food.
âThis is a war, in many ways I would argue, against humanism â against humanity.
âThe dominant ideology â I am tempted to call it the cult-ish ideology â tells us that if you donât change now, the world is going to end in ten years. Which, of course, itâs not.
âThis is part of a larger story.
âRemember Sri Lanka⌠If you go back two years, everybody was cheering them on. âAh, Sri Lanka! They show the way forward! Sri Lanka knows how to do it! They proved to the world that in fact, you donât need fertiliser. You donât need any kind of synthetic materials to feed your population!â And then it all broke down in a very short order. Because you cannot feed your people. Modern agriculture is an absolute necessity given the population numbers that we have.
âI think this is overall a larger part of a kind of auto-immune disease that the West is afflicted by where we turn against everything that made our civilisation powerful.â
This is not the first time that socialism, in one form or another, has been described as a disease that attacks weak minds â and our civilisation has certainly grown physically and intellectually lazy after generations of easy-living.
When asked if Climate Change and Net Zero are a breed of Marxism â a common accusation â he replies:
âFor me, itâs less Marxism then it is a kind of secular coming of a new form of reformation. If you listen to how they talk. Itâs about, you know, âsociety needs to be cleansedâ. We need to change our ways of life. This sounds more like the Puritans would argue than the Marxists
âItâs about âwe need to eat less meatâ and âwe need to take fewer showersâ. Itâs all about society needing a baptism of fire to cleanse ourselves from the sins of the past. Itâs a quasi-religious movement.â
Rowan Dean adds, âItâs also fascism if you ask me. Fascism is the marriage of authoritarian governments and big business.â
It could be both⌠Eco-fascism with a state religion.
A generation lacking morality and told to feel guilty about everything â including the colour of their skin â has found salvation in Climate Puritanism. It is the misguided belief that they are saving the world by turning celebrities, politicians, and bureaucrats into a pantheon of gods to which they offer grand sacrifices â such as liberty and prosperity â to appease âthe greater goodâ. They want to pass through the needle of social media approval and enter the Utopia of #ClimateJustice where everything is free.
They fail to realise that Climate Change is a death cult, ruled by demons and attended by corruption â of the Earth, of our wallets, and of our civilisationâs future. After all, what ideology could be more evil than a one that denies the basic human rights of the individual and seeks power through ruin?
According to Tombstone, written by Yang Jisheng, Maoâs Great Leap Forward proved that economically irrational policies are deadly. That a system of absolute power micromanaging agriculture, immune to criticism, and ignorant of its practical failings has the potential to inflict the worst suffering imaginable on society â even in nations blessed by natural resources.
âThe insanity and ruthlessness of the Great Leap Forward and the Great Cultural Revolution were the result of that degeneration and the great âachievementâ of the totalitarian system. The regime considered no cost or coercion too great in making the realisation of Communist ideals the supreme goal of the entire populace. The peasants bore the chief burden of realising these ideals: they shouldered the cost of industrialisation, of collectivisation, of subsidising the cities, and of the extravagant habits of officials at every level.â
Net Zero is our âGreen Leap Forwardâ and massive collapse backward.’https://spectator.com.au/2022/12/the-green-leap-forward/
‘A video emerged this week from the Dutch city of Almelo, where a supermarket named Picnic where a fire scorched through the store and it was laid to ruins.
Rebel News arrived at the scene of the fire the following day to check it out.
It just so happens that Picnic is, in fact, a supermarket brand funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and uses electric vehicles to drop off groceries to customers.
Christianne van der Wal-Zeggelink, the Dutch minister for nature and nitrogen, is married to Piet van der Wal, an heir to the fortune of another supermarket chain, Boni. Boni is one of a group of four big investors in the Picnic franchise.
The van der Wal family was part of a group of investors who in 2015 and 2019 generated âŹ450 million for the Picnic operation, along with funding from Gates. In the end, buying from Boni or ordering online from Picnic is effectively the same thing.
The current owner and CEO of Picnic is a man named Michiel Mueller. Mueller is a Dutch entrepreneur, climate change activist and self-described visionary who intends to âchange the entire food system [and] eliminate wasteâ to be in line with the United Nations’ Agenda 2030 and Sustainable Development Goals.
Sales from Picnic or Boni could, in theory, directly be increasing the wealth of van der Wal-Zeggelink. Gates also profits off Picnic, given the store also sells the food gates promotes.
While it seems like the dots start to align in a potentially suspicious manner, in this instance, the truth of the fire’s origin remains elusive.’https://www.rebelnews.com/dutch_grocery_store_backed_by_gates_foundation_burns_down?
This is what happens when people get hungry. https://youtube.com/shorts/fqzFBoEU9ks?feature=share
‘The information that I am about to share with you is extremely alarming, but I have always endeavored to never sugarcoat things for my readers. Right now, there are shortages of certain items in grocery stores across the United States, and food supplies have gotten very tight all over the globe. I have repeatedly warned that this is just the beginning, but I didnât realize how dire things have already gotten until I received an email from a farming insider that I have corresponded with over the years. I asked him if I could publicly share some of the information that he was sharing with me, and he said that would be okay as long as I kept his name out of it.
According to this farming insider, dramatically increased costs for fertilizer will make it impossible for many farmers to profitably plant corn this year. The following is an excerpt from an email that he recently sent meâŚ
âThings for 2022 are interesting (and scary). Input costs for things like fertilizer, liquid nitrogen and seeds are like triple and quadruple the old prices. It will not be profitable to plant this year. Let me repeat, the economics will NOT work. Our plan, is to drop about 700 acres of corn off and convert to soybeans (they use less fertilizer, and we also have chicken manure from that operation). Guess what? We are not the only ones with those plans. Already there is a shortage of soybean seeds, so we will see how that will work out. The way I see it, there will be a major grain shortage later in the year, especially with corn. I mean, we are small with that. What about these people in the midwest who have like 10,000 acres of corn? This will not be good.â
Once I received that message, I wrote him back with some questions that I had.
In response, he expanded on his comments in a subsequent emailâŚAs for the farming, I see it getting bad. Things like fertilizer and liquid nitrogen have tripled and quadrupled in price. Yes commodity prices are up, but that certainly wont cover the new increased input costs. We are in NC, so while certainly not like the midwest, we still grow grain. The midwest of course will have these same higher input costs as well.Corn for example, typically takes about 600 pounds of fertilizer per acre, plus 50 gallons of liquid nitrogen. Times that by many acres and thats a lot of money. Soybeans take much less. The plan for us, and most others around here, is to drastically cut corn acres and switch to soybeans. Problem is, there is apparently a soybean seed shortage because others have this plan as well. We were lucky enough to pre buy enough to do it. However, most people, especially younger farmers, or farmers where that is all they do, probably donât have the money to front like that.The way I see it, a corn shortage will come. I guess there could possibly be a glut of soybeans, but remember that could depend on the seed being available. I guess there are other alternatives, maybe milo, oats, or barley. Of course the corn market is much larger. Think animal feed and ethanol. I mean for animals, soybeans are used too, but its a mix. What happens to the animal producers who depend on reasonably priced corn? I just donât see how it can end well. I mean, even if we end up with plenty of soybeans, even a glut, then you have a busted market for that. I donât know. There just isnt much history to base any of this on. I just see it hurting both grain farmers, and animal farmers, and also translating to more shortages and price increases for consumers who buy the end products.
I was stunned when I first read that.
Corn is one of the foundational pillars of our food supply.
If you go to the grocery store and start reading through the ingredients of various products, you will quickly discover that corn is in just about everything in one form or another.
So what is our country going to look like if a severe corn shortage actually happens?
I donât even want to think about that.
Of course fertilizer prices are not just going through the roof here in the United States.
In South America, high fertilizer prices are going to dramatically affect coffee productionâŚ
Christina Ribeiro do Valle, who comes from a long line of coffee growers in Brazil, is this year paying three times what she paid last year for the fertilizer she needs. Coupled with a recent drought that hit her crop hard, it means Ms. do Valle, 75, will produce a fraction of her Ribeiro do Valle brand of coffee, some of which is exported.
There is also a shortage of fertilizer. âThis year, you pay, then put your name on a waiting list, and the supplier delivers it when he has it,â she said.
If you love to drink coffee in the morning, you will soon be paying much more for that privilege.
Over in Africa, fertilizer prices could result in â30 million metric tons less food producedââŚ
Fertilizer demand in sub-Saharan Africa could fall 30% in 2022, according to the International Fertilizer Development Center, a global nonprofit organization. That would translate to 30 million metric tons less food produced, which the center says is equivalent to the food needs of 100 million people.
âLower fertilizer use will inevitably weigh on food production and quality, affecting food availability, rural incomes and the livelihoods of the poor,â said Josef Schmidhuber, deputy director of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organizationâs trade and markets division.
Where in the world are we going to get enough food to replace âthe food needs of 100 million peopleâ?
This is beyond serious.
Basically, the stage is being set for the sort of historic global crisis that I have been relentlessly warning about.
Many Americans had assumed that even if the rest of the world was suffering that we would be immune.
But now there are widespread shortages all over the nation, and the Wall Street Journal just published a major article entitled âU.S. Food Supply Is Under Pressure, From Plants To Store Shelvesâ.
This is really happening.
In Washington D.C., residents are being instructed to âjust buy what you need and leave some for othersââŚ
âIf youâre hitting the grocery store to prepare for winter weather, please just buy what you need and leave some for others! You may have noticed empty shelves in some stores due to national supply chain issues, but there is no need to buy more than you normally would.â
What would have been unimaginable just a few years ago is now making headlines on a daily basis.
Of course it isnât just our food supply that is under threat. As Victor Davis Hansen has aptly noted, our country is now in the process of undergoing a âsystems collapseââŚ
In modern times, as in ancient Rome, several nations have suffered a âsystems collapse.â The term describes the sudden inability of once-prosperous populations to continue with what had ensured the good life as they knew it.
Abruptly, the population cannot buy, or even find, once plentiful necessities. They feel their streets are unsafe. Laws go unenforced or are enforced inequitably. Every day things stop working. The government turns from reliable to capricious if not hostile.
A lot of people are going to be caught off guard by the pace of change.
Things are shifting so rapidly that it really is hard to keep up with it all unless you are paying very close attention.
Now that you have been exposed to the information in this article, please donât go back to sleep.
This is not a drill.
We really are heading into a nightmare scenario, and I strongly urge you to act accordingly.’http://themostimportantnews.com/archives/a-farming-insider-has-warned-me-that-the-coming-food-shortages-are-going-to-be-far-worse-than-we-are-being-told