January 23, 2023

Give up cheeseburgers, and eat bugs instead.  That’s what the Davos elite want you to do, while they dine on $50 burritos and slabs of steak.  They would even have you feel good about being a meat- and diary-free insectivore.  To this end, they have carefully manufactured the cult of environmental alarmism, whose virtue-signaling adherents have been duped into thinking an ecological disaster is at hand.

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The cult’s latest scapegoat is agriculture.  The wise global leaders of the World Economic Forum (WEF) have decreed that farming must be restricted to “save the planet.”  By 2030, they dictate, plebs must adopt the ecologically sound practice of entomophagy, or insect-eating.

In sardonic response to this vision — as Orwellian as it’s quixotic — Michael Shellenberger, the author of Apocalypse Never and a relentless campaigner against environmental hysterics, says pollution from farming is negligible compared to that from jet-setting around the world promoting bug cuisine.  He calls out the “woke” elite’s “festival of narcissism,” in which brazen hypocrisy is a flaunting of power.  He describes the WEF as a “cult wrapped in a grift wrapped in an enigma” that seeks world domination through business.

The strategy is to create a need (in this case, to protect the environment), through fear-mongering if necessary; make people feel virtuous about having that need; and only then launch products that will upend millennia-old paradigms, and hence earn massive profits.  Not surprisingly, millions of dollars have already been invested in bug farms.

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Bill Gates is one of those who wants to re-engineer the global economy and the food supply by promoting entomophagy.  He is the biggest private owner of farmland in the U.S. — 269,000 acres across dozens of states — but wants to solve the global food crisis by having the proletariat eat synthetic food and bugs.  He has given Kenya-based InsectiPro $2 million to establish a “commercially-viable business for sustainable insect production for food and feed products.”  He has also invested $100,000 in All Things Bugs, a Florida company developing methods to produce “nutritionally dense food using insect species.”  Its founder, Dr. Aaron Dossey, is working on a project titled “Good Bugs: Sustainable Food for Malnutrition in Children.”

The marketing of bug-eating nirvana has already begun.  Globalists hope to make entomophagy palatable through celebrity endorsements to normalize the practice and signal virtue.  They think this will weaken the revulsion people feel about eating insects and persuade them to see insects as an alternative source of protein — nutritious, delicious, and sustainable.

Apparently, the list of celebrity endorsers is growing.  Actor Robert Downey, Jr. has financed Ynsect, a French insect farm, and sampled mealworms on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert.  Nicole Kidman partook of a four-course repast of bugs, many still alive, during a Secret Talent segment with Vanity Fair.  She referred to grasshoppers as “micro livestock” and, using chopsticks to take only tiny morsels, unconvincingly raved that some critters were “amazing” and “exquisite.”  Salma Hayek, Angelina Jolie, Justin Timberlake, and celebrity chef Gordon Ramsay have joined in to promote the idea.

Perhaps the globalists will create hundreds of grimacing Greta Thunberg clones to shame the world into eating bugs.  Railing against invented infractions like “destroying the planet” and how-dare-you-ing world leaders and McDonald’s patrons alike, they might end meat and dairy product sales everywhere.  Leftist academicians will definitely do their part.  They dreamed up castigations against “heteronormativity,” “white privilege,” and the “patriarchy,” after all, so they can surely harangue meat-eaters and vegetarians alike into insect emporiums!

On a serious note, there are important questions to be asked.  Why should the world reverse accepted norms about what to eat and what not to eat?  Is the consumption of insects a salubrious enterprise?  What are the food safety issues associated with the production and consumption of insects?

While entomophagy is not new — about 25% of the world’s population consumes insects, according to the Library of Congress — the very sight of insects and even minimal contact with them evokes disgust in many.  The revulsion most people feel about eating insects is deep-rooted, associated with the reptilian part of our brain and the limbic system.  No doubt, beetles, caterpillars, wasps, ants, grasshoppers, locusts, crickets, and cicadas are eaten in some cultures.  But the globalists and the left, who are so eloquent about protecting minuscule cultures, brook no opposition to overturning what most of the world believes: that insects are repulsive.