Olivia Murray at the American Thinker has a post entitled America's largest poultry producer partnes with European insect plant to open a major facility stateside. America's largest poultry producer is Tyson Foods. The European insect plan is less well known here, Protix.
This seems to be a big story, and most of the conservative media seems to have missed the fact that both parties in this business deal are World Economic Forum acolytes, not just one.
From time to time, I check in on the Young Global Leaders website to keep tabs on the alumni as well as the newcomers, and a year or two ago, one name in particular caught my attention: it was John R. Tyson, the CFO for Tyson Foods, Inc.
For those of you who don’t know, YGL is a Klaus Schwab initiative, and directly linked to the WEF; the organization functions as one big social network for the philosophically like-minded globalists pushing towards a one-world “own-nothing-eat-ze-bugs” communist government… which is why I’ve been completely unsurprised to see Tyson plants closing left and right, citing “costs.” Yeah, uh huh, sure. According to Reuters, Tyson closed two plants this spring, and this summer, announced the impending closure of four more.
Now, according to a Tuesday press release from Tyson:
Tyson Foods, Inc. … has reached an agreement for a two-fold i, which means that wnvestment with Protix, the leading global insect ingredients company. The strategic investment will support the growth of the emerging insect ingredient industry and expand the use of insect ingredient solutions to create more efficient sustainable proteins and lipids for use in the global food system.
Through a direct equity investment, Tyson Foods will acquire a minority stake in Protix to help fund its global expansion. In addition, Tyson Foods and Protix have entered a joint venture for the operation and construction of an insect ingredient facility in the continental United States. Upon completion, it will be the first at-scale facility of its kind to upcycle food manufacturing byproducts into high-quality insect proteins and lipids which will primarily be used in the pet food, aquaculture, and livestock industries.
From other sources, I hear that farmers and ranchers are being driven out of business. A lot of our beef apparently comes from overseas, which means that while the administration will let in the riffraff of the world cross our Southern border, they might not let beef come in. You need to begin developing your own food supplies locally. If Tyson and Klaus Schwab have their way, we will be getting a daily ration of Soylent Bugs. No matter how much we object, they just keep pushing their agenda.
No comments:
Post a Comment