It's curious that a report from the Rockefeller Foundation, released in July 2020 and predicting a coming food crisis, hasn't received more attention, however — especially since its solution centered on the creation of a centralized "nutrition security system."
A centralized food system benefits no one but those who control it, and puts consumers at risk. Will Harris, a regenerative farming pioneer who runs White Oak Pastures in Bluffton, Georgia, explained:
"The centralization of food production impoverishes our rural communities as it creates an oligopoly. This centralization of food production is also bad for consumers. This system lacks resilience.
When mega-production facilities that are focused on efficiency break down, consumers' access to food can become limited, which causes panic. This state of panic allows multinational companies to increase their profits exponentially. When the driving goal of our food production system is efficiency, as opposed to resiliency, consumers suffer."
Their report, "Reset the Table," was published just one month after the World Economic Forum (WEF) officially announced its plans for a "Great Reset," and many of the contributors to the Foundation's paper are WEF members. They intend for the current food system to fall apart, so they can then "solve" the problem.
The Rockefeller Foundation states, "America faces a hunger and nutrition crisis unlike any this country has seen in generations." The Foundation's "Reset the Table" report calls for "meeting the moment to transform the U.S. food system" in order to solve the food crisis. But as The Corbett Report put it:
"And their proposed solution to this crisis? Subsidies for small farmers? Development of community gardens? A new food sovereignty campaign encouraging people to get their hands dirty and start growing more food themselves?
Of course not. On the contrary, the Rockefeller Foundation wants a further centralization of control over the food supply, including 'a new, integrated nutrition security system.' Yes, you read that right, folks: feeding the hungry is now a 'nutrition security' problem that can only be solved by massive federal intervention in
the food sector."
If the Rockefeller Foundation having its hands in your ability to purchase the food you need to feed your family doesn't sit well with you, you're in good company. A look back at the Rockefeller Foundation's forays into agriculture reveal why we don't want history to repeat itself. As Corbett reported:
"They created the Mexican Agricultural Program, which was criticized from its very inception for trying to standardize and commercialize traditional Mexican farming practices in order to benefit of the Rockefellers and their corporate cronies.
They created the International Basic Economy Corporation in Brazil to industrialize that nation's agricultural sector, with the explicit aim of hooking its farmers on expensive machinery and Rockefeller petroleum products and finding a sustainable business model in the process.
It was John D. Rockefeller III who, when sitting on the Board of Trustees of the Ford Foundation, convinced his fellow oligarchs to join the 'Green Revolution' by founding the Intensive Agriculture District Programme in India, which exacerbated the disparity between rich feudal landowners and poor farming peasants.
And then of course there's the Rockefeller's work in Africa, which today takes the form of the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa. AGRA's stated goal is to "elevate the single African voice" on the world stage.
It all sounds nice and fuzzy until you learn that 200 organizations have come together to denounce the alliance and its activities. They claim that the group has not only 'unequivocally failed in its mission' but has actually 'harmed broader efforts to support African farmers.'"
@Metal-Brain
Sounds like federal takeover of farms/food.
Next we'll be standing in line for our daily ration of bugs. 🤮
@endlame saidBill Gates owns more farm land in the USA than anyone else now. Gates and the Rockefellers are always on the same page so to speak. Control the population. Control the food. Control you.
@Metal-Brain
Sounds like federal takeover of farms/food.
Next we'll be standing in line for our daily ration of bugs. 🤮