by Elze van Hamelen
October 23, 2023
from
PeopleWhoFeedUs Website
also
HERE...
Dutch farmers and
fishermen represent the "canary in the coal mine" in the battle to
destroy agriculture worldwide.
Everything that is happening
there is being replicated in the U.S., Canada,
Australia, and throughout Europe...
Holodomor means "death by
hunger," as was intentionally inflicted on Ukrainian peasants
during 1932-33, killing at least 5 million. Now that a
global Holodomor is forming, it should be as plain as your
nose on your face.
This paper represents every facet of the attack in the Netherlands...
There is still time to thwart these evil plans, but the vast
majority of the intended victims have no clue.
History of the Holodomor
"In the case of the Holodomor, this was the
first genocide that was methodically planned out and
perpetrated by depriving the very people who were
producers of food of their nourishment (for
survival).
What is especially horrific is that the withholding
of food was used as a weapon of genocide and that it
was done in a region of the world known as the
'breadbasket of Europe'."
Prof. Andrea Graziosi
University of Naples.
The
majority of rural Ukrainians, who were independent
small-scale or subsistence farmers, resisted
collectivization.
They
were forced to surrender their land, livestock and
farming tools, and work on government collective
farms (kolhosps) as laborers.
Historians have recorded about 4,000 local rebellions
against collectivization, taxation, terror,
and violence by Soviet authorities in the early 1930s.
The
Soviet secret police (GPU) and the Red Army ruthlessly
suppressed these protests.
Tens
of thousands of farmers were arrested for participating
in anti-Soviet activities, shot, or deported
to labor camps.
Source
Dutch
Farmers and Fishermen:
The People Who
Feed Us
"Not long
after we met for the first time,
[Medavoy] said
to me,
'I can tell you
how to run a world, you know. '
I laughed.
'Really. '
'Sure, ' he
said. 'You make up something complicated.
Then you insert
it into
the bloodstream
of the society,
and you watch it
bloom.
You make it
complex enough
that it will
take armies of people
to sort it out
and argue about it,
and then you
have them.
The other thing
is,
what you make up
has to cost money.
A lot of
money'..."
Jon
Rappoport
interview with
propaganda expert
Ellis Medavoy
"They keep changing the rules of the game."
Jeroen
van Maanen
Dutch farmer
I.
Introduction
In 2022, Dutch farmers made worldwide news when they began
protesting government plans to move them off their lands.
Less known to the outside
world is the fact that Dutch fishermen, too, are being
driven out of their centuries-old fishing grounds, as wind
farms and "protected natural areas" take their place.
For the current political
class at the local, national, and global levels,
and for the uninformed public at large, farmers and fishermen
stand accused of damaging nature - with officials claiming that
policies to "restore" nature and keep it free from human activity
are necessary.
How did this false dichotomy of "man versus nature" arise and come
to the forefront of policymaking?
To answer that question,
one has to dive into the history of industrial agriculture and the
rise of global agribusiness (see Some Post-WWII Historical
Background).
That history shows that
United Nations (UN) treaties to "protect" nature - such as Habitat I
(1976), 1 Agenda 21 (1992), 2 and the Convention on Biological
Diversity (1992)3 - have encouraged rapid urbanization while
emptying out the countryside.
Even more significantly,
these treaties are a direct (albeit stealthy) attack on private
property and the sovereignty of nation-states.
Currently, the land grab is speeding up.
The UN agenda to expand
the amount of land set aside for "protection" is accelerating,
and simultaneously, BlackRock and other asset managers and
private equity investors are buying up large tracts of land
worldwide.
Meanwhile, the
cities created through engineered urbanization are rapidly turning
into open-air prisons - heavily surveilled "smart cities" divided
into 15-minute zones.
To understand the challenges that Dutch farmers and fishermen are
facing - and learn from their experiences - the Solari Report wanted
to speak to them directly. In the spring of 2023, I
conducted in-depth interviews with eight Dutch farmers and
fishermen. (In this report, we provide bios for the two
farmers and two fishermen interviewed on camera.)
The interviews furnish a
"from the horse's mouth" picture of the tsunami of policies that are
making it increasingly impossible for farmers and fishermen to keep
producing food.
Their sobering words form
a centerpiece of this 2nd Quarter 2023 Wrap Up.
They warn that the means of food production are being undermined,
moved abroad, or in other ways concentrated in the hands of
multinational corporations.
As people around the world grapple with the importance of building
and strengthening local food systems, the observations of
Dutch farmers and fishermen, and their assessment of how
current developments may impact their - and our - future,
provide vital intelligence. Historically, the move from
privately owned land and food production to centralized systems has
led to famines, including the greatest famines of the 20th
century.
However,
centralization is neither a necessity nor, if we take action,
a foregone conclusion. In my conversations with farmers and
fishermen, I encountered courage, resilience,
creativity, entrepreneurship, and a real passion for the
work that they and their families and communities have performed for
generations.
The interviews also
reminded me that farming and fishing communities do more than just
provide our food - they maintain a cultural thread that keeps us
rooted in history and to the land.
As consumers,
investors, and citizens, it is high time that we support
the people who feed us.
This report:
-
Describes the
policy tsunami that has hit Dutch farmers and fishermen
(Parts II and III)
-
Outlines the
coercive "solutions" proposed by the government and their
consequences (Parts IV and V)
-
Discusses the
Netherlands as an industrial agriculture case study and
cautionary tale
-
Considers
globalists' long-standing plans for controlling land,
people, and the seas (Parts VII, VIII, and
IX)
-
Examines the
control grid and the economic and energy warfare and control
of food supplies that it facilitates (Part X)
-
Considers the
larger endgame (Part XI)
-
Proposes
solutions (Part XII)
Some Post-WWII
Historical Background
The narrative that underpins many of the policies that are driving
people off the land and sea is that man is "bad for nature" and that
nature needs to be saved from man.
To understand how this
narrative came to the forefront of regulations, we have to go
back to the period after WWII. During this post-war period,
agriculture in many parts of the world underwent a fundamental
transformation from the traditional farming practices used for
thousands of years to an industrialized model of agriculture.
This shift,
which was top-down, could not have been achieved without state
intervention. 4
When Britain's position as a global hegemon started declining in the
period after WWI, power brokers at the U. S. State
Department started planning to take over its role.
That group recognized,
however, that it would not be sustainable to occupy colonies
through direct rule, as Britain had done. Instead,
they gradually constructed a system of economic colonization,
whereby countries had ostensible political independence but were
controlled by debt bondage and forced liberalization and
globalization policies.
The new global governance
architecture was run by, among others, the UN, the
World Bank, the International Monetary Fund (IMF), and
the World Trade Organization (WTO). 5-7
As geopolitical analyst F. William Engdahl explains in his
2007 book
Seeds of Destruction,
"Under the banner of
'free trade' and the opening of closed markets around the world,
US big business would advance their agenda, forcing open
new untapped markets for cheap raw materials as well as new
outlets for selling American manufactures after the war" (p.
106). 5
In essence,
free-trade policies meant that to a large extent, countries
lost control over their economies.
International
corporations - not beholden to national boundaries - have a very
advantageous position in this system.
Among the hegemonic aspirations of the U. S. was the explicit
policy goal of dominating global agricultural markets. 5 To achieve
this, the U.S. government worked hand in glove with the
Rockefeller family and its
foundation, whose members had influential positions in every
imaginable area of the establishment - from political circles to
academia, business, finance, and think tanks. 5
Engdahl writes (p.
114):
"The Rockefeller
group wielded tremendous influence on the State Department.
Every man who served
as Secretary of State in the critical Cold War years ranging
from 1952 to the end of Jimmy Carter's Presidency in 1979 had
formerly been a leading figure from the Rockefeller Foundation.
[They] all understood
the Rockefeller views on the importance of private sector
activity over the role of government, and they understood
how the Rockefellers viewed agriculture - as a commodity just
like oil, which could be traded, controlled,
made scarce or plentiful depending on foreign policy goals of
the few corporations controlling its trade." 5
A cornerstone of the
strategy to dominate agriculture was the worldwide deployment of the
industrial agricultural model developed by the Rockefeller
Foundation.
In the Global South,
this model was implemented as the Green Revolution; in Western
Europe, the makeover of agriculture was financed with Marshall
Plan investments. 4
For the first several
decades of the 20th century (1906–1935), the Rockefeller
Foundation had financed agricultural programs in the U. S.
South and conducted crop enhancement research in China, and in
1941, it started experimenting with agricultural science
methods in India and Mexico. 8
Also in the 1940s,
Nelson and Laurance Rockefeller bought large swaths of
Latin American farmland to expand the family's influence in
agriculture. 9
The Rockefellers'
overarching message was that agriculture needed to become more
"efficient, " rationalized, mechanized, and otherwise
improved through technological and chemical means.
The proponents of industrial agriculture sold it as a path to
alleviate hunger, quell civil unrest and communist sympathies,
and produce food surpluses for a burgeoning population; however,
domination of global agricultural markets forced countries to give
up their self-sufficiency and allowed food to be used as a strategic
weapon, as it was, for example, during the Cold
War.
Under the "Food for
Peace" program that started in 1954, the U. S. made the
sharing of its food surpluses part of its foreign aid.
Rockefeller protegé
Henry Kissinger asserted that
"food aid should be considered an instrument of national power" 5
and stipulated that such aid should be conditioned on recipient
countries opening up their markets for free trade and taking
population control measures. 9
II.
Policy Tsunami Hits Farmers
Two Farmers
Jeroen van
Maanen:
I met Jeroen van
Maanen at his farm in Flevoland in the heart of the Netherlands.
This agricultural land was reclaimed from the IJsselmeer in the
1950s and 1960s.
"All the trees
you see here, we planted them 40 years ago, " van
Maanen explains.
As part of the action
group called Farmers Defense Force, he became a prominent
spokesperson for Dutch farmers in 2019.
He is now a board
member of the Dutch Dairy Farmers Union (Nederlandse
Melkveehouders Vakbond). His farmer's lineage reaches far
back; his father, grandfather, and countless
generations before them were all farmers.
Van Maanen says,
"They say it is
in your blood. I knew I wanted to be a farmer and work
with cows since before I could talk. I love working
with nature and with the animals."
Jon Bergeman:
Jon Bergeman is the
treasurer of the VBBM (the Association for the Preservation of
Farmers and Nature), an Association that helps farmers
restore natural cycles by feeding cows in a way that supports
their health and applying manure in a manner that nurtures and
restores the soil.
Bergeman says,
"I married the
daughter of a farmer, and we ran the farm for 30
years. I loved working outside, the freedom of
the work, and working with animals.
We started as a
regular farm but made the transition to organic farming
after 20 years. It all went well, until we were
hit by the phosphate policies. We did not have a
phosphate problem.
The policies
bankrupted our perfectly healthy, environmentally
friendly organic farm. I became burned out, my
wife and I got divorced, and I left the farm.
I now support
farmers in applying nature-friendly solutions to
agriculture."
Clipping
Farmers' Wings
The ongoing protests by farmers in the Netherlands made
international news in 2022.
The protests were first
triggered in 2019, when one of the parties of the coalition
government, the "D66" party, proposed a plan to reduce
the country's livestock by 50%, ostensibly to reduce nitrogen
emissions.
The protests came to a
head in 2022, and throughout the summer, streets in the
countryside were adorned with upside-down flags - the sign of a
country in distress. 10, 11
As Jeroen van Maanen explains:
"The nitrogen
regulations were the proverbial straw that broke the camel's
back. But it was not only about the nitrogen.
The bureaucrats in
The Hague keep looking for something to hit us with. If it
is not zoonotic diseases, then it is cattle density.
Perhaps methane will be next.
We already have gone
through a number of chapters on water quality. They keep
changing the rules of the game (and every time, it
increases the costs of production). It is very hard for
farmers to earn a living that way.
Moreover,
because profit margins on a farmer's products are so low,
we have been following a system in which scale enlargement is
the only solution to increase profits.
However, mostly
because we can't raise our level of production any further,
we are running into the limits of this system.
Society keeps
demanding changes of farmers, for which we need to make
private investments. But the cost of these investments is
not included in the cost of our products, because the
consumer expects cheap food.
In addition, there is so much regulatory and
administrative pressure, we are losing our sense of
proportion. Everything is locked into protocol; there is
no more trust in people. All of our activities need to be
extensively documented to avoid possible legal risks.
Of course, this
is not only happening to the farmers. The same thing is
happening to teachers and nurses. Instead of doing what
they are good at, they spend 75% of their time writing
reports.
Even for people who
truly love their vocation, they get bullied out of their
work in this way."
In addition to having to
respond to 'stifling' policies and administrative burdens,
farmers find that their job is now directed by bureaucrats who have
very little understanding of what the work on the ground entails.
Van Maanen pleads,
"People with
'knowledge about nature' are currently sitting behind desks with
a bow tie around their necks. Don't clip the farmer's
wings. Just let people do what they are good at.
That is a necessary condition to get to a better world."
Debt Traps
As van Maanen explained, the nitrogen regulations were not the
first policy challenge farmers had to deal with.
For decades,
Europe's dairy market had been kept stable through heavily regulated
milk quotas to cap overproduction, but in 2008, the
European Commission gave a heads-up that it would be repealing the
quotas in 2015.
Institutional partners -
such as banks, milk factories, cooperatives, and
the LTO farmers union - forecast that without the quotas, the
market would be able to grow by 20%.
All the experts
encouraged farmers to capture this "market opportunity" by taking on
debt to expand their businesses. 12
Farmer Alex Brouwer shared his memory of this period:
"Many farmers started
building new stables because the quota was revoked.
However, my
father was never enthusiastic about scale enlargement. His
policy was to avoid the need to discard manure outside our farm,
and in normal years, to avoid buying feed from the market.
The number of cows on
our farm dovetails with what our land can support. He did
save for a new stable to give our cattle more space.
All the agricultural
and financial experts told us we were crazy to invest in a
stable but not expand. Of course, for expansion,
the bank is always willing to provide a loan.
Fortunately,
because of my father's prudent financial management, he
was not fully dependent on the bank to finance the stable.
Otherwise,
scale enlargement would have been a condition for the loan."
Phosphate
Policy
The European Union officially ended its milk quotas on April 1,
2015.
By July 1,
2015, the Dutch government had implemented phosphate
emissions quotas for all dairy farmers.
With the end of the milk
quotas, a relatively small number of Dutch dairy farmers
significantly expanded their livestock operations, producing
more manure and generating increased phosphate emissions.
However, 70 of the
largest emitters received an exemption from the phosphate emissions
ceiling13; instead, the government's across-the-board
emissions ceiling penalized small mixed farms (cultivating both
crops and livestock) that had contributed little to nothing to the
problem. 14
The regulations ended up
bankrupting many of the mixed farms.
Jon Bergeman was one of them:
"The quota was
repealed, and everyone expanded, but we didn't.
Because we were in the middle of transitioning to organic
farming, our production had temporarily decreased.
Then we were
allocated phosphate emissions rights based on this low
production level. As a result, the government
demanded that we get rid of 35 of our 120 cows. But it is
those last couple of cows that make it possible to generate a
sustainable income.
Our whole business
model was planned around 120 to 130 cows. We did not have
a phosphate problem.
Simultaneous with the
emissions cap, we were allowed to import manure
externally. I still do not understand how this was
possible. You work hard for 25 years even just to be able
to do something like build a new barn.
How can the
government take that away from you? It was so unjust, you
feel powerless. We fought for two years, but we
lost.
They call this the
'risk of entrepreneurship'."
Nitrogen Policy
In conformity with the European Union's "Natura 2000" legislation,
15 which requires the creation of a coordinated network of protected
areas across the EU, the Netherlands has designated 162 areas
as nature reserves - many more than neighboring European countries.
According to this
legislation, nature in these areas is not allowed to
"deteriorate."16
Van Maanen explains how
this works in practice, and how it led to the supposed
nitrogen problem:
"The EU has
identified about 300 'pressure factors' that could damage
natural environments, nitrogen being one of them.
The Netherlands has
singled out nitrogen, alleging that agricultural emissions
near Natura 2000 areas are damaging these reserves.
So they say,
'If the farmers
go, then nature will improve.'
It is ridiculous.
It is all based on models and assumptions that are often wrong.
They are designed for one goal: get the farmers off the land."
To solve the "nitrogen
crisis," the Dutch government is planning to buy out 2, 000 to 3,
000 farms. 17
Bergeman worries that
this is only the beginning:
"If the farms near
nature need to go, then the amount of arable land becomes
smaller. I may have to go first, but my neighbor
will be next."
The Natura 2000 areas are
also threatening the livelihood of farmer Alex Brouwer.
He farms land that is
partially owned and partially leased. The leases were locked
into ancient contracts, seemingly securing his right to farm.
Without informing him, however, the provincial
government changed the zoning of the land from an agricultural zone
to a nature zone.
He was informed that by
2027 or 2030, the land must become "herbal-rich grassland." 18
Back in 2016,
researchers at the Dutch Environmental Assessment Agency
understatedly put it this way:
"In certain regions,
political choices have to be made between ecology and
competitive agriculture." 19
Brouwer explains the true
implications for nature and soil health:
"This means that no
cattle will be allowed on those lands. There will be no
manure on the land. This starts a process of atrophy.
That does not improve
nature. If cattle do not graze the pastures, the
grass dies, the soil loses its humus. It becomes
sand, it is desertification.
I believe that nature
loves biodiversity, not deserts. These nature
protection organizations are just out for more land."
Interestingly, the
"nitrogen crisis" appears to stop at the German border.
Moreover, the
convoluted and highly criticized "AERIUS" model developed by the
Dutch National Institute for Public Health (RIVM) reports an excess
of emissions even when a baseline of zero is inserted into the
model. 20
Recognizing the
contradictions, a number of academicians with a background in
studying nitrogen deposition models - including emeritus professor
Kees de Lange, Dr. Jaap Hanekamp, and
emeritus professor Han Lindeboom - have criticized the
nitrogen model and related policies and are pleading for
sensibleness.
However, the legacy
media have shunned these academicians and their valid criticisms.
Dr. Hanekamp posits that "there is no nitrogen crisis"; he is
an advocate of scrapping the model altogether.
For his part,
professor de Lange states:
"[The nitrogen
problem] is an official fabrication, based on a 'model' of
the RIVM in which deviations of more than 100% from reality are
the rule rather than the exception.
Moreover, in
the densely populated Netherlands there are far too many 'Natura
2000 areas' and the limit values for 'nitrogen exceedance' are
unrealistic and unfeasible." 16
Even if we assume that
there is a nitrogen problem, professor Lindeboom discovered in
his doctoral research decades ago that such problems are very local.
An increase of nitrogen
will affect which plants grow in specific local areas. Insofar
as this is deemed an issue, it can be solved with simple,
local solutions. 21
III.
Policy Tsunami Hits Fishermen
Two Fishermen
Jurie Post:
Post is a native of
the former island Urk, which harbors a tight-knit
fisheries community. We met him and his youngest son
Benjamin at the dock on a sunny day, enjoying a splendid
view over the IJsselmeer.
Post shared,
"On Urk,
being involved in fishing is part of the community,
and it comes down through the generations. I have no
idea how long this goes back.
I just love being
out at sea, being in nature. I cannot express
how beautiful it is to see the sunrise in my 'office.' My
sons want to become fishermen as well."
Post often brings up
his Christian faith, still shared in the Urker community
as well.
"Jesus said,
'Love thy neighbor as thyself, ' so we support each other.
That is the principle from which you build a better
society."
Peke Wouda:
Wouda fishes for
shrimp in the coastal regions of the Netherlands.
We met him on a clear
sunny day on his trawler at the dock of the small town of
Stavoren. It is a stunning boat
He explained,
"The boat is
older than I am. If you maintain it well, the
boat can last over 100 years."
Wouda grew up with
fishing.
He notes,
"My grandfather
was a fisherman and my father as well. As a child,
I would go along with them to fish during school vacations.
I love the freedom and the adventure of fishing - and the
competition. My brothers are fishermen as well,
and at the end of the week, we all want to bring home
the largest catch."
Loss of Fishing
Grounds to Brexit, Wind Farms, and Nature "Protection"
The flood of bad policies hitting Dutch fishermen is, if
possible, even worse than what is happening to the nation's
farmers.
The marine areas that are
still accessible to fishermen are dwindling. For starters,
a lot of fishing ground was lost when, due to Brexit, EU
and Dutch fishermen no longer had access to UK fishing grounds.
In addition, 20%
(11. 374 square kilometers) of the Dutch North Sea area has been
assigned as Natura 2000 protected areas, which are partially
or wholly closed for fishing. 22 The EU is planning to increase
these areas up to 30%. 23
The Netherlands had already scheduled a major increase of wind
energy generation at sea, but these intentions achieved
megalomaniac proportions when the countries bordering the North Sea
announced, during a summit in Ostend, Belgium on April
24, 2023, that the North Sea would be turned into
"Europe's Green Power Plant," with a planned expansion of 30, 000
wind turbines by 2050. 24, 25
A 2021 report titled The High Value of The North Sea by the Hague
Centre for Strategic Studies condenses all government plans for the
North Sea in 2050 in one map on which, tellingly, there
is no space allocated for fishermen. 26
The report's Table 1
states,
"Large parts of the
North Sea currently available for fishing will make way for
other uses, such as wind farms and sustainable
aquaculture."
The report's authors
acknowledge,
"This may lead to
(further) unrest in the sector."
You might expect
nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) focused on protection of nature
to be concerned about such a large-scale wind power intervention in
a natural habitat, but as fisherman Peke Wouda observes,
"They have different
standards for wind energy than for fishermen."
He continues,
"We [fishermen]
always have to prove that we are not damaging nature, but
they can build these offshore wind farms without doing the
research first to understand what effects this will have.
There are so many wind turbines that you cannot even find the
fishermen anymore."
Fisherman Jurie Post
states,
"These plans make me
very concerned. Before, I would have thought,
'The sea is big, you cannot destroy nature.' But with
this, yes, it is possible to destroy the North Sea."
The ways in which the
government requires fishermen to prove that their activities are not
harmful border on the ridiculous.
Post shared a story about
how he participated in research that assessed the effect of a shadow
cast from a fisherman's boat on underwater life:
"Fishermen are not
allowed to impact nature.
But, at the
same time, we are followed by seals and seabirds.
They know where they can find some food. Are our shadows
impacting them negatively?"
Somehow, the
effects of the moving shadows cast by the blades of thousands of
200-meter-long wind turbines seem to be of no concern.
Post points out,
moreover, that with the turbines,
"It's not just the
shadows by day. It used to be dark at night at sea,
but not anymore. With all the lights of the turbines
flickering, it resembles a discotheque."
According to NGOs and
ecologists, fishermen's trawlers disturb the seafloor.
Post is not convinced
that the 0. 8 millimeters of his nets passing through the sand of
the seabed are damaging:
"If there are rocks,
with corals, of course I would not fish there. It
would damage the nets. However, the North Sea is one
big sandbox.
These environmental
NGOs believe that you can protect a sand castle that was here 50
years ago by putting a ribbon around it and calling it a
'reserve.'
They cannot fathom
that nature is dynamic; dunes move under water, and you
suddenly see an old shipwreck emerge. A one-meter wave
has, below the surface, seven times as much force.
There are the tides,
or a strong northwest storm.
All of these change
the sea and its sandy bottom."
Fuel Prices
After the war in Ukraine started, fuel prices went through the
roof.
Wouda explains how this
impacted his business: "Two years ago, gas oil was € 0. 25 per
liter. Last summer, it was € 1. 26. My boat uses
3, 500 to 4, 000 liters per week. You can do the math."
During this time, many of the larger trawlers did not even go
out to sea because it would have led to losses. 27 As Post comments,
"The government said,
'We need to support Ukraine; this is what we must do together as
a country.'
But when the energy
prices skyrocketed, we were on our own."
Nitrogen
(Again)
The area around the North coast of the Netherlands is designated as
a Natura 2000 reserve.
Authorities have deemed
nitrogen emissions to be a problem there as well. Smaller
trawlers (such as Wouda's) fish for shrimp in these areas.
To comply with the
nitrogen regulations, the shrimp fishermen must make their
boats "more sustainable" by installing new engines and catalytic
converters; if they don't, they lose their fishing licenses.
28
"Both are investments
of up to €100, 000, " says Wouda. "That is a lot of money
for a one-man business such as mine."
Many other types of boats
traverse the same protected areas, including ferries,
yachts, and big container vessels.
All of these are exempted
from the nitrogen regulations.
Ban on Discards
Not all fish that are caught are suitable for sale.
Traditionally, this
bycatch has been "discarded" (returned to the sea). To combat
this "wasteful practice," the EU implemented a "landing obligation"
policy that went fully into effect in January 2019.
Under this policy,
all catch needs to be brought to the coast with the goal of,
"eliminat[ing]
discards by encouraging fishers to fish more selectively and to
avoid unwanted catches." 29
As Wouda remarks,
"It is an insane
policy. Fifty percent of these [discarded] fish are still
alive after you put them overboard. These are young fish;
they should swim - it is crazy to bring them to land."
Stepping Up the
Surveillance
Fishing boats have been monitored for decades through GPS systems.
The Dutch government already has a detailed record of where the
fishermen fish. However, politicians claim to be worried
that fishermen are not abiding by the landing obligation policy.
To ensure compliance,
the European Parliament has adopted legislation that requires
fishermen to install cameras on their boats. 30
Post comments:
"For 40 years,
I have been working with an ankle strap. Our vessels are
monitored by the satellites. If just one of the wires is
loose, we receive a letter from the Ministry.
We keep a log of
everything; there are drones. They [already] have
sufficient control. I tell you, it starts with a
camera for the fishermen. But once that is normalized,
others will follow."
No Breakthrough
Innovations Allowed
Beam trawling is a long-standing method of fishing that drags a beam
and chains across the seafloor to "tickle" and catch bottom-swelling
species.
Instead of trawling a
beam, an innovative pulse trawling method (called "Pulskor
SumWing") floats a kind of wing above the seabed and uses a very
low-voltage electrical pulse to stir up the fish from the bottom.
31, 32
Extensive research on
this invention showed that there was less unwanted bycatch,
less or even no disturbance of the seafloor, and more than a
50% reduction in fuel use. 33
In 2011, it was
awarded a "Responsible Fishing Prize" (De Verantwoorde Visprijs)
because it solved multiple environmental challenges at once.
In 2010, seven dozen Dutch fisheries received temporary
permits to start using the pulse trawling technology.
However, France,
which has a fisheries lobby with considerable political clout in the
EU (despite having a less advanced fishing fleet), actively
and successfully campaigned against the use of the pulse trawling
technology.
An extremely biased media
campaign even suggested, falsely, that the technology
was responsible for electrocuting fish. 31, 34, 35
In July 2021, the
European Parliament and EU member states agreed to an EU-wide ban on
the pulse trawling method. 36
Wouda was one of the fishermen who invested in pulse trawling.
He notes:
"For us, this
was an investment of around € 150, 000. You are young,
you think, 'Let's invest in the future. ' You would think
that they would applaud this innovation.
A sector that can
reduce 60% of its energy consumption? Now, the equipment
is in storage."
IV.
Government "Solutions"
Stakeholder
"Engagement": Sign on the Dotted Line…
For appearances' sake, the Dutch government devised two sets
of "stakeholder engagement" processes, called the
"Agricultural Agreement" (Landbouwakkoord) and the "North Sea
Consultation" (Noordzeeoverleg), for farmers and fishermen,
respectively.
Officially, the
purpose of the Agreement and Consultation was to gather stakeholder
input for policy development, but van Maanen does not have a
lot of trust in the two processes.
He says,
"It is one big
charade. They created an enormously cumbersome process.
If you wanted honest negotiations, you would not design it
that way."
In February 2023,
an activist farmers interest group called Agractie bowed out of the
negotiations, stating that the government is inflexible about
its policies to limit farmers' right to use their own land. 37
Four months later,
in June 2023, the more mainstream LTO organization,
which also represents farmers, pulled out of the negotiations
as well, arguing that the government was not offering farmers
adequate "prospects for action and income security."38
The government will now
develop its farm policies without stakeholder input.
As for the fishermen, Wouda explains that during the North Sea
Consultation, the representative organizations for fishermen
ended up abandoning the consultation process, just like the
farmer organizations. 39
He says,
"They will let you
'have your say, ' but in the end, they will go ahead and
do what was planned."
Post comments:
"The North Sea
Consultation is the same as the Agricultural Agreement.
You may sit at the table on the condition of secrecy. At
the end, you may sign on the dotted line. The only
'solutions' that they have are to send the fishermen away."
Numerous environmental
NGOs have a seat at the North Sea Consultation negotiation table,
including the World Wildlife Fund (WWF), Greenpeace, the
North Sea Foundation (Stichting De Noordzee), Bird Protection
Netherlands (Vogelbescherming Nederland), and Nature & Milieu
(Natuur&Milieu). 40
The NGOs are very
critical of the fishermen, but they support ocean wind farms
to "combat climate change."
Wouda comments,
"These NGOs say,
'Well, if there is a wind farm, then we should get
extra nature reserves, too.' So, the fishermen lose
twice."
Nudging Farmers and
Fishermen to Sell Off Land and Boats
"The most
terrifying words in the English language are:
'I'm from the
government and I'm here to help. '"
Ronald
Reagan
"I'm going to make him an offer he can't refuse."
Don Vito
Corleone,
in The Godfather
After all the regulatory harassment, the Dutch government has
offered a "way out" to farmers as well as fishermen who have larger
bottom trawlers - they can sell their farms and boats to the
government, but only on the condition that they accept a
professional ban.
Under the government's terms, farmers who sell their farm and
land would not be allowed to restart a farm, whether in the
Netherlands or elsewhere in the EU, nor could they participate
with others in a farming joint venture. 41, 42
Although the government
claims to be offering farmers 100% to 120% of the market price, 43
there is a significant caveat - the market price has dropped by at
least 50% due to the farms' proximity to Natura 2000 protected
areas. 44
Thus far,
government pressure to buy up farms has not been very successful.
45, 46 Although the government's stated goal is to buy out up to 3,
000 farms, by September 2022, it was reported that only
20 had sold their farms. 47
After the government
renewed its offer in June 2023, 200 more farmers applied. 48
As for fishermen, they must agree to destroy their boats,
lose their fishing quota, and not buy a new boat for the next
five years. 49
Wouda states:
"When these boats are
gone, they're gone. You can use the boats for other
purposes, but they want to make sure they are not used for
fishing again.
They bring the ship
to the scrapyard, and the first thing they do is to take a
major chunk out of the bridge. That's the end of it."
The fishermen with larger
boats who fish on the North Sea are in such dire straits that 78
boats have already headed toward destruction, 50 leaving only 40
such boats to fish out at sea, according to Post.
The smaller boats that
fish for shrimp have not (yet) been offered the "solution" to sell,
but Wouda expects that if such an offer were to materialize,
at least 50% of shrimp fishermen would quit.
Post, however, is going against the grain; he has bought
an extra boat. He has sons who want to follow in their
father's footsteps.
He explains:
"There is so much
surveillance and bureaucracy around the fisheries. For one
fisherman, you'll have two control boats, police
checks, biologists, ecologists, the Ministry.
It is a large
upside-down pyramid. They will need to subsidize the last
boat to keep everyone working in the bureaucracy they have
built."
Transitioning
Away from Production of Real Food
The Dutch government is investing a lot of money to prohibit and
suppress traditional ways of producing food, ranging from
investments in the "energy transition" and "restoration" of nature,
the subsidies to buy out farmers and fishermen, and
investments into insects, lab-grown meat, and other
artificial or "pharma" foods. 51
Here is a non-exhaustive
overview of some of the expenditures:
-
Farmers: 1. 9
billion euros (2020–2030) to make farmers more "sustainable"
(or help them quit) 52
-
Farmers: 7.5
billion euros (2022–2025) to buy out farmers around Natura
2000 reserves and "solve the nitrogen crisis" 53
-
Fisheries: 444
million euros (2022) to destroy or adapt the fisheries fleet
to make it "smaller, more diverse and more
sustainable" 54
-
Rural Areas: 25
billion euros (2022–2035) for a national "Rural Area"
program to "solve the challenges in agriculture and nature"
55
-
Climate: 28. 1
billion euros (2023–2035) for "climate expenses, " 56
including wind farms and solar farms at the expense of
agricultural land and marine fisheries
-
Technocracy: 20
billion euros for "projects that will take care of economic
growth in the long run"; supporting the current government's
technocratic vision, funded projects include projects
focused on climate-resistant, gene-edited plants,
the lab-grown meat ecosystem, the digital transition,
and more 57
V.
Consequences of the Policy Tsunami
Discouraging
the Next Generation of Farmers and Fishermen
"What is the
most insecure profession?
It is to be a
farmer or fisherman.
And who will you always need to feed the people,
since the
beginning of the world?
It's the farmers
and fishermen."
Jurie
Post, fisherman
The policy tsunami, regulatory uncertainty, selective
government policies that create winners and losers, and low
profit margins - all of these have combined, says van Maanen,
to make family farming a fundamentally uncertain profession. 58
In many places,
this has led to farmers quitting their livelihood. 14
This is a worldwide
problem, but especially in Europe, where the
agricultural workforce is aging and farmers' children are
increasingly hesitant to take over family farms.
Compounding the policy
uncertainties, heirs generally also need to take on a lot of
debt, as decades of policies that encouraged the industrial
model of scale enlargement have made most farms highly leveraged.
At some point, the amount of debt makes it prohibitive to take
over the farm.
Only industrial or
corporate entities can attract enough capital to take over the
business.
Van Maanen comments:
"When I was 25 to 35
years old, you couldn't wait to take over the farm.
But with the current generation, you see that they are
very hesitant: 'Do I really want to do this?' It is painful to
see.
On the one hand,
every farmer wants their children to take over the farm.
On the other hand, you think, 'If I love them,
do I want to do this to them?'"
The
Corporatization of Food Production
All of our interviewees warned that food production is moving into
the hands of international corporations.
As Van Maanen remarked:
"The average age of
farmers in the Netherlands is over 60 years old.
If you take into
account that only a small number of their children want to take
over the farm, it speaks for itself that this will lead to
more consolidation - fewer people who need to take care of more
land.
If we are not
careful, food production will move from family farms into
the hands of multinationals."
In his sector,
Wouda noted that the large shrimp processors control the market:
"They already control
the way we work. It is advantageous for them to control
the whole supply chain. If the family businesses are
pushed out of the sector, they will fully control the
fleet as well."
Recent research supports
these observations.
The research collective
ETC Group reported in 2022 that four to six corporations dominate
most agribusiness sectors - including seeds, agrochemicals,
livestock genetics, synthetic fertilizers, commodity
traders, food processors, grocery retail, and food
delivery - controlling 40% or more of the market in each of those
sectors. 59
Describing the
corporations' oligopolistic practices, ETC Group calls them
the "Food Barons."
Moreover, as
political economist Jennifer Clapp observes in an article titled
"The rise of financial investment and common ownership in global
agrifood firms," these corporations are, to a great extent,
all owned by the same large asset managers, namely,
BlackRock, Vanguard, State Street, and Fidelity.
60
Commenting on this corporate concentration, Van Maanen states:
"This makes it much
easier to control the population. I know you are not
allowed to say that out loud, but there are some who'd
like to see it that way.
I don't think this
will benefit the average Joe."
Lowering Food
Quality
The legacy media are more than willing to describe Dutch farmers and
fishermen as being detrimental to nature, but they avoid
reporting on the damage caused by industrial food production methods
used abroad.
Van Maanen explains:
"The West's solution
is to move problems over the border.
For example,
years ago it was decided that the chicken factory farms needed
to go. So, they were forbidden [in the Netherlands].
However, they
were not destroyed; they moved them all in trucks to Ukraine,
all financed by the Rabobank, a Dutch banking and
financial services company that claims to support animal welfare
and sustainability.
Eighty percent of the
eggs in processed products such as cookies now comes from these
Ukrainian facilities, where they have no concern for
animal welfare, medicine use, or health and safety
standards.
As a result,
supermarkets sell products that a Dutch farmer is not allowed to
produce."
Within the fisheries
sector, the Dutch government foresees a rise in demand for
seafood products because it is actively discouraging the consumption
of meat through its "protein transition" policy and related
campaigns to influence public opinion. Consequently, the
government forecasts an increase in aquaculture - that is,
farmed fish production. 61
Post has his reservations about farmed fish.
He explains:
"To grow one kilo of
fish, you need three kilos of food. These fish are
not vegetarian. And, if you want it to taste like
fish, you shouldn't feed them meat offal. Therefore,
they will need to feed the farmed fish with wild-caught fish."
Wouda asks,
"Where are they going
to get this fish from when the fleet is gone? They will need to
import it. Is this then 'sustainably' caught?"
Loss of Food
Security and Self-Sufficiency: It's Intentional
When you take into account all the policies facing farmers and
fishermen, and their consequences, there is no way
around the conclusion that the government is actively undermining
the capacity to produce food.
Van Maanen states:
"They are playing
with our food security. If you are dependent on what
another is willing to share with you, then you have a
problem. Farmers make up 2% of the population.
They grow the food
for the other 98%, who do not know how to do that
themselves. They do not realize it now, but they
will face the consequences of these policies.
If there is no food,
the people will be very discontent."
Post observes:
"Of course, you
can 'build back better. ' Break everything down to zero.
They change nature,
break it down, restore it, turn it into a desert.
At some point, we won't have enough food. The
Netherlands as a 'guiding country' will be crushed. They
present vision reports about crickets and stuff.
They invest more into
this than into the fisheries. Let the bureaucrats be
accountable for these visions. Sure, you get a
subsidy.
But you are also
accountable when this goes wrong."
VI. The
Netherlands: A Case Study of Industrial Agriculture
"Before
the Second World War, all farmers were organic."
Jon
Bergeman,
former
organic farmer
"It is important to tell the history,
how it came to
be that most farmers are locked into
a system of
debt-ridden, large-scale intensive farming."
Alex
Brouwer,
farmer
In this section, I describe how in the aftermath of WWII,
the Netherlands provided fertile soil for the implementation of the
industrial model of agriculture.
The Dutch case study is a
microcosm for what happened to agriculture and rural populations in
other countries.
It also elucidates several negative
consequences of the industrialized model of agriculture,
including the emergence of agribusiness, accelerated
urbanization, and the wholesale destruction of nature.
As of 2022, the Netherlands had a population of 17. 6 million.
62 With a total land area of 41, 543 square kilometers, 63 the
country has a relatively high population density of 523 people per
square kilometer - making it about 14 times more densely populated
than the U. S. 64
In that context, it
is noteworthy that the Netherlands is the world's second largest
food producer. The export value in 2021 was € 104. 7 billion,
although that figure comes with several caveats:
First, in
keeping with the industrial agricultural model, the
exports are heavily reliant on related imports from the world
market, for example of soy, corn, and other
feed for livestock. 65, 66 Total imports amounted to € 72. 5
billion in 2021. 67
Second, not all exports are foods. For example,
horticulture (tulips) is part of the agricultural sector and
accounts for € 12 billion in exports.
Third, the exports also include drinks such as vodka
(valued at € 6. 6 billion). 68
Finally, as a trading nation, there is also a high
throughput of commodities and raw materials such as coffee,
cacao, and even agricultural processing equipment. 65
As of 2023, the U.
S. was still the world's largest food exporter.
The Pre-WWII
Landscape
Before WWII, the Dutch agricultural landscape was
characterized by a patchwork of little plots of land,
separated by meandering brooks and ditches or surrounded by a
diversity of hedges and rows of trees. 69 Land ownership was highly
fragmented.
There are no precise
numbers available for the whole country, but the "Ballumer
Mieden" area on the island of Ameland provides one example. In
this area, the average farmer owned 1. 7 hectares (4. 2
acres); this land was spread out over as many as 33 plots that might
be distributed across multiple villages.
All of these farms were
mixed farms, 70 and agricultural activity was highly
labor-intensive.
Hilde Huizinga, who has written four books on the
history of the Dutch landscape, describes the abundance that
was present at this time:
"It was teeming with
pheasants, hares, partridges, meadow and field
birds, frogs, owls; in some moors it was purple with
lapwing flowers." 69
Farmers created and
cultivated this landscape, reclaiming land for agriculture
where possible and working around the patches of forests, peat
marshes, and brooks. 71
This resulted in a very
biodiverse landscape.
For the government, however, both the fragmentation of
the landscape and the large number of small farmers were
problematic, in its view making production "inefficient" and
preventing the implementation of more "rational" agricultural
approaches. 71-74
World War II:
Famine and Agricultural Destruction
Before World War II, the government had made some attempts to
consolidate land into larger plots, with the stated purpose
being to help farmers. 73
However, concerns
about infringements on property rights and political hesitancy about
government intervention had forestalled a larger reorganization of
the rural landscape. 70
In the last year of the war, during an extremely cold winter,
the population in the west of the Netherlands suffered a horrendous
famine, called the "Hunger Winter, " and an estimated 18, 000
to 22, 000 people perished.
The war also damaged
almost 375, 000 hectares (926, 645 acres) of agricultural land (the
equivalent of 16% of total fertile land as of 1943), and,
compared to 1939, reduced livestock by 36% and agricultural
assets - such as machines, buildings, and storage - by
12%.
Eight thousand farms were
destroyed. 75
After the war, food shortages continued. For years,
bread and other foods were rationed with food stamps. 76, 77 This
situation created a willingness to accept government intervention in
name of the public interest.
"No more hunger" was the
rallying cry. The country needed to be rebuilt, and the
idea that centralized planning could construct or remodel society -
in accordance with visions of modernization - had taken root among
politicians and the policymakers and sociologists who were advising
them.
There was a felt need to
modernize agriculture and increase production, not only for
the domestic population but also to produce surpluses to ameliorate
the trade balance. 71, 75, 77
"Land consolidation serves you and our country" (1946).
Source: City archive of Rotterdam,
VIII-1955-0402, public domain.
Enter the
Marshall Plan
For the U. S. , rebuilding Europe's economies became a
strategic goal during the Cold War.
The U. S. not only
needed Europe as an export market but recognized that Europe's
economic collapse would have repercussions for the American economy.
Strategists viewed strong
economies and general well-being in Western populations as an
important bulwark against communist sympathies.
In June 1947, George C. Marshall, president Harry
Truman's Secretary of State (and later, his Secretary of
Defense), proposed the "Marshall Plan."
The large-scale aid
program to rebuild European economies included, among other
things, the delivery of food, agricultural products,
raw materials, and machines, as well as loans and
education programs.
The U. S. provided
the help under the condition that European countries start
collaborating again. In fact, the push for European
unification - not only to fight communism but also to solve the
"German problem" - was part of both overt and covert U. S.
foreign policy under Truman and then Eisenhower. 78
Because European countries had been at war so shortly before,
the idea of a more united Europe generated resistance in some
corners, 79, 80 but at the same time, there were Dutch
policymakers who understood that a strong German economy would
benefit the Dutch economy, provided that Germany's power could
be reined in. 79
To overcome resistance to
the plan, the United States Information Service worked with
the embassy in The Hague to devise a strategic "Country Plan for the
Netherlands" to influence the attitudes of Dutch elites working in
business, politics, education, the military,
and labor unions. 80
Ultimately, the Marshall Plan investments helped finance the
industrialization of agriculture in the Netherlands and exported
knowledge about how to implement industrial agriculture systems.
Of the USD $13 billion
invested in Europe, 81 USD $1. 127 million went to the Netherlands -
the highest per capita amount of Marshall Plan aid compared to other
countries. 79
Post-War Land
Consolidation
An agricultural advisor
who worked for the government in the after-war period reminisced,
"There were many
small farmers with a tiny piece of land. So, they
had go." 73
However, it is an
open question whether the farmers themselves experienced their
circumstances as problematic.
Sicco Mansholt, a former farmer and resistance member
during the war, became the post-war Minister of Agriculture
and played a leading role in initiating a major overhaul of the
rural landscape. 76
Mansholt and his Ministry
not only deemed land consolidation necessary but in the public
interest82, 83; in implementing the post-war scale enlargement,
Mansholt asserted that "ownership rights should no longer be in the
way of rational production" (p. 121). 77
The "Cultural Engineering Service" (Cultuurtechnische dienst) of the
Ministry of Agriculture worked on the redevelopment of the rural
landscape together with many other parties: municipalities,
provincial government, water authorities, the land
registry, agricultural authorities, agricultural
organizations, and private partners.
Altogether, the
Cultural Engineering Service enlisted the assistance of almost 4,
000 experts, who developed detailed top-down plans that guided
the implementation of land reforms, facilitated by subsidies,
countless committees, collaboration agreements, and
other planning methods.
Bulldozing the countryside.
Source: Dutch National Archives, public domain.
The government shaped voting and other procedures in such a way as
to facilitate land consolidation.
Plots of land could have
dozens of owners, and those who did not show up to vote were
counted as being in favor of consolidation. In the village of
Tubbergen, disagreement about the voting procedures,
perceived to be unfair, led to riots and a major clash between
the rural population and the national police. 71
Land consolidation vote and protest.
Source:
Dutch National Archives, public domain.
More than just a technological intervention, the Netherlands
undertook the remaking of agriculture and the remodeling of the
rural landscape as a large-scale social engineering program. 73
The government considered
the agricultural population to be backward, as some farms did
not have electricity or running water.
Most work was done
manually or with horse power, and some families shared beds or
lived together with their animals. According to sociologists
of the day, modern industrialized society needed these
households to be brought up to speed. 71, 73
The government was also
concerned about possible "radicalization" of the rural population.
84
As a result of these social agendas, the project to make the
division of the land more workable quickly morphed into a
"civilization offensive" geared toward equalizing economic,
social, and cultural differences between urban and rural
populations. 71, 75
In the early 1950s,
there was one public information officer for every 400 farmers.
For example, the
Rural Area Development Program provided technical, economic,
housekeeping, and social advice; some of its reeducation was
aimed specifically at farmers' wives, who were instructed on
how to run a modern household efficiently with a modern kitchen and
a vacuum cleaner.
As the consolidation of
land reduced the number of future farmers and mechanization of
agriculture reduced the need for manual labor, farmers' sons,
meanwhile, were offered career guidance and often steered
toward industrial jobs in the city.
Other tools used to steer
farmers toward industrial agriculture included lectures,
documentaries, movies, and newspaper articles promoting
mechanization, as well as study trips to the U. S. to
introduce farmers to the new agricultural methods and "the American
way of life."
To showcase the new agricultural system domestically, the
government created model villages. One of these is Rottevalle
in Friesland. 85
The Marshall Plan aid
provided 50% of the funds, and local farmers invested the
rest. The village houses contained modern kitchens with
boilers, upgraded water and electricity, and modern
bedrooms.
The farms had tractors
and milk machines. Agricultural schools, farmers,
engineers, and even the then-Queen Juliana visited the
villages on tours that were organized weekly.
An important factor in the success of agriculture's modernization
was to redefine agriculture through the lens of the "agricultural
sciences." Before, agriculture had been the activity of
farmers, but in the modernized view, it was redefined as
the systematic application of biology, chemistry,
physics, and economics.
From this perspective,
the farmers and their knowledge and skills were taken out of the
equation. 14
Agricultural schools, such as the Agricultural College in
Wageningen and the Agriculture Economic Institute, heavily
promoted a new system, 75 characterized by intensification,
mechanization, rationalization, scale enlargement,
"unmixing" of farms (in the name of efficiency), crop
enhancement, and dependence on pesticides, fertilizers,
and fuel.
The scientific approach
to farming introduced monocropping and a preference for flat areas
of land that were as large as possible and friendly to large
machinery.
Social Upheaval
Stories about the Netherlands' land consolidation tend to focus on
perceived successes, such as the miraculous surge in
production or farmers' increased access to running water and
electricity.
However, while the
intensification of agriculture did lead to a significant increase in
agricultural production, the surplus production put pressure
on profit margins, leading to a system where scale enlargement
by taking on debt was the only way for farmers to stay in business.
Moreover, not everyone in the country was content with the
geographic and social upheaval. 71
In fact, as the
government relocated entire farms, farmers who previously had
lived in villages were moved onto newly built farms in the middle of
large, newly created tracts of flattened land. 86 Many felt
isolated.
One farmer's wife who
shared her experience stated, "It became very lonely.
School friends of my children would not visit anymore." In addition,
many of the small farmers were forced to quit. 71 One wonders what
the effects were on the rural culture.
In an article titled "The Reconstruction of the Netherlands, " 86
the authors quote Dutch author and poet Willem van Toorn's
description of the "empty landscape" (Leeg landschap):
"I told her that
years ago, I wanted to show someone my grandmother's
house: out of the town, crossing the railroad, then
through a long silent lane - only, the lane was gone.
And across the
railroad, there was a complete new city in the landscape.
'I felt that my body was protesting,' I said. Not my
thoughts, they were not there yet.
As if your body can
only accept a certain amount of irreversible changes. What
all these planners are forgetting, is that the past is
what we know. We are made up of the past.
If they take too much
away from us, we can no longer think of the future."
As these comments
indicate, the state's intervention left a major mark on the
landscape.
In his doctoral thesis
titled Divided Landscape (Verdeeld Land), which deals with the
history of land consolidation in the Netherlands, Dr.
Simon van den Bergh writes:
"Over the course of
time, about 70% of the Dutch landscape has been overhauled
in land consolidation processes. In some areas, more
than once.
It is not an
exaggeration to argue that during the 20th century, land
consolidation was one of the most important instruments to
initiate changes in the rural society - landscape-wise,
economically, and socially." 74
Between 1945 and 1985,
1. 5 million hectares - 65% of the total 2. 3 million hectares -
were made fit for industrial agriculture. 71
In the process, the
characteristic natural landscape formerly created and maintained by
farmers was almost completely destroyed. Jaap Dirkmaat,
an environmental advocate who pleads for recreating part of the
landscape to increase biodiversity, 87, 88 estimates that land
consolidation led to the removal of 225, 000 kilometers (almost 140,
000 miles) of hedges. 89
These hedges harbored
birds, small mammals, and insects; kept predators out;
and provided natural corridors for animals. 90
The hedges were replaced
by barbed wire.
The shift from mixed farms to monocropping, meanwhile,
led to pollution from pesticides, fertilizers, and
excess manure; the disappearance of biodiversity; soil salinization;
and pest outbreaks. 8
The Humane Society of the
United States' report titled Factory Farming in America aptly
summarizes the effects of the industrial model on rural communities:
"The landscape of
American agriculture has changed dramatically since the 1950s.
Across the country, independent, family farms have
been pushed aside by industrial animal agribusiness corporations
that intensively confine tens if not hundreds of thousands -
even millions - of animals. Factory farms not only
jeopardize the welfare of the animals, but damage
communities, public health, the environment,
and livelihoods - all for cheap meat, eggs, and
milk." 91
As machines replaced
agricultural workers, the countryside was emptied of farmers
and those working the land.
Small farms, too,
were pushed out of business, as they were simply not able to
compete with the efficiencies of scale of the industrial model. 86
These trends, not limited to the Netherlands, led to a
simultaneous rise in urbanization. In Western nations,
workers were absorbed into industrialized economies.
In the global south,
many landless workers ended up living in appalling conditions in
shantytown slums. 5
The Industrial
Model
In his book titled The New Peasantries: Rural Development in
Times of Globalization, Frisian agricultural scholar
Jan Douwe van der Ploeg describes the "material reshaping" of
farming as a result of industrialization and globalization.
He writes,
"[T]he use of
external inputs, new technologies and credit became
dominant, new dependency relations emerged, labour
became increasingly redundant, while ongoing increases in
scale were necessary to overcome the squeeze on agriculture
imposed by external capital groups."4
Illustrating how scale
enlargement - financed by debt - became the only way for a farmer to
stay in business, consider the following trajectory:
At the beginning of
the 20th century, one to two hectares (2. 5–4. 9 acres)
were sufficient to provide a reasonable family income.
Just after WWII, a family needed about four hectares (9. 9
acres).
By 1957, a farm family needed seven hectares (17. 3
acres).
That amount had jumped to 12 hectares (29. 7 acres) by 1961.
By 1970, 20 hectares (49. 4 acres) were needed.
Nowadays, a farmer needs from 60 to 100 hectares (148. 3
to 247. 1 acres) to support a family. 73
Industrial farming models
are diametrically opposed to traditional "peasant" models, in
which the farmer generates all the resources he needs from the land
he occupies.
In another publication
about peasant farming, Van der Ploeg explains:
"Peasant agriculture
can be defined as grounded in a self-controlled resource base.
That is to say,
the resources needed to produce food, fibre or whatever
are largely available in the farm itself. These resources
are part of the patrimony of the farming family and pass from
one generation to the other.
The self-controlled
resource base embraces living nature which is embodied in the
land, crops, animals and the local eco-system and
the capacity of farmers to know, deal with, develop
and convert living nature into food.
Having such a
resource base allows for autonomy and control over production
and development". 14
In contrast, the
industrial model shifts the farm from autonomy to dependency.
The farmer must import
the resources needed for production, including animals,
fertilizers, seeds, machines, buildings, and
also knowledge. To finance this, the industrial farmer
is reliant on credit; in this way, industrial farming becomes
a financial operation dependent on capital markets.
This dependence on
capital markets and external inputs, and commodity price
fluctuations make the industrial farm vulnerable to the volatility
of the global market. 14
In 2020, 50, 000 farmers in the Netherlands had a collective
debt of over 30 billion euros. 65 According to van der Ploeg,
that debt represents,
"10 to 15 times the
total agricultural income earned on these farms (which
fluctuates between 2 and 3 billion per year)." 14
Most of this debt is held
by the Rabobank, which owns about 85% of the agricultural
market. 92
The implementation of the industrial agricultural model basically
led to the creation of agribusiness - a system of global food
production that is to a large extent dominated by multinational
corporations.
Engdahl described (p.
46) the rise of agribusiness in 2007 in
Seeds of Destruction:
"[In 1974], 95
percent of all grain reserves in the world were under the
control of six multinational agribusiness corporations - Cargill
Grain Company, Continental Grain Company, Cook
Industries Inc. , Dreyfus, Bunge Company and
Archer-Daniel Midland.
All of them were
American-based companies.
[Industrial
agriculture] was widely supported by corporate agribusiness,
big New York banks and investment firms who saw the emerging
agribusiness as a potential group of new 'hot' stocks for Wall
Street." 5
According to van der
Ploeg's analysis in The New Peasantries, the globally
implemented industrial agricultural model (which he somewhat
confusingly refers to as "entrepreneurial agriculture") was,
"created by,
and through, the modernization project of the state."
He continues:
"Modernization is a
megaproject that is state-driven and which critically requires
the state.
It is an organized,
multi-level and long-lasting operation to align agriculture with
the global interests of capital and the specific interests of
the agricultural and food industries.
This is the script
that dominated 'agricultural modernization' in Europe and North
America as well as the Green Revolution and Integrated Rural
Development programs in the Global South."
Of note, though the
industrial model of farming continues to be widely promoted, 4 the
peasant (or "agro-economic" model) still provides over half of the
food calories produced globally, and at least 70% of the food
calories in Latin America, sub-Saharan Africa, and South
and East Asia, 14, 93 while it consumes less than 30% of the land,
water, and agricultural resources. 59
Destroy and
Then "Protect" Nature
Interestingly, the Dutch government's response to the
wholesale destruction of the Netherlands' original landscape has
been to apply land consolidation principles for the purpose of
creating protected natural areas.
The government has
donated newly created nature reserves to environmental protection
agencies such as the State Forestry Administration (Staatsbosbeheer).
In the 1980s, conservation was added to the responsibilities
of the Ministry of Agriculture. 71, 73
Sicco Mansholt, who (as already noted) was pivotal to
implementing land consolidation policies, was later a
proponent of "giving land back to nature."
In a 1995 interview,
he shared his regrets about the loss of small farmers, the
loss of nature, and the detrimental effects of the system of
industrial agriculture:
"Because of the fixed
grain prices we have an excess of 40 million tons of grain.
With expensive export
subsidies, we dump it on the world market against
ramshackle prices that drive the farmers in developing countries
into the slums.
Simultaneously,
we opened the market for imports of feed, tapioca,
and that stuff. Also 40 million tons per year.
Because of that we have intensive cattle farming and excesses of
manure.
It is an untenable
condition."83
VII.
Controlling the Land
"It
cannot be too strongly emphasized
that this is a
radical agenda
designed to
control not just the land,
but all
human activity, as well."
Marilyn
Brannan
Associate
Editor, Monetary & Economic Review
Habitat I
From May 31 to June 11, 1976, the UN organized a
conference in Vancouver, Canada, called "Habitat I,"
with the declared purpose of solving two of the "global problems"
that industrial agriculture had helped create
"the rapid and often
uncontrolled growth of cities" and the destruction of nature. 94
If you want to understand
why farmers and fishermen are being pushed off the land and sea,
why healthy businesses are being bankrupted to "protect nature," why
rezoning has tanked the value of your house, why you are not
allowed to dig a well on your own property, why your town or
city is full of roadblocks and bike lanes and skyrocketing parking
fees, look no further.
This conference laid the
groundwork.
The Habitat I
Whistleblowers
From Habitat I on, a number of researchers recognized the
radical nature of the policies being proposed, and they tried
to warn the public accordingly.
These individuals
included:
-
Michael S.
Coffman of Environmental Perspectives, Inc.
(Bangor, Maine)
-
Henry Lamb of
Environmental Conservation Organization (Hollow Rock,
Tennessee)
-
Marilyn Brannan,
Associate Editor, Monetary & Economic Review
-
Rosa Koire,
author of Behind the Green Mask: U. N. Agenda 21
-
Patrick Wood,
editor of Technocracy. news and author of Technocracy
Rising: The Trojan Horse of Global Transformation,
Technocracy: The Hard Road to World Order, and The
Evil Twins of Technocracy and Transhumanism
These critics warned that
the changes proposed by the UN in Habitat I and in subsequent UN
conferences and agreements,
(1) constituted a
stealth shift in governance structure
(2) were deliberately
undermining the nation-state and national legislative processes,
instead laying the groundwork for UN-affiliated NGOs to
implement a global agenda at the local and regional levels
(3) were designed to
destroy property rights, which are the foundation of
freedom, by redefining property rights as rights to use
property under certain conditions in the name of the "public
interest"
Habitat I resulted in the
"Vancouver Declaration, " which includes an action plan with 64
specific recommendations for national governments. 95
The language in this
document was surprisingly candid about its true intentions.
(In policy documents from subsequent conferences, organizers
took greater care to obfuscate their real goals in fuzzy,
bureaucratic, environmental feel-good language.)
The Declaration explains,
for example, that "Land is one of the fundamental elements in
human settlements" and that, to manage humans, control
over land is a prerequisite:
"Land... cannot be
treated as an ordinary asset, controlled by individuals
and subject to the pressures and inefficiencies of the market.
Private land
ownership is also a principal instrument of accumulation and
concentration of wealth and therefore contributes to social
injustice.
If unchecked,
it may become a major obstacle in the planning and
implementation of development schemes. Social justice,
urban renewal and development, the provision of decent
dwellings and healthy conditions for the people can only be
achieved if land is used in the interests of society as a
whole."
(Preamble to Recommendation D. 1) 96
The document also
directed nations to,
"establish as a
matter of urgency a national policy on human settlements,
embodying the distribution of population, and related
economic and social activities, over the national
territory".
(Recommendation A. 1. b)
The action guidelines
were quite specific about the types of policies to be implemented.
As pointed out by
Michael S. Coffman in various articles, 97, 98 the Vancouver
Declaration urged governments to:
Put land under public
control (Recommendations D. 1. a and D. 1. b):
"Public ownership
or effective control of land in the public interest is the
single most important means of... achieving a more equitable
distribution of the benefits of development whilst assuring
that environmental impacts are considered."
"Land is a scarce resource whose management should be
subject to public surveillance or control in the interest of
the nation."
Intervene directly by expropriating and "developing" land,
and through administrative controls and taxation
(Recommendations D. 2. c. ii, D. 2. c. iii, and
D. 3. a):
"Direct intervention, e. g. the creation of land
reserves and land banks, purchase, compensated
expropriation and/or pre-emption, acquisition of
development rights, conditioned leasing of public and
communal land, formation of public and mixed
development enterprises"
"Legal controls, e. g. compulsory registration,
changes in administrative boundaries, development
building and local permits, assembly and replotting"
"Taxation should not be seen only as a source of revenue for
the community but also as a powerful tool to encourage
development of desirable locations, to exercise a
controlling effect on the land market and to redistribute to
the public at large the benefits of the unearned increase in
land values."
In a 2014 article,
Coffman explained that the proposed policies change private property
rights into so-called "usufructuary rights."
It is worth quoting his
explanation at length:
"By definition,
usufructuary rights are the rights to use and enjoy the profits
and advantages of something belonging to another, as long
as the property is not damaged or altered in any way.
Conceptually,
it is similar to renting or leasing something within limits set
by its true owner.
The usufruct system
of property use is derived from the Latin word ususfructus.
Originally it defined Roman property interests between a master
and his slave held under a usus fructus (Latin: "use and
enjoyment") bond.
The Romans expanded
this concept to create an estate of uses in land rather than an
estate of possession. Having seized lands belonging to
conquered kingdoms, the Romans considered them public
lands, and rented (ususfructus) them to Roman soldiers.
Thus the emperor
retained the estate (possession) in the lands, but gave
the occupier an estate of uses." 99
According to Coffman,
Habitat I was the occasion for the public debut of the usufructuary
principle; laying that policy foundation would become the means,
in subsequent decades, of implementing environmental
protection laws and bringing private property under state control.
Although Habitat I
ostensibly was about where and how people should live, it
simultaneously - and more importantly - outlined where people would
not be allowed to live anymore (see Part VIII. Controlling the
People).
As Coffman emphasized in 2014, because,
"unalienable property
rights provide the foundation to liberty and wealth in America,
sustainable development portends dire consequences to all
Americans."
UN Rio
Conference and Agenda 21: Welcome to "Sustainable Development"
Where Habitat I laid the groundwork, the global governance
agenda to control land - and people - really took off with the UN
Earth Summit in Rio in 1992.
At this conference,
"political leaders, diplomats, scientists,
representatives of the media and [NGOs] from 179 countries" came
together to discuss "the impact of human socio-economic activities
on the environment" and create a "blueprint for international action
on environmental and development issues" for the 21st century. 100
It was this conference that put the concept of "sustainable
development" on the map - a term coined by Trilateral Commission
member Gro Brundtland in her 1987 book Our Common Future. 101 (Brundtland
served several terms as Norwegian prime minister and was WHO
director-general from 1998 to 2003.)
Sustainable development
proponents posit that the economic, social, and
environmental dimensions of society need to be rebalanced,
requiring,
"new perceptions of
the way we produce and consume, the way we live and work,
and the way we make decisions." 100
On the surface,
this may sound wonderful, until the details of what
sustainable development means in practice - buried in thousands of
pages of tedious bureaucratic reports - start to sink in.
In a nutshell,
"sustainable
development" means the end of the nation-state, the end of
democratic process, the end of freedom and private
property, and the implementation of a technocratic
dystopia under UN rule.
The Rio conference
resulted in three influential blueprints and frameworks: (1) Agenda
21 (a "blueprint" for 21st-century societies), (2) the
Convention on Biological Diversity ("Biodiversity Convention"),
and (3) the Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).
Agenda 21 and the Biodiversity
Convention, in particular, picked up where Habitat I
left off.
To protect the environment, for example, Agenda 21 calls
for the following:
"Enhancing the
protection, sustainable management and conservation of all
forests, and the greening of degraded areas, through
forest rehabilitation, afforestation, reforestation
and other rehabilitative means."
"Establishing, expanding and managing, as
appropriate to each national context, protected area
systems, which includes systems of conservation units."
102
The Biodiversity
Convention is named as the vehicle to implement these conservation
measures. 3
It, in turn, outlines (in Article 8: In-situ
Conservation) how the land should be divided - by creating nature
reserves and managing the activities around them:
"Establish a system
of protected areas or areas where special measures need to be
taken to conserve biological diversity" (8. a).
"Promote environmentally sound and sustainable development in
areas adjacent to protected areas with a view to furthering
protection of these areas" (8. e).
"Regulate or manage biological resources important for the
conservation of biological diversity whether within or outside
protected areas, with a view to ensuring their
conservation and sustainable use" (8. c).
Coffman astutely observes
that the conservation measures are formulated so broadly as to apply
to nearly all land use activities. In essence, this puts
all land under public control, by treaty, in the name of
"protecting biodiversity." The Biodiversity Convention itself was
formulated in generic terms, with the implementation language
not added until after the treaty's ratification.
The implementation details are contained in a 1000-plus-page
document called the Global Biodiversity Assessment (GBA),
published in 1995. 99 After combing through the document,
Coffman reiterated that the GBA, just like Habitat I,
attacks property rights by establishing the usufruct concept. 99
He considered the
following statements from the document (Section 11. 2. 3. 1. 2 and
Section 12. 7. 5) particularly noteworthy:
"Property rights are
not absolute and unchanging, but rather a complex,
dynamic and shifting relationship between two or more parties,
over space and time."
"…[O]ne option for ensuring against excessive species depletion
is the allocation of property rights in order to create
markets."
"A common characteristic of many ecosystems is that resources
are non-exclusive in their use: they are in the nature of
local…public goods. […] Property rights can still be
allocated to environmental public goods, but in this case
they should be restricted to usufructual or user rights.
Harvesting quotas, emissions permits and…development
rights…are all examples of such rights."
"The point here is that the reallocation of property rights
implies the redistribution of assets."
Coffman warned,
moreover, that where Habitat I was only a declaration,
the GBA under the Biodiversity Convention has the status of a
legally binding treaty. 99
The Wildlands
Project
Specifying how the Biodiversity Convention's goals should be
implemented, the GBA proposed a system of protected nature
reserves, surrounded by "buffer zones, " that are connected
through "corridors" - and refers to the Wildlands Project as an
example of this design.
The Wildlands Project:
Plotting a North American Wilderness Recovery Strategy,
published in a special issue of Wild Earth magazine in 1992,
was the first document to introduce the "reserve-buffer-corridor"
model.
The five authors of "The Wildlands Project Mission Statement" were:
Dave Foreman, a
radical and misanthropic environmentalist who previously had
been convicted of a conspiracy to blow up power transmission
lines 103, 104
Dr. Reed Noss, according to whom "the collective
needs of non-human species must take precedence over the needs
and desires of humans, " who later elaborated the ecosystem
conservation concept with grants from The Nature Conservancy and
the National Audubon Society 103
John Davis, who later became executive director of the
Rewilding Institute
David Johns, an adjunct political science professor at
Portland State University, who later became the first
executive director of the Wildlands Project, as well as
co-founder of the Yellowstone to Yukon Conservation Initiative
that aims to install a 2, 000-mile Yellowstone-to-Yukon
ecoregion 105, 106
Michal Soulé,
a conservation biologist and rewilding advocate
To fathom the mindset and scope of what these and other influential
"wild earthlings" envisioned, it is worth extensively
summarizing their mission statement [bold added]:
Foreman and co-authors propose an,
"audacious plan" to
"help protect and restore the ecological richness and native
biodiversity of North America through the establishment of a
connected system of reserves."
Their vision is "simple":
"[W]e live for the
day when Grizzlies in Chihuahua have an unbroken connection to
Grizzlies in Alaska; when Gray Wolf populations are continuous
from New Mexico to Greenland; when vast unbroken forests and
flowing plains again thrive and support pre-Columbian
populations of plants and animals."
Their vision is also
"continental" - "from Panama and the Caribbean to Alaska and
Greenland" - and it calls for the reintroduction of large predators.
Recognizing that Earth has been "colonized by humans, " they regret
the lack of pre-Columbian "true wilderness" that is "free from
industrial human intervention" (that is, free from "roads,
dams, motorized vehicles, powerlines, overflights,
or other artifacts of civilization").
To achieve their vision of vast landscapes unfettered by human
activity, they propose the aforementioned system of "core
reserves, " corridors, and buffers.
Additionally, they advocate for restoration of "already
degraded" landscapes outside the system of reserves. Ominously
(because who would have thought that this idea of a bunch of anarcho-environmentalists
would take root), they envision that "Implementation of such a
system would take place over many decades."
Finally, they assert that their "new agenda" is "based on the
needs of all life, rather than just human life, " a statement
that foreshadows the "Rights of Nature" movement that wants to
attribute legal personhood to rivers and natural areas, and
the erasure of the concept of human rights in the proposed changes
to
the WHO's International Health
Regulations. 107
If fully implemented, the Wildlands Project would turn at
least half of the U. S. into protected areas. 103, 108
To understand where
people still would be allowed to live in the "Wildlands" system,
the Wildlands Project map is informative.
Conservation
Goes Global
In subsequent decades, the Wildlands framework became the
blueprint for global ecosystem conservation efforts, and it is
the major reason why people are being pushed off their lands and,
in the case of fishermen, out of their fishing grounds.
A global review published
by the UN Convention on Biological Diversity in 2005 details (p.
86) the perceived success of the ecological network model:
"[T]his review,
although describing only a proportion on [sic] the initiatives
that are currently underway, nevertheless traced 168
ecological networks, corridors and comparable projects,
plus 26 flyways, 459 Man and Biosphere Reserves and 11
Bonn Convention agreements to conserve populations of migratory
species." 109
These ecological networks
(defined as "strictly protected areas, buffered and linked by
green corridors") span the globe - they can be found in North and
South America, Africa, Europe, Asia,
Australia, and even Russia.
The review (pp. 87,
89) specifies a number of features of protected areas:
They are not
primarily created by national governments (with legislative due
process), but instead tend to be initiated by NGOs and,
in some instances, "regional governments."
Instead of being run by the central government, they are
run by "many partners."
They are "planned as part of national, regional and
international systems."
They are "community assets" of "international concern." 109
In other words, the
ecological reserves cross national boundaries and also span
different levels of government; by design, they undermine the
sovereignty of the nation-state.
An Army of NGOs
In 1968, UNESCO passed Resolution 1296, through which
NGOs could get consultative status at
the UN.
With this, they had
a seat at the table developing UN policies that were implemented
globally - by the very same NGOs. 103 In essence, this created
a fifth column of governance, masquerading as grassroots civil
society.
During the Rio
conference, for example, as many as 1, 400 accredited
NGOs were formal participants in the official proceedings, and
"thousands more" participated in a parallel "Global Forum." 110
The activities of these NGOs bypass and undermine the activities of
nation-states.
Brannan explained in 2014
that NGOs,
"constitute the
machinery that is actually driving the movement toward global
governance.
They organize and
coordinate the agenda from the highest chambers of governance at
the UN down to county commissions and city councils at the local
level" (see The NGO Toolbox). 103
Some of the most
important NGO players in this "machinery, " according to Brannan,
are the International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural
Resources (IUCN), the World Wide Fund for Nature or WWF
(called the World Wildlife Fund in the U. S. and Canada),
the World Resources Institute, and, in the U. S. ,
the Sierra Club.
The NGO Toolbox
NGOs use a wide array of tools to influence public opinion and
implement UN policies. 103, 109
Some of these include the
following:
-
Lobbying at all
levels of government
-
Churning out
research reports that support their policies
-
Creating
documentaries and running advertising and other media
campaigns that support their causes
-
Integrating the
Agenda 21 ideology in education curricula
-
Using lawfare
(the use of legal action to damage or delegitimize
opponents)
-
Supporting land
reforms and spatial planning
-
Attacking
dissenters
-
Establishing
community forests
-
Creating forest
and other certification schemes
-
Offering training
courses
-
Creating
conservation easements
Wildlands: The
Senate Never Voted on It
In 1994, the Biodiversity Convention was up for a vote in the
U. S. Senate. On the day of the vote, freedom
advocates managed to send Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-TX) a copy
of the Global Biodiversity Assessment and the maps of what the U. S.
would look like if the Wildlands Project were implemented.
Just an hour before the
vote, Hutchison presented these materials on the Senate floor.
After this,
then-Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell (D-ME) withdrew from the
treaty, and the convention was never voted on. 99, 108
Despite the lack of a formal vote, the U. S. went ahead
and implemented the bioconservation agenda anyway. In June
1993, through Executive Order No. 12852, President
Bill Clinton set up the President's Council on Sustainable
Development to develop guidelines to implement Agenda 21. 103, 111
Council members included
NGO leaders such as Jonathan Lash (president of the World Resources
Institute [WRI]) and Jay D. Hair (president of IUCN), as
well as "green"-oriented government officials, cabinet
members, and business leaders.
In August of that same year, the Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) put itself forward, in a national performance
review of ecosystem protection, as "a catalyst to the national
vision for change," for example, by,
"amending guidances
and regulations to promote ecosystem protection."112
EPA stated that the
Executive Branch ,
"develop a
national ecosystem management policy which is implemented
jointly by the appropriate federal agencies pursuant to an
executive order" and "develop and implement coordinated
ecosystem protection initiatives among federal, state,
and local governments."
The President's Council
on Sustainable Development and the EPA were not the only parties set
to work on implementing Agenda 21 and its associated plans.
In addition,
Clinton asked natural resource and environmental agencies "to
evaluate national policies…in light of international policies and
obligations" (such as the Convention on Biological Diversity and
Agenda 21) and provide a strategy to "amend national policies to
achieve international objectives."99
Coffman is very critical of this overreach:
"Amending national
policy is a Constitutional responsibility of the U. S.
Congress, not the executive branch, and certainly
not federal agencies.
Yet certain
bureaucrats believe their responsibility to international
objectives superseded the U. S. Constitution and their
mandate to serve the American people." 97
During his presidency,
Clinton provided diplomatic immunity to as many as 21 international
institutions, including the environmental protection NGOs
represented on the president's council, such as the IUCN.
These immunities can
extend to members of the "immune" organization. 113
On its website as of
2023, the IUCN states:
"The International
Union for Conservation of Nature…is a membership Union uniquely
composed of both government and civil society organisations.
By harnessing the
experience, resources and reach of its more than 1, 400
Member organisations and the input of some 15, 000 experts,
IUCN is the global authority on the status of the natural world
and the measures needed to safeguard it." 114
It is not clear whether
the IUCN has extended its diplomatic immunity status to its members.
In short, through a piecemeal approach, the Wildlands
plan was implemented as parts of other Acts (such as the Clean Air
Act and the Endangered Species Act), by administrative
measures enforced by the EPA, and by international NGOs,
including, in the case of the IUCN, organizations
granted diplomatic immunity. 103
Wildlands in
Europe: Natura 2000
The EU - itself a regional governance body with no democratic
accountability115 - has implemented the Wildlands blueprint through
its Natura 2000 program, which is set up to protect species
and their habitats under EU law.
Covering 18% of EU land
and 8% of its sea territory, it is the world's largest
ecological network. 116
And with that, we are back to the Dutch farmers and fishermen.
The farmers "need to go" because they inhabit the buffer zones
around Natura 2000 areas.
The fishermen are losing
their fishing grounds because of these protected areas and offshore
wind farms.
Whereas the U. S. is implementing much of this agenda by
stealth, Dutch government agencies are not trying to hide
where they get their orders from.
In its "North Sea Program
2022–2027" document, the government states:
"The North Sea
ecosystem and its use are not confined to national boundaries,
nor are the policies and management. The Netherlands
explicitly place the vision, ambition and tasks related to
the North Sea in international context." 61
What is meant by
"international context" is then spelled out as the following:
-
The UN
Biodiversity Convention
-
The UN
Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) - the milestone
indicators on the road to Agenda 21
-
The UN Paris
Climate Accords
-
The regional
OSPAR Convention ("Convention for the Protection of the
Marine Environment of the North-East Atlantic")
-
EU-specific
mechanisms such as the EU Marine Strategy Framework
Directive, European Maritime Spatial Planning,
the Water Framework Directive, and the European Green
Deal
The question arises: Is
the Netherlands still a sovereign state, or has it been
reduced to an administrative unit of the EU and UN?
Life, Liberty,
and the Pursuit of… Property
The famous sentence by Thomas Jefferson concerning "Life,
Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness" in the U. S. Declaration
of Independence was originally phrased by 17th-century philosopher
John Locke; however, Locke worded it in a slightly different
way:
"Life, liberty
and estate (property)."117
At the time, Locke
and others recognized that private property and its protection by
law are the foundation of individual liberty.
In 1997, author and
publisher Henry Lamb (author of The Rise of Global Governance,
long-time Agenda 21 critic, and founding chairman of
Sovereignty International) expounded on this theme:
"To the framers of
the U. S. Constitution, property was as sacred as
life and liberty.
The inalienable right
to own - and control the use of - private property is perhaps
the single most important principle responsible for the growth
and prosperity of America.
It is a right that is
being systematically eroded. Private ownership of land is
not compatible with socialism, communism, or with
global governance as described by the United Nations.
Stalin, Hitler,
Castro, and Mao - all took steps to forcefully nationalize
the land as an essential first step toward controlling their
citizens.
The UN, without
the use of military force, is attempting to achieve the
same result." 118
In his article "Why
property rights matter," Coffman explains that assets can only
start to generate wealth when property rights are protected.
When there is a lack of
protection or there are "strangling regulations, " assets cannot be
used as collateral, thus depriving individuals of access to
capital to generate wealth. 119
That property is the basis for the generation of wealth and
individual independence is beautifully illustrated by the personal
story that author and agricultural engineer Jan Douwe van der
Ploeg recounts about his grandfather:
"The agrarian history
of Europe has seen important episodes during which poor landless
people were trying as hard as they could to obtain a small piece
of land in order to start farming and thus gain at least a
minimum of autonomy, dignity and wellbeing.
My grandfather…was a
rural worker who travelled back and forth from Friesland to
Germany and Holland in order to earn a living milking cows and
harvesting hay - for others.
On one of these trips
he encountered a young lady who…would become my grandmother.
They got engaged and remained so for seven years.
That was how long it
took to save enough to have one milking cow and one pig…assumed,
at that time, to be the minimum requirement for settling
down, renting a piece of land, getting married,
starting a small farm and raising a family.
Having their small
farm and developing it through hard work was their pride and it
allowed them to send one son to the secondary school and then to
teacher training college.
This son became
schoolmaster who…could send a son to the agricultural
university.
This is how
emancipation proceeds and this is precisely what the present day
structuring of the production, processing, trading
and consumption of food denies to many millions of others - who
are in dire need of emancipation." 14
With the destruction of
property rights, people become dependent on those who own the
land, their houses, the roads, transportation,
and the means of food production.
It reduces them not only
to a state of dependence but, ultimately, to slavery.
It is telling that the
usufructuary rights under Roman law defined the relationship between
a master and slave.
Who Owns the
Land?
"You will
own nothing…"
World Economic Forum
-
WEF -
The centralization of food production is part of a larger trend of
global land grabbing and financialization of agriculture. 58, 59
There is a rush to buy up
agricultural land worldwide. This phenomenon is well-known and
documented in the global South, but it also is occurring in
post-Soviet Eurasia, Canada, the United States,
Ukraine, and Europe. 58
Bill Gates, for example,
who was already one of the largest landowners in the U. S.
with close to 270, 000 acres of land, expanded this amount in
2022 with the purchase of 2, 100 acres in North Dakota. 120
Working through private
companies, the Chinese are also purchasing U. S. land.
Joseph Mercola
reports that they currently own American farmland that is worth $1.
4 billion. 121
Van der Ploeg and
co-authors, meanwhile, have described how land deals
throughout Europe are occurring in nontransparent ways through
middlemen, with deals reported in Romania, Bulgaria,
Poland, and Hungary.
The concentration of
landownership in Europe is driven by agricultural policies and
subsidies that, according to van der Ploeg,
"favor elite large
holdings, marginalize small farms and block the entry of
prospective farmers." 58
A lesser-known fact
concerning the war in Ukraine is that aid has been provided on the
condition of creating a land market.
As a result, while
civilians are fighting and dying in the war, their land is
being sold to oligarchs and large agribusiness policies "with help
and financing from Western financial institutions."122
Frédéric Mousseau,
co-author of the report War and Theft: The Takeover of Ukraine's
Agricultural Land writes (as quoted by Off-Guardian journalist
Colin Todhunter):
"Despite being at the
centre of news cycle and international policy, little
attention has gone to the core of the conflict - who controls
the agricultural land in the country known as the breadbasket of
Europe.
[The] Answer to this
question is paramount to understanding the major stakes in the
war."
122
Todhunter reports how the
finances flow:
"Most of the
agribusiness firms are substantially indebted to Western
financial institutions, in particular the European Bank
for Reconstruction and Development, the European
Investment Bank, and the International Finance Corporation
- the private sector arm of the World Bank.
Together, these
institutions have been major lenders to Ukrainian
agribusinesses, with close to US$1. 7 billion lent to just
six of Ukraine's largest landholding firms in recent years." 122
In addition, van
der Ploeg and co-authors have described the phenomenon of "green
grabbing" - the buying up of agricultural land for forest
conservation and climate mitigation.
Urbanization is also
encroaching upon agricultural land in a process driven by
speculation on the difference in value between agricultural and
non-agricultural land. 58
As should by now be apparent, land grabbing and centralization
of food production go hand in hand, particularly as the
agricultural sector has increasingly been financialized through a
surge of equity-related investments. 58, 60, 123
For the 2010–2014 period,
according to scholar Jennifer Clapp, investment funds
accounted for up to one-third of financial investments in the entire
agrifood sector. 60
A 2020 investigation
titled "Barbarians at the barn: private equity sinks its teeth into
agriculture," by a non-profit that supports small farmers,
reported that as of 2004, there were only seven investment
funds dedicated to land and agriculture; by 2009, that number
had risen to 55, and by early 2020, more than 300 funds
were "active in the area of food and agriculture, " accounting for
nearly US$300 billion. 123
The article also
described the impact of the private equity takeover on local
communities:
"For many, just
the term 'private equity' strikes fear because so many deals
have led to workers in the target firms being laid off,
management teams replaced, the companies stripped of
equity and filled with debt, and eventually crippled and
shut down."
The same handful of large
asset management companies (BlackRock,
Vanguard, State Street, Fidelity, and
Capital Group) plays the lead role in these funds.
Clapp explains:
"First, a small
number of large asset management companies act as intermediaries
that funnel vast sums of money into equity shares in publicly
listed transnational agribusiness firms through a variety of
investment funds that enable investors to gain exposure to the
sector.
Second, company
ownership data reveals that those same giant asset management
companies are among the largest shareholders of the dominant
agribusiness firms." 60
The phenomenon by which
different corporations in a sector share the same owners is referred
to as "common ownership."
The combination of land grabs and centralization of ownership of
food production may lead to a "potentially explosive situation,"
warn van der Ploeg and colleagues. 58
They describe the "uphill
battle" faced by small farmers as the market is flooded with cheap
products from corporate agricultural producers who benefit from
cheap inputs from the global market and economies of scale.
As the small farmers are
bankrupted, the corporations and equity investors pick up the
land, creating a self-reinforcing feedback loop.
Simultaneously, the same market forces create significant
barriers to entry for anyone who wishes to start a farm.
An Accelerating
Agenda
The agenda to move land and sea under UN control is accelerating on
multiple fronts.
For example:
In 2021, the UN
announced the "Decade on Ecosystem Restoration."
As part of this
effort, the UN is putting to work all of its
non-governmental allies - such as the UN Environment Programme (UNEP),
the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), the World
Bank, and IUCN - to increase the "protection and revival
of ecosystems all around the world."124
After the UN Biodiversity Conference (COP 15) in Montreal,
Canada in December 2022, the UN announced new biodiversity
conservation targets, with plans to increase both the
conservation and restoration of nature to "at least 30%" by
2030.
The conservation
target refers to "at least 30% of the world's lands,
inland waters, coastal areas and oceans"; restoration
targets "at least 30% of degraded terrestrial, inland
waters, and coastal and marine ecosystems."125
In lockstep with the UN, the EU, too, has
biodiversity policy targets for 2030.
With 18% of its land
area and 8% of its marine territory already designated as
protected areas, 117 the EU aims to increase protected areas to
30% of land and sea, 23 and, via the highly controversial
"Nature Restoration Law" adopted in June 2023, to restore
at least 20% of both.
Ambitiously,
the goal for 2050 is restoration of "all ecosystems in need of
restoration." 126
As these initiatives
indicate, "conservation" and "restoration" are distinct
targets for both the UN and the EU. For conservation,
the standards about what constitutes the "biodiversity" that needs
to conserved can be quite arbitrary. The "North Sea Programme
2022–2027" policy document illustrates the case in point.
It states (p. 32),
"The partially
natural and partially human dynamics make it a complex exercise
to formulate and evaluate measures to influence the different
components of a healthy North Sea ecosystem. Just
determining a historical reference is already difficult." 61
Following this line of
reasoning, the shadow from a fisherman's boat is interfering
with nature but a wind turbine's blades are not; nitrogen from
farming is not allowed to disturb "habitats" but offshore wind farms
create "positive effects" when a new ecosystem forms around them.
127
What does the restoration goal mean? The European Commission
explains,
"[N]ot all restored
areas have to become protected areas. Most of them will
not, as restoration does not preclude economic activity.
Restoration is about
living and producing together with nature by bringing more
biodiversity back everywhere, including to the areas where
economic activity takes place like managed forests,
agricultural land and cities for example." 128
Given that areas targeted
for restoration outside the conservation zones are not allowed to
"deteriorate, " there is justifiable fear - even in the current
Dutch cabinet that works hand in glove with the EU and UN - that the
restoration goals may halt economic activity such as building
houses. 129
Restoration
Nation
Among the EU's restoration targets are rewetting of drained
peatlands under agricultural use, increasing biodiversity in
agricultural ecosystems, removing river dams, and
restoring marine habitat sediment bottoms (bottom trawling will be
forbidden). 130
With this type of logic,
it would not be surprising if Dutch policymakers proposed bringing
back the peatbogs that covered the Netherlands 2, 000 years ago or
protecting sand castles at the bottom of the sea, or for U. S.
policymakers to propose taking American nature back to the
pre-Colombian era.
And in fact...
Peatlands
A large part of Dutch land lies below sea level. It used to be
a big swamp that was flooded half of the time.
Roman historian Pliny
the Elder described the situation in 47 AD in his Naturalis
Historia:
"Twice a day the
ocean floods a large part of their territory, so it is not
easy to tell whether this land should be counted as belonging to
the sea or to the land.
There, poor
people try to stay alive by building houses on steep hills.
These mounds are
raised by hand to a height just above the highest tide. At
high tide they look like castaways. They live on fish
which they catch in the mud with nets.
They warm their
chilled limbs by burning mud, which they have allowed to
dry more by the wind than by the sun. They drink nothing
but rainwater, which they keep in a pit in front of their
homes. […]
And these peoples
speak of slavery when they are today conquered by the Roman
people!" 69
There is a running joke
about the Netherlands:
"God created the
world, but the Dutch created the Netherlands."
The Dutch drained the
marshes and peatbogs and, through an ingenious system of
ditches, dykes, and windmills, reclaimed the land
and turned it into fertile soil.
And what is the EU's
goal?
"Restoring drained
peatlands under agricultural use"!
According to farmers
Bergeman and Brouwer, many pastures have already been turned
into swamps, and in the areas where this has happened,
the cows do not eat the grass.
Agricultural
Biodiversity
The full agricultural ecosystems goal outlined in the EU's Nature
Restoration Law is to increase,
"grassland
butterflies, farmland birds, organic carbon in
cropland mineral soils and high-diversity landscape features on
agricultural land."
To be properly
understood, this goal should be seen in the context of the
Green Deal biodiversity policy goal to reduce chemical pesticide use
by 50% by 2030. 131
One might ask, who
would not want grassland with butterflies and birds?
However, I
discussed when reviewing the history and implementation of
industrial agriculture, many farmers are trapped by debt and
have been locked into the industrial model of agriculture.
Even if they want to change, they do not have the resources to
do so.
The Rabobank usually
provides loans for scale enlargement, but it is less generous
in financing other types of farm transitions.
Farmer van Maanen states:
"They are talking
about a 'green transition.' Well, the transition of a
system that emerged over 80 years, you are not going to
change that in a year.
If you want to do
that, it will be ridiculously expensive. Farmers
have invested in a system, these investments have a
payback time.
It not fair to say,
'Well, it is pity you've done that, but now we have
other plans'."
The transition to an
organic system of agriculture not only requires investments,
it requires time, as production may drop significantly in the
early years.
As one of the farmers I
talked to observed, adopting a new approach also requires
knowledge and is helped along by support from others who already
have made the transition.
Sri Lanka's experience
with banning pesticides and fertilizers overnight shows what such
abrupt changes lead to:
food shortages...
In 2021, the Sri
Lankan government decided to ban agrochemicals with the goals of
increasing organic production, cutting the cost of
agrochemical imports, and reducing illnesses resulting from
pesticide use; within a year, however, the rice harvest
fell by almost 40%. 132
Rivers and Dams
Just when you thought that nature-protection measures could not get
any more insane, the European Commission is further setting
out to restore "river connectivity" by,
"identifying and
removing barriers that prevent the connectivity of surface
waters, so that at least 25, 000 km of rivers are restored
to a free-flowing state by 2030." 130
Dams can provide clean
hydropower.
They are also used to
create freshwater reservoirs, which are very useful and
life-saving during times of drought - perhaps even more important
than food itself.
In Spain, for
example, many dams were built under the Franco dictatorship to
store water during droughts, and they still supply many cities
with drinking water and farmers with water for irrigation.
In addition, they
are used to manage the flow of rivers to prevent flooding. 133
Removal of dams - those "artifacts of civilization" - was a part of
the Wildlands vision and made its way to Agenda 21 in more woolly
terms.
Agenda 21 states,
"The complex
interconnectedness of freshwater systems demands that freshwater
management be holistic (taking a catchment management approach)
and based on a balanced consideration of the needs of people and
the environment." 102
In her Agenda 21 exposé,
Behind the Green Mask, Rosa Koire wrote in 2011,
"The fight to
demolish the dams has been going on for twenty years.
Commercial fishing restrictions, species protection that
calls for creek setbacks, reduction in river flow
diversion, or dam destruction, it is all for the
'greater good'." 134
She also explained that
there are solutions, such as different types of fish ladders,
that retain the benefits of dams while enabling the migration of
fish; however, that is not the "solution" that UN bureaucrats
are seeking.
In 2022 alone, 65
dams were removed in the U. S. ; the states that removed the most
dams were Ohio (11), Pennsylvania (10), and Virginia
(6). 135
But the EU tops this amount. In 2021, a "record year, "
17 countries removed at least 239 dams, 108 of which were in
Spain. 136
In April 2023,
while Spain was facing one of the worst droughts in 50 years,
the publication The Local posed the question,
"Why is Spain
destroying dams in the middle of a drought?" 133
Rewilding
Initiatives
As Wild Earth explained in the Wildlands Project document, it
is not enough to free wilderness of humans; "true wilderness" also
requires the reintroduction of large predators.
Part of the NGO army is
now advancing this part of the Wildlands vision, calling it "rewilding."
Already in 2011, Koire wrote,
"Across the nation,
in cities near open space, more mountain lions,
bears, coyotes, cougars and bobcats are coming into
populated areas" (p. 57). 134
In the EU, the NGO
called Rewilding is advancing these plans in projects such as
"Living on the Edge." Through this project, the NGO tries to
raise awareness in Central Europe of large predators and promotes
"coexistence."
The NGO explains:
"The Living on the
Edge project came about due to the scarcity of brown bears,
wolves and Eurasian lynx in Austria.
By contrast,
wolves are returning to Germany, there are thriving
populations of brown bears in Slovenia, and Switzerland
hosts a significant lynx population.
This inequality
prompted the team to ask why some areas of Central Europe have
healthy predator populations (and others don't), and
whether humans and large carnivores can actually co-exist across
the densely populated region." 137
The Netherlands is one of
the most densely populated countries in the world and the most
densely populated in Europe.
According to reports from
citizens who live around one of the Netherlands' largest natural
areas, the Veluwe, about 40 wolves are roaming the
country again. Because there is no ecological infrastructure
to support the wolves, they wreak havoc on farmers,
killing sheep and cattle.
As they become habituated
to humans, they may pose a threat to people as well.
Some suspect that the wolves did not just happen to walk over from
Germany but were deliberately brought to the Netherlands.
Thirteen NGOs in the
Netherlands alone work together to support this "rewilding" effort,
including the WWF. 138, 139
The "Rights for
Nature" Movement
Concurrent with conservation, restoration, and rewilding
efforts, a movement is working to create legal personhood for
nature.
Even more so than with
other parts of this conservation agenda, the "Rights for
Nature" movement shows that the real purpose is not environmental
protection but to attack property rights.
The Global Alliance for
the Rights of Nature (GARN) explains:
"Rather than treating
nature as property under the law, rights of nature
acknowledges that nature in all its life forms has the right to
exist…. […]
[F]or millennia,
legal systems around the world have treated land and nature as
'property.' Laws and contracts are written to protect the
property rights of individuals, corporations, and
other legal entities.
As such,
environmental protection laws legalize environmental harm by
regulating how much pollution or destruction of nature can occur
within the law. […]
[N]ature has
inalienable rights, just as humans do. This premise
is a radical but natural departure from the assumption that
nature is property under the law."140
The "Rights for Nature"
movement demands a change in governance of all natural systems and
the global implementation of rights for nature.
To achieve this,
they,
"collaborate with
global movements to establish laws and constitutional
amendments." 141
The movement heralds the
notion of granting legal personhood to nature as a welcome shift
from an anthropocentric to an ecocentric worldview. 142
At least six countries have passed this type of legislation in parts
of their jurisdictions; among them are municipalities in the state
of Pennsylvania.
"Is this necessary?",
Shanthi van Zeebroeck asks in an article titled "Nature
Rights: What Countries Grant Legal Personhood Status to Nature
and Why?"
In a lucid moment,
van Zeebroeck reflects:
"There is also a
problematic issue of ownership of property.
If we consider nature
as a person, is it also not true then that man may not own
nature in the form of land and homes, or have riparian
rights over it?
Ultimately, if
we take it even further, then no one will be able to own
anything related to nature." 142
The movement to create
legal personhood for nature is even more concerning when seen in the
light of the recent proposals for amendments to the WHO's
International Health Regulations to remove the concept of human
rights from the treaty.
The proposed change is to
remove the sentence "with full respect for the dignity, human
rights and fundamental freedoms of persons" and replace it with
"equity, coherence, inclusivity."143
With the proposed changes to the International Health Regulations,
the WHO is trying to anchor its "One Health" concept into global
legislation.
Under
One Health, "health" - as
defined by WHO - is achieved by surveilling and controlling
"pandemic potential" in ecosystems, animals, and humans.
116
The "equity" that is
supposed to replace human freedom would apply not only to humans but
also to ecosystems and animals. The Lancet explained the
reasoning behind this shift in a January 2023 editorial titled "One
Health: a call for ecological equity":
"Modern attitudes to
human health take a purely anthropocentric view - that the human
being is the centre of medical attention and concern.
One Health places us
in an interconnected and interdependent relationship with
non-human animals and the environment. The consequences of
this thinking entail a subtle but quite revolutionary shift of
perspective: all life is equal, and of equal concern.
This understanding is
fundamental to addressing pressing health issues at the
human–animal–environment interface." 144
What does this imply? How
would this work when applied to law?
If a habitat or a species
is given the same interests as humans, how would this be
litigated when there are conflicts? These pieces of nature with
"legal personhood" cannot defend themselves; they will be defended
by people - and probably by people working for NGOs on behalf of the
UN.
The former WHO official David Bell summarized the insanity of
this reasoning in a piece titled "Your daughter for a rat?":
"There are various
degrees of acceptable insanity, but in general you would
not want a person who thought a toad had the same intrinsic
value as your mother to manage her Alzheimer's disease."145
VIII.
Controlling the People
Returning to the Habitat I conference, it is important to note
that where one side laid the groundwork for control over land,
the other part determined where and how people should live.
In fact, in a
section titled "Opportunities and Solutions, " the Vancouver
Declaration shares a vision of using cities ("human settlements") as
the focal point for global transformation:
"[H]uman settlements
must be seen as an instrument and object of development.
The goals of settlement policies are inseparable from the goals
of every sector of social and economic life.
The solutions to the
problems of human settlements must therefore be conceived as an
integral part of the development process of individual nations
and the world community." 1
Redistribution
and Redevelopment
According to the Declaration, changes in land use policies -
addressed "at national and international levels" - would tackle
development, economic, and social problems such as
inequitable economic growth; social, economic,
ecological, and environmental degradation; world population
growth; uncontrolled urbanization; rural backwardness; and rural
dispersion.
Among other things,
this would require nations to devise policies that "facilitate
population redistribution to accord with the availability of
resources."
As noted previously, these provisions were integrated into
subsequent UN documents and conferences such as Agenda 21,
which dedicates a whole chapter to "Promoting sustainable settlement
development."102 Currently, these same objectives are being
pursued under Sustainable Development Goal 11 (SDG 11):
"Prioritizing Inclusive, Safe, Resilient and Sustainable
Cities and Communities."146
By 2050, according to UN projections as of 2018, over
two-thirds (68%) of the world's population will live in urban areas.
147 The crossover where more of the global population now lives in
urban than rural areas happened in the early 2000s.
The UN documents and
conferences clearly show that urbanization and the rapid rise of the
"smart city" were not just "natural" processes that coincided with
industrialization - these phenomena were carefully managed through
global policies implemented on a local level. These policies
pursued an intentional redistribution of the population and of
assets.
Let's look at an example of the results of the UN's "settlement"
policies. As a forensic commercial real estate appraiser
specializing in eminent domain valuation, the late Rosa Koire
ran into the urban side of human settlement policy in 2005 when she
discovered that a major area in her California home town of Santa
Rosa was up for redevelopment.
Homeowners were being
defrauded off their property in the process, either by the
municipality declaring the properties "blighted" or burdening the
homeowners with excessive and intrusive regulations and then citing
them for noncompliance. Properties also were taken by eminent
domain.
Koire further discovered that throughout the country, former
commercial, industrial, and multi-residential land was
being rezoned into mixed-use "smart growth zones." These areas - the
forerunners of current "smart cities" - were then targeted for
redevelopment with high-density, mixed-use buildings that had
retail on the ground floor and two or three stories above.
According to Koire,
"single family homes are not part of the plan." The areas stimulated
bike use and public transport, and discouraged use of cars by
limiting thoroughfares, creating one-way roads, putting
obstacles on roads, and limiting parking opportunities. 134
As Koire soon learned, Agenda 21 and the UN army of NGOs
posing as "civil society" were behind these redevelopment plans,
which often were implemented without local residents being aware of
what was happening.
She wrote (pp.
15-18):
"Redevelopment
projects are one implementation arm of the UN plan. […]
High density urban development without parking for cars is the
goal. They call them Transit Villages. 'Human
habitation' is now restricted to lands within the Urban Growth
boundaries.
It makes
rural/suburban development prohibitive. From
stream/creek/ditch protection to watershed protection, to
bayland/inland rural corridor prohibitions, to increased
species protection (lists are growing), the use of land is
greatly limited. Water well monitoring and loss of water
rights reduces the opportunity for living outside of cities."
134
In addition,
because the conservation paradigm considers roads to be a problem,
Koire found that maintenance and construction of the roads leading
suburban and rural areas were being defunded.
She observed,
"The push is for
people to get off of the land, become more dependent,
come into the cities. To get out of the suburbs and into
the cities. Out of their private homes and into condos.
Out of their private cars and onto their bikes."
Thus, rural
residents feel the effects of human settlement policies strongly.
Coffman wrote in 2014:
"Rural landowners who
desire to use their own property are shocked when they learn new
regulations increasingly restrict them from doing almost
anything. These regulations ostensibly protect endangered
species, viewsheds, open space, or a host of
other reasons for limiting the owners rights to use their land.
Although the environment and society allegedly benefit from the
regulations, it is the landowner who pays the price
through lowered property values. Rarely does the property
owner receive just compensation for the societal benefit - as
required by the U. S. Constitution and almost every state
constitution." 99
Simultaneously, the
policies cause prices within the urban growth boundaries to
skyrocket.
A 2006 policy report titled "The Planning Penalty:
How Smart Growth Makes Housing Unaffordable" by the Independent
Institute includes an impressive list of regulations that increase
housing prices:
"Urban growth
boundaries, urban service boundaries, large-lot
rural zoning, or other restrictions on the amount of land
available for development;
Purchases of greenbelts and other open spaces that reduce the
amount of land available for development;
Design codes requiring developers to use higher-cost
construction methods or designs;
Historic preservation ordinances, tree ordinances,
and other rules restricting or increasing the cost of
development;
Impact fees aimed at discouraging development;
Growth caps limiting the number of permits that can be issued
each year;
Concurrency rules requiring adequate financing for all urban
services before building permits can be issued;
Lengthy permitting processes that force developers to hold land
for several years before they are allowed to develop it;
Planning processes that allow people to easily appeal and delay
projects, creating uncertainty about when a project can
begin;
Inclusionary zoning programs requiring developers to subsidize
some housing for low-income people, effectively increasing
the price of the remaining housing." 148
In 2011, Koire
warned,
"Slowly, people will not be able to afford
single family homes."
This is becoming painfully evident in 2023,
when housing has become unaffordable even for people with
well-paying jobs.
Martin Armstrong of
Armstrong Economics reports that "over three million Americans
earning over $150, 000 annually still choose to rent as there is
simply no alternative at this time."149 Still worse, 40% of
parents in the U. S. have adult children living with them
because their offspring cannot afford housing - whether to buy or to
rent - at all. 150
While people cannot afford to buy or rent, houses are being
bought up by BlackRock and Blackstone and entire suburban
neighborhoods are turning into "ghost towns."151, 152
In short,
it is becoming clear that a reallocation of assets is taking shape.
The NGO Army Strikes Again
As with the conservation agenda, NGOs have been very active in
the implementation of global plans for urban redevelopment.
Koire found that one NGO, in particular, was very
active: the International Council on Local Environmental Initiatives
or ICLEI (p. 40). 134
ICLEI, engaged in
more than 125 countries, is a "global network of more than
2500 local and regional governments committed to sustainable urban
development."153
Specifically, the
NGO works with "local and regional governments" to "advance the new
global sustainable development agenda - including the 2030 Agenda
for Sustainable Development, the Paris Climate Agreement and
the New Urban Agenda."154
ICLEI is not the only NGO working to implement the UN's urban
agenda, however.
Other players include:
The World Economic
Forum (WEF), which runs the "G20 Global Smart Cities
Alliance." The alliance "unites municipal, regional,
and national governments" to develop "guiding principles for the
responsible use of smart city technologies."
The C40, a "global
network of nearly 100 mayors of the world's leading cities." Mayors
of C40 cities jointly develop policy to "confront the climate
crisis."155
The 40 largest cities in the Netherlands, which are all
working on smart city projects, including "smart economy,
smart mobility, smart environment, smart citizen and
smart living" solutions to achieve government goals in the areas of
"housing, climate, mobility and the energy
transition."156
In Technocracy: The Hard Road to World Order, Patrick Wood
notes that there are already over 200 inter-city networks of the
type operating in the world (p. 53). 157 What they have in
common is that they subvert local government processes and undermine
the national sovereignty.
Wood warns,
"[C]ities are
intended to replace the nation-state as the primary unit of the
global organizational structure."
Koire asked,
"Does it bother you
that a 'non-governmental' organization is made up of local
governments? It should. It is a private group holding
meetings that are not open to the public" (p. 40). 134
Smart,
Sustainable, 15-Minute Cities or Open-Air Prisons?
"Democratic accountability is the only criterion
which distinguishes
a modern traffic control system
from an advanced dissident capture
technology."
~ Steve Wright158
"Sustainable" cities, increasingly, are "smart" cities -
full of cameras, sensors, Wi-Fi trackers, and
other Internet-of-Things applications running on 2G-to-5G networks
that harvest data and surveil uncountable aspects of public and
private life (see Security Cameras in the Netherlands).
Who owns and controls the
hardware and data varies on a case-by-case basis, but be they
municipalities, corporations, or public-private
partnerships, the situation generally is quite opaque.
The public at large has little to no insight or influence over the
data that are harvested.
With the addition of the "15-minute
city, " the plot is thickening. The 15-minute city
is being marketed as a way to make cities more "liveable by ensuring
that all essential services - think schools, medical care and
shops - are within the distance of a short walk or bicycle ride."
The author of a Politico
article could not fathom why protests broke out in Oxford after the
municipality sought to implement this "rather benign urban planning
concept."159 As it happens, the WEF is putting forward this
"benign" concept as a blueprint for lockdowns: "Having your
amenities within reach, " the WEF writes, "became a 'matter of
life and death' during Covid."
Other justifications
offered for the 15-minute city include climate change and global
conflict. 160 The residents of Oxford were not stupid,
however; people clearly saw the concept for what it is:
"a "Stalinist-style,
closed city."161
Security
Cameras in the Netherlands
Across the Netherlands, in Dutch public spaces, hundreds
of thousands of security cameras are registered with the police.
A news report in 2019 cited the national total as around 228, 000,
162 but by June 2023, the total had increased to 321, 000
registered security cameras. 163
On average, the
2023 number translates to 10 cameras per square kilometer.
However, the camera density is even higher in urban areas.
Amsterdam has the highest security camera count; as of 2019,
the city's public spaces had about 100 cameras per square kilometer
- or 253 cameras for every 10, 000 residents. 162
Who owns all of these security cameras? According to a 2023 tally by
the GadgetGear website (which places the total at 314, 000 cameras),
Dutch citizens have registered about 55, 000 cameras (mostly in the
form of "smart doorbells"), as have about 236, 000 companies.
Officially, another 23, 000 are police cameras.
The site's author
reassuringly claims that,
"the police can
request images from citizens when they may have recorded a crime
or, for example, a missing person. So it is
not that the police will have permanent access to the cameras in
the database."164
Regionalism:
Tristate City
We cannot leap into world government in one quick step….
[T]he
precondition for eventual globalization - genuine globalization - is
progressive regionalization,
because thereby we move toward
larger, more stable, more cooperative units."
Zbigniew Brzezinski,
1995 (former National Security Advisor,
member of the Council on Foreign Relations and Trilateral
Commission)
In the summer of 2022, amid the Dutch farmers' protests,
the "Tristate City" project made the news.
Many people
suspected that the plan to create a megacity or "super city" of up
to 45 million people - connecting industrial centers across Germany,
Belgium, and the Netherlands - was one of the reasons the
government was insisting farmers had to move off their land. 165-167
Tristate City is not an official government plan. The
originator of the plan, Peter Savelberg, explained in an
interview with Politico that it is "a city marketing concept and had
nothing to do whatsoever with farmland or construction of houses on
a large scale."159
According to Politico,
"The scheme is
similar to any number of regional alliances across Europe,
like that of the Hanseatic Cities [a network of about 200
European towns and cities] or the Danube Cultural Cluster [a
Vienna-based "cooperation platform" to enhance the Danube as a
"quality cultural brand"], which promote greater
infrastructure connections and collaboration between people and
administrations."
To move the initiative
along, Savelberg has brought together a variety of influential
players, including investors, property developers,
pension funds, and the Dutch employers organization VNO-NCW.
165
Is Tristate really just an innocent "marketing concept"? The fact is
that the Tristate City plans fit exactly with what Wood describes as
regionalism or regionalization: the creation of new governance
layers without making amendments to constitutions.
In a 2022 interview with De Andere Krant, Wood related this
process to "devolution."
He explained:
"Devolution is the
stripping away of political rights from a sovereign entity and
moving it to an institute that has nothing to do with the
original entity. It is related to regionalization.
In this case,
they develop a regional governance layer that pulls away
sovereignty from nation-states and then determines policy for
the whole region. This does not only happen in Europe and
the US; it is a worldwide problem." 101
Coalitions of
corporations, public-private partnerships, and NGOs are
creating regional structures to bypass national governments and
elective processes.
In Technocracy: The Hard
Road to World Order (p. 67), Wood described the "Smart
Region" concept:
"To globalist Smart
City planners, multiple cities bordering each other are
seen as a city-region. These metro-areas are often
referred to as such: Phoenix metro, the Bay Area,
Los Angeles area, and so on.
These regions present
a huge problem to Technocrat planners because each city has its
own degree of sovereignty as well as an independent city
council. […]
What's a planner to
do? The answer is to create Smart Regions as a higher layer of
governance and simply usurp sovereignty from all cities." 157
As Wood further explains
in Hard Road (p. 43),
"Cities of the past
were operated by elected representatives of the people who were
responsive to citizen needs and aspirations. Cities of the
future will increasingly be run by corporations, investors
and social engineers who have different ends in mind."
IX.
Controlling the Seas
As we have seen, the period after the Second World War was
characterized by industrialization of agriculture.
Currently, a
process of industrialization of the seas is underway.
Worldwide, from Korea to the UK to the U. S. East Coast,
countries and regions are initiating massive offshore wind projects.
168
As already mentioned, European leaders announced at the Ostend
summit in April 2023 an ambitious plan to turn the North Sea into
"Europe's Green Power Plant, " which would affect the Netherlands,
Belgium, Germany, Denmark, Ireland, France,
the UK, Norway, and Luxembourg.
If the plans to increase
North Sea wind capacity to 120 gigawatts (GW) by 2030 - and 300 GW
by 2050 - proceed, there will be 30, 000 wind turbines in the
North Sea. For the Dutch area alone, this would mean a
more than seven-fold increase, from the current 289 wind
turbines to 2, 100 by 2030. 169
To understand the scale of this plan, note that to generate
just one GW of power, the U. S. Department of Energy
estimates that it takes three million solar panels or 333
utility-scale wind turbines. 170
According to one
calculation,
"a power plant with a
capacity of 1 GW could power approximately 876, 000 households
for one year" (assuming an average level of consumption and
"assuming the plant operates continuously throughout the year").
171
These offshore wind farms
will be part of a larger "North Sea energy system" with flexible
connections in energy hubs. All this infrastructure will be
connected by thousands of kilometers underwater electricity cables.
172
Because the generation of wind power fluctuates, there is a -
so far, unfulfilled - need for energy storage capacity.
The Dutch government is betting on hydrogen generation to store this
excess capacity (with the proposed mechanism being to transform the
wind power into hydrogen by electrolysis of water).
Therefore, it is
planning to build the world's largest hydrogen plant at sea,
with a capacity of 500 megawatts, before 2031. 173
However,
experts such as Samuel Furfari (professor of political
science and applied science at the University of Brussels and senior
official in the European Commission's Directorate-General for
Energy) dispute hydrogen as a solution to the storage problem. 174,
175
Firstly, the
process to convert energy to hydrogen is highly inefficient -
Furfari calculates that it is as low as 28%.
Moreover, hydrogen
is usually not used as a fuel. It is a costly resource that is
used in the chemical industry to produce ammonia, which in
turn is used in the production of fertilizers.
Furfari
compares "burning hydrogen to generate energy when hydrogen has been
produced by energy" to "keeping oneself warm burning Louis Vuitton
handbags."
He predicts that "any
hydrogen produced will end up in chemistry and not in a motor
vehicle."174
Inefficient,
Unreliable, and Expensive
Experiences with "renewable" energy so far have shown that they are
unable to replace fossil fuels. 176
Despite enormous infrastructure
investments and a heavy burden on energy consumers (see The High
Cost of Europe's "Clean" Energy), wind and solar are not
producing enough energy. 177
Because those two
technologies' energy generation is unreliable, the backup
power from gas, coal, or nuclear remains a necessity.
Wind and solar are also highly inefficient; even at maximum
production, offshore wind produces only 40% of its capacity.
178
Lessons learned in Germany provide a valuable case study.
The country was a
forerunner in the transition to a "clean, " fossil-fuel-free energy
system. Some estimate that Germany invested as much as €1
trillion (US$1. 19 trillion) between 2000 and 2021, only
managing to produce 45% of its electricity by 2020 but not its total
energy needs. 177, 179
As its reward for these
investments - financed to a large extent by taxes and consumers -
Germany now has unreliable energy and risks regular blackouts,
is dependent on neighboring countries to augment its energy supply,
and has the highest energy prices in Europe. 177, 180 In February
2023, Bloomberg reported that Germany's economy is shrinking.
181
Despite this obvious failure, the European Commission is still
pushing for a similar transition on the entire continent,
holding fast to the goal to have 100% renewable energy by 2050.
So far, the EU has
invested over "€1 million millions" to produce 2. 5 percent of its
total energy needs. 174
The High Cost
of Europe's "Clean" Energy
The following figures highlight that it is not only Germany that
"has a math problem, "177 as one news account put it when describing
the nation's outsized and illogical commitment to renewable energy;
so do the Netherlands and other European nations caught up in the
EU's energy policies.
Germany will have
$99. 77 billion in additional grid fees from 2022–2030 177
The Netherlands needs € 102 billion euros in related
infrastructure investments 182
To install 60, 000 to 80, 000 meters of cable, the
Netherlands will need to break up one in three streets 182
Dutch consumers' energy costs rose by 350% in 2021,
"costing a household with average consumption over 1,700 euros
more on an annual basis" 183
The Dutch climate
minister Rob Jetten confirmed that € 28 billion for a climate
transition fund would reduce the world's temperature by 0. 000036
degrees Celsius (Jetten could barely keep a straight face when
answering questions about the effects of the investments)184
Offshore Wind
Power: Destructive to Nature
Installing offshore wind farms constitutes a major intervention into
marine ecosystems, of which the full effects are not yet
known.
The research that has
been conducted is insufficient, and much of it is dated,
not to mention being financed by parties (such as the government)
that have an interest in expanding offshore wind. 185
Speaking to this latter
point, Ana Miranda (Spanish member of the European
Parliament), after organizing a conference titled "Offshore
Wind Projects – towards a new environmental failure?", stated:
"Impact studies on
offshore wind projects remain too influenced by public
authorities and by the wind industry and cannot be considered as
independent and objective." 186
Despite the shortcomings
in research, the evidence is piling up that offshore wind is
devastating for marine environments. A 2022 paper titled
"Reviewing the ecological impacts of offshore wind farms"
(published, ironically, in the Nature family of
journals) examined the existing literature and reported that of 867
findings of environmental effects, 72% of the impacts were
negative. 187
Wind turbines were
particularly bad for birds and sea mammals. The list below
provides a non-exhaustive overview of other destructive impacts:
Offshore wind
influences "ecosystem structure, " meaning both the abundance
and composition of species, and the full effects are
unknown. 187
Migratory birds change their trajectory to avoid wind turbines.
127, 187
A 90% decline in diving seabird populations has been observed
near offshore wind farms. 188
On the North Atlantic coast, deaths of whales increased by
400%, coincident with acoustic sonar research conducted
for the construction of offshore wind. 189
Building the turbines requires pile-driving in the sea,
which disturbs all sea life in a wide radius. 173
Offshore wind requires large networks of electricity cables,
which can disturb sea creatures that orient themselves
electromagnetically, such as sharks.
Wind turbines leak chemicals, including BPA and other
microplastics from the blades, hydraulic lubricating oil,
the highly toxic SF6 (sulfur hexafluoride), and metals.
190
Offshore wind influences local and perhaps even global climate,
according to Harvard scientist David Keith and colleagues. 191
Turbine poles change
currents, make wakes, and create sediment plumes,
as can be seen on NASA satellite photos. As one researcher put
it,
"[T]he installation
of the wind turbines not only modifies the wind field above the
sea surface (which is expected…), but…they also modify the
currents and sediment transport in the water."192
Environmental
NGOs Silent About Offshore Wind's Impacts
With this extent of environmental damage already evident, you
would expect the agencies whose raison d'ętre is the protection of
the environment to be up in arms about the industrialization of the
seas.
However, the most
influential NGOs - those who have a seat at stakeholder negotiation
tables - have been remarkably silent about the known impacts and
unknown risks of offshore wind.
Here is how several leading NGOs explain their position on wind
energy:
WWF:
"The WWF is a
worldwide advocate of the transition to 100% renewable
energy and supports the development of offshore wind,
provided that this climate solution does not impede
biodiversity recovery." 193
Greenpeace:
"Wind turbines
are not damaging for animals. […] The climate crisis
is disastrous for many animals. And windmills resolve
those risks." 194
Natuurmonumenten
(Nature's Monuments), an NGO that manages many nature
reserves in the Netherlands: The organization declares itself a,
"proponent of
sustainable energy such as wind energy, but also asks
for consideration for nature and landscape in decisions
about the placement of wind turbines." 195
"Major Changes
in the Sea"
Dirk Kraak, a Dutch fisherman, closely monitors
the science about the environmental effects of offshore wind.
In an interview with me
in May 2023, he shared the following observations:
"They are not doing
sufficient research. The earlier permits were granted
based on research into the effects on birds and bats.
The studies are now
dated; they dealt with hundreds of wind turbines, not
thousands. They are not applying the precautionary
principle.
They are not
answering open questions, they are not filling in the gaps
in the research. And these nature protection agencies know
it.
They always have an
opinion about the fishermen, but they are never vocal
about the effects of these offshore wind farms. We already
notice major changes in the sea, especially in the last
year; things seem to change quickly.
I hear this from all
the other fishermen. We do not find the fish in the usual
places. We find them at other times, in other
places, or not at all. The fish stocks are
thoroughly monitored by the government and associate agencies.
I wonder if they are
observing these changes as well?"
X.
Control Grid Weapons: Economic and Energy Warfare and Hunger
Data Centers
It appears as if the expansion of energy capacity in the North Sea
will, to a large extent, be used to power the
centralizers' control grid.
An article in The Economist titled
"Can the North Sea become Europe's new economic powerhouse?"
reported that concurrent with the massive expansion of offshore
wind, the demand for energy-intensive data centers in the
Nordic areas is booming. 196
The Economist forecast
that this demand will increase by 17% a year until 2030. Meta,
Amazon, and Microsoft, but also corporations such as
Mercedes Benz, are building data centers in the Nordic
countries, where the chilly climate lowers the electricity
costs of cooling servers and a skilled workforce is available.
Elsewhere in Europe,
"data centers are hitting limits." Data centers consume so much
energy that they put grids at risk for blackouts, to the
extent that the Irish state-owned utility EirGrid has decided not to
supply electricity to new server farms.
The Netherlands houses between 180 and 200 data centers, three
of which are "hyperscale data centers" (meaning they are very large
data centers with extraordinary computing power). In 2021,
these used 3. 3% of the Netherlands' electricity. 197
How much energy do data centers require? An article in Fortune,
"The Internet cloud has a dirty secret," cites a Huawei study that
estimated that in 2019, data centers consumed 2% of the
world's energy, with the expectation that this number will
rise to 8% by 2030. 198 In addition to the cloud, the article
cites "5G networks, A. I. training, holography,
and cryptocurrency mining" as drivers of data - and energy - demand.
As this last point
indicates, the control grid's insatiable needs extend far
beyond the energy required for data centers; the control grid also
needs to power telecommunication networks, such as 5G,
and all of the Internet-of-Things (IoT) appliances connected to the
networks.
According to one
estimate, the IoT alone could increase energy demand by 20% by
2025. 199 Another study, published by InterDigital,
estimates that by 2030, 5G and the IoT could increase energy
demand by as much as 37%. 200 5G differs from previous
telecommunication networks because it requires the installation of
small cells every 50 to 200 meters - and these need to be powered.
201
The Datacenter Forum
forecasts that 5G infrastructure could lead to a 160% increase in
energy demand over the 2020–2030 decade. 200
Taken together, the control grid infrastructure,
networks, sensors, data storage needs, and
processing capacity will create an exponential rise in energy
demand. With gas from Russia cut off and nuclear plants being
shut down, it is not clear where the power will come from; it
is unlikely that offshore wind will be able to fill the gap.
Economic
Warfare
For an industrialized economy, access to energy is the most
basic need, and from a larger perspective, it is even a
driver of civilization. That is why the destruction of cheap,
reliable, and abundant energy is nothing less than economic
warfare.
When the war in Ukraine broke out in February 2022, renowned
economist Michael Hudson declared, "America defeats Germany
for the third time in a century."
He explained:
"So the most pressing
U. S. strategic aim of NATO confrontation with Russia is
soaring oil and gas prices, above all to the detriment of
Germany. In addition to creating profits and stock-market
gains for U. S. oil companies, higher energy prices
will take much of the steam out of the German economy.
Thus looms the third
time in a century that the United States will have defeated
Germany - each time increasing its control over a German economy
increasingly dependent on the United States for imports and
policy leadership, with NATO being the effective check
against any domestic nationalist resistance."202
Other revealing headlines
show where Germany's energy transition and foreign policy have led:
"The
deindustrialization of Germany will cripple the EU for a long
time" 203
"Europe's economic engine is breaking down" 204
"Heating crisis in Germany? Government advises blankets and tea
candles" 205
"With blackouts looming, German government holds disaster
preparation day, promotes 'cooking without electricity'"
206
The Economist, too,
acknowledges the connection between energy availability and economic
stability.
The publication cites
Nikolaus Wolf, an economic historian at Humboldt University in
Berlin, as saying that "Abundance of energy tends to attract
industry, " with Wolf going on to predict that as "Europe's economic
epicentre moves north, so will its political one." Is the push
for offshore wind and data cables in the North Sea an act of
economic warfare, not only toward Germany but France as well?
The Economist states:
"At the European
level, France and Germany, whose industrial might
underpinned the European Coal and Steel Community, the
EU's forebear, may lose some influence to a new bloc led
by Denmark, the Netherlands and, outside the EU,
Britain and Norway.
The French and
Bavarians may bristle at the idea of a de facto Windpower and
Hydrogen Community centred on the North Sea. But it would
give Europe as a whole a much-needed economic and geopolitical
boost."196
"Much needed" according
to whom, and in whose interest?
Energy and
Civilization
In a fascinating article titled "World history and energy, " the
scientist Vaclav Smil looks at civilization's historical eras from
the perspective of each era's energy sources. 207
He argues,
"A strict
thermodynamic perspective must see energy - its overall use,
quality, intensity, and conversion efficiency - as
the key factor in the history of the human species. Energy
flows and conversions sustain and delimit the lives of all
organisms and hence also of superorganisms such as societies and
civilizations."
He recognizes that energy
is not the sole determinant of civilization, but his
observations are nonetheless interesting.
Smil identifies six "energy eras":
Each of these eras
coincided with a civilizational leap, with the principal
benefit being improvements in quality of life:
"…increased food
harvests, greater accumulation of personal possessions,
abundance of educational and leisure opportunities, and
vastly enhanced personal mobility.
The growth of the
world's population, the rising economic might of nations,
the extension of empires and military capabilities, the
expansion of world trade, and the globalization of human
affairs have been the key collective consequences of the quest
[for higher energy use]."
Following a similar line
of reasoning, the Soviet astrophysicist Nikolai Kardashev
proposed a system in which he categorized civilizations based on
their energy consumption. 208
In his system,
which extrapolates beyond our current use of fossil fuels,
there are three types of civilizations:
-
Type 1
civilizations use the energy that is available on their
planet.
-
Type 2
civilizations use the energy of a star.
-
A Type 3
civilization can capture the energy that is available in its
galaxy.
From this broader
standpoint, destroying access to energy is not only an act of
economic warfare but an attack on civilization itself. In that
sense, the strategy fits in very well with the Wildlands
vision.
Man-made Hunger
"A country that does not take care of its food supply is doomed."
~ Patrick Schilder, fisherman
"Mass starvation is a process of deprivation
that occurs when actors
impede the capacity
of targeted persons to access the means of
sustaining life."
~ Alex de Waal, research professor
"In a highly centralized and industrialized food-supply system
there
can be no small disaster.
Whether it be a production 'error'
or a corn blight,
the disaster is not foreseen until it
exists;
it is not recognized until it is widespread."
~ Wendell Berry
The major famines of the 20th century were not caused by the whims
of nature, although nature certainly can exacerbate famines.
The famines were caused by politics and policies. In a 1999
article about China's great famine, 209 Vaclav Smil quotes historian
Richard Rhodes, who considered "public man-made death"
possibly the most overlooked cause of 20th-century mortality.
Although Rhodes defined
man-made deaths as those resulting "from war, political
violence, and their attendant privations, " Smil's details
about China's famine show that cold, calculating socioeconomic
policies can be every bit as fatal.
This is a point often emphasized by Tufts University research
professor Alex de Waal, one of the world's foremost experts on
humanitarian crises.
In a Tufts interview
about his 2017 book Mass Starvation: The History and Future of
Famine, de Waal quickly dispensed with the notion that mass
starvation is caused by "natural" circumstances such as food
shortages, overpopulation, or natural disasters.
He stated:
"That is nonsense.
Famine is a very specific political product of the way in which
societies are run, wars are fought, governments are
managed.
The single
overwhelming element in causation - in three-quarters of the
famines and three-quarters of the famine deaths - is political
agency. Yet we still tend to be gripped by this idea that
famine is a natural calamity." 210
As de Waal and scholar
Bridget Conley explain in an article titled "The Purposes of
Starvation: Historical and Contemporary Uses, " the most egregious
instances of mass starvation have been the result of communist
regimes' "titanic social engineering" attempts.
They state, "Soviet
agrarian reform, the 'Great Leap Forward' in China, and
Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge, are the leading contemporary
examples of forcible socio-economic transformation."211
The precise numbers are still unknown, but according to
estimates cited by Smil, during the "Great Leap Forward"
(1959–1961) in which China and Mao sought to reform the country's
agricultural system, starvation killed 30 million Chinese. 209
In southern Russia,
Kazakhstan, and Ukraine, Stalin's agricultural reforms
caused the "Holodomor" (Great Famine); Ukrainians suffered the most,
with the Holodomor causing an estimated 3. 3 million excess deaths
in 1932 and 1933, according to de Waal and Conley. 211
They estimate that
another 1. 2 million died from starvation or related causes under
the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia.
During these top-down agricultural reforms, farmers were
driven off the land. In the Soviet Union, the government
confiscated farms (kulaks) and turned them into collective farms;
those peasants who did not want to join the collectives - about five
million of them - were deported to central Asia or Siberia. 212
In China,
similarly, the regime forbade private food production and
forced peasants to join agricultural communes. 209
There are many other smaller-scale examples. What they have in
common, according to Conley and de Waal, is the use of
mass starvation as "a process of deprivation" intended to "impede
the capacity of targeted persons to access the means of sustaining
life." This can be achieved through multiple policies that reduce a
population's access to food and water.
In short, Conley
and de Waal argue, mass starvation "is produced by leaders'
decisions and serves political, military or economic goals."
They list "nine objectives that can be furthered through mass
starvation":
-
Extermination or
genocide
-
Control through
weakening a population
-
Gaining
territorial control
-
Flushing out a
population
-
Punishment
-
Material
extraction or theft
-
Extreme
exploitation
-
War provisioning
-
Comprehensive
societal transformation
Conley and de Waal make
several other important points about what they summarize as
"starvation crimes."
First,
though "culpability" may initially be "relatively easy to deny,
" the "long duration of maintaining the policies that create
these conditions undermines claims of innocence. In most
of the 'uses' of mass starvation…deprivation was imposed on
thousands of people over multiple years."
Second, the two authors explain that the policies
of starvation can be exacerbated by external factors, such
as "environmental stress, natural calamity, global
economic shocks" as well as internal factors such as "economic
inequalities and policy that cause economic distress."
Third, the processes of globalization of food
markets and urbanization create dependencies for populations
that no longer rely on local food production.
If we compare the nine
objectives of Conley and de Waal to the policies implemented over
the past 70 years, there are some striking parallels.
In particular, we
can note the following:
Agenda 21, or
what more recently has been dubbed "the Great Reset, " is a
megalomaniacal plan for "comprehensive societal transformation"
(#9) that is very reminiscent of the earlier communist visions
of a perfect society.
As we have seen, the urbanization and globalization of
food markets seen in recent decades were not natural processes;
they were implemented through social engineering on an enormous
scale.
Habitat I laid the legal foundation for these phenomena by
redefining private property for the objectives of "material
extraction or theft" (#6) and "gaining territorial control"
(#3).
In addition, the
countless policies that are weakening people's ability to provide
for themselves and sustain their lives - or prevent self-reliance
altogether - can certainly be interpreted as "control through
weakening a population" (#2).
To recapitulate,
these weakening policies include:
-
Policies that
drive farmers off the land
-
Policies that
drive fishermen off the sea
-
Professional bans
on starting a farm or fishery
-
Policies that
restrict access to the land
-
Policies that
restrict access to freshwater, such as the right to
strike a well or use ground- or rainwater
-
Destruction of
dams and freshwater reservoirs
-
Policies that
facilitate corporate control over seeds and attack peasants'
and indigenous peoples' right to control their own seeds 213
-
Policies to cull
cow herds, such as the Irish government's proposed 10%
reduction between 2023 and 2026, 214 or the Dutch
government's intention to reduce the nation's cows by at
least 40% 215
-
Policies to cull
poultry, with 272 million birds culled worldwide
between October 2021 and March 2023 to combat "bird flu"
-
Bans on fishing
and hunting 216
-
ns on access to
community gardens, such as happened in Ireland during
lockdowns 217
Finally, we could
add to this list the policies that have facilitated "economic
inequalities and polic[ies] that cause economic distress":
-
Lockdown policies
that prohibit people from working
-
Policies that
bankrupt the middle class and redistribute assets to
corporations and institutional investors (such as the "Going
Direct" policies implemented during Covid) 218
-
Policies that
cause energy prices to skyrocket
-
Policies that
increase inflation
As Henry Kissinger
famously stated,
"control over food is
control over people."
We are not at the point
of mass famines yet - at least not in the West - but if we take a
lesson from history and look at these policies in their larger
context, we should take heed.
As Ian Fleming's
Goldfinger tells us,
"Once is
happenstance. Twice is coincidence. Three times is
enemy action."
Author and activist Naomi
Wolf has stated:
"As a political
consultant you learn to reason backwards. You look at the
effect - you draw conclusions from the effect [of a policy].
The story is made up, always. You learn that as a
political consultant.
The principals will
set a goal, they will say 'Get us to this goal, ' and then
the Chief of Staff goes to the message shop, meaning the
storytellers, and says, 'Tell a story that will get
people to accept this goal. '
And that is how
politics works." 219
Perhaps the goal is
"just" to control the food supply, and coming events will not
take the form of a famine.
If Mr. Global's
plans for lab-grown meat, milk, and fish, vertical
farms, aquaculture, and insect farms pan out,
there may be sufficient food for the population, albeit not
foods that are fresh, local, or healthy - but even
access to these "pharma foods" could well be on the condition of
signing up for a digital identity, central bank digital
currencies (CBDCs),
and regular medical "treatment."
XI. The
Endgame: Control All Resources, Including Humans
Decades ago, UN watchers like the astute individuals quoted in
this report recognized that the bioconservation agenda is not about
the environment and warned that it is an attack on property rights
and a blueprint for changing global governance by stealth.
Years later, we see
that the creeping and expanding inkblot of "reserves" and "buffer
zones" is indeed destroying ownership rights, access to land,
and the ability to grow food.
But what is the endgame?
In his 1997 article "The UN and property rights," Henry Lamb
cautioned:
"It is now clear that
the UN's land use policies, though refined over time,
have had a predetermined objective from the very beginning.
That objective - as bizarre as it may sound - is to place all
land and natural resources under the ultimate authority of the
UN." 118
His statement might sound
"bizarre, " were it not for the fact that we can see the
implementation of this "objective" happening under our very noses.
Already, 17% of the world's lands - and 10% of marine areas -
are under the UN Biodiversity Convention's "protection."125
The "sustainable development" agenda is actually a rebranding of an
earlier technocratic agenda that envisioned putting the world's
resources into a global common trust to be administered by
technocratic scientists and engineers. 220
In an interview with
De Andere Krant, Patrick Wood explained that this
idea has a lengthy history that ties into the creation of a currency
based on carbon credits.
According to Wood:
"The early
technocrats wanted to get rid of private property. All
goods and resources in a society were supposed to be managed in
a global trust.
Then they would
decide who could use what, and regulate that by using an
energy credit. According to them, this would restore
the balance between man and nature.
These technocrats saw
humans as part of the resources as well. That is very
clear in the earlier technocrat documents; humans had to be
managed like a sort of cattle." 101
By 2021, as Rosa
Koire explained during a "Greater Reset" presentation, it had
become clear that this technocratic agenda means control over "all
land, water, minerals, plants, animals,
construction, means of production, energy,
education, information, and all human beings in the
world."221
These resources are
intended to be inventoried and managed under the stipulations of
Agenda 21 as well as under the umbrella of Environmental,
Social, and Governance (ESG) investment reporting
requirements.
Coincidentally or not, managing all global resources in a UN
trust happens to have been an explicit recommendation of the
Commission on Global Governance in its 1995 report, Our Global
Neighborhood (see The Commission on Global Governance).
To this end, the
global governance group proposed changing the mandate of the already
existing Trusteeship Council of the UN system (the latter oversaw
decolonization processes until 1994), recommending that the
Trusteeship Council "be given the mandate of exercising trusteeship
over the global commons." 222
They continued,
"Its functions would include the administration of environmental
treaties…. It would refer any economic or security issues
arising from these matters to the Economic Security Council or the
Security Council."
What "global commons" did
they have in mind? They would include "the atmosphere, outer
space, the oceans, and the related environment and
life-support systems that contribute to the support of human life."
The Commission
on Global Governance
The Commission on Global Governance was not an official UN body.
However, the UN
partially financed its activities; other funders included nine
governments and several influential foundations, including the,
MacArthur Foundation, Ford Foundation, and Carnegie
Corporation. 222
The group's membership featured 28 internationally prominent names,
including the following:
Barber Conable (U.
S.), president of the World Bank from 1986 to 1991
Jacques Delors (France), president of the European
Commission from 1985 to 1995
Enrique Iglesias (Uruguay), president of the
Inter-American Development Bank
Frank Judd (UK), member of the House of Lords
Jan Pronk (Netherlands), Minister for Development
Co-operation
Adele Simmons (U. S.), member of the Council on Foreign
Relations; president of the MacArthur Foundation; member of the
UN High Level Advisory Board on Sustainable Development
Maurice Strong (Canada), chairman of the Earth Council;
secretary-general of Earth Summits I and II
Yuli Vorontsov (Russia), ambassador to the U. S. ,
ambassador to the UN
The Trust:
Collateral for a CBDC?
In his article "World Wilderness/Wildlife fund declared illegal in
Russia, " published on June 28, 2023, Dr.
Joseph P. Farrell shares the story of a man who
inadvertently received an invitation to attend the World Wilderness
Congress sometime in the 1980s.
To his surprise,
the other attendees included the "highest of high financiers, "
including Maurice Strong and Baron
Rothschild.
During the
Congress, the man learned about plans to establish,
"a world
currency that was to be 'backed' by all the undeveloped wilderness
land of the world." 223
In the same article, Farrell speculates that as the largest
country in the world, with a wealth of natural resources,
Russia's assets may be pivotal to implementation of a
global-trust-backed CBDC.
He suggests:
"Russia is the major
obstacle standing in the way of a world financial system,
the 'great reset, ' or whatever one wishes to call it.
That system simply
must gain control over Russia's tremendous natural resources,
if for no other reason than to balance its own (crooked) books."
Interestingly,
Farrell points out that in June 2023, Russia declared the WWF
as "undesirable."
Its Prosecutor-General
stated that the "WWF uses environmental and educational activities
'as a cover for implementing projects that pose security threats in
the economic sphere.'"
Russia's specific
assertion is that,
"under the pretext of
preserving the environment, the WWF is carrying out
activities aimed at preventing the implementation of [Russia's]
policies for the industrial development and exploration of
natural resources in the Arctic territories, while
developing and legitimizing restrictions that could serve as a
basis for transferring the Northern Sea Route into the exclusive
economic zone of the US."
This connection between
the push to bring real assets under UN control, on the one
hand, and hints that these assets are to be used as collateral
for a world currency, on the other hand, reemerged in
another summer 2023 article titled "BIS blueprint = global control
of ALL assets, information & people" at the Corey's Digs
website. 224
The article references a
recent Bank for International Settlements (BIS) report,
Blueprint for the future monetary system: improving the old,
enabling the new.
As summarized in the
article,
the BIS proposes:
"[A]ll private
property in the real world, such as money, houses,
cars, etc. , would be 'tokenised' into digital
assets within an 'everything in one place' global unified
ledger.
CBDCs would be 'core
to the functioning' of this tokenised world and serve as the
reserve currency on the unified ledger.
Transactions between
CBDCs and tokenised assets, which represent real-world
assets, would operate seamlessly through smart contracts
on one programmable platform."
Multiple Layers
of Sovereign Immunity
The BIS, central banks, UN organizations, and NGOs
happen to be shielded by multiple layers of immunity, as
investigative journalist Corey Lynn reported in her groundbreaking
"Laundering with Immunity" series at Corey's Digs. 113
Since 1946, 76
different international organizations - including UN bodies,
NGOs, banks, and the BIS - have enjoyed sovereign
immunity and other related privileges and tax exemptions.
This
type of immunity means that it is not possible to sue these
organizations in a court of law, nor is it possible to conduct
a criminal investigation or submit a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)
request.
In short, these
entities' assets, information, and people are "protected
to the hilt." Moreover, some of the protected institutions can
extend their immunity to member organizations; for example,
under the BIS, 63 central banks and the Federal Reserve system
have sovereign immunity as well.
Lynn's conclusion:
"[These
organizations] do not operate above the law, they operate
entirely outside of the law."
Putting these various
pieces of information together, we can deduce the following:
Under cover of
environmental protection, large tracts of land worldwide
have been put under NGO/UN control.
The land - and other resources - may be used as collateral for a
world currency.
The organizations that oversee control over this land are
shielded by sovereign immunity.
The BIS and other central banks, which would manage the
world currency, are likewise shielded by sovereign
immunity.
We can hypothesize that other assets may have been moved into
this immunity layer, especially during the pandemic
period.
What this means is that
an important portion of the world's assets has been moved or is
being moved to a governance layer where the rule of law is
completely absent.
CBDC = Land
Trust + Control Grid
As the "BIS blueprint" article explained, the envisioned CBDC
would tokenize real assets as the first digital layer in the global
unified ledger - in other words, the "global commons"
comprising the atmosphere, outer space, the oceans,
and the "related environment."
However, given that
the technocratic system regards humans as resources, too,
it is probable that the smart-grid data generated from people will
also be added to the ledger.
To understand how this would work, the work of independent
researcher Alison McDowell is informative.
Her work is summarized in
the article,
"The central banks
intend to lay claim to bodies and minds, " which explains how
personal data - from smart cities, schools,
computers, phones, and more - are converted into
"social impact bonds" that create predictions about people's
behavior and are then attached with a monetary value in "Pay for
Success Finance" models. 225, 226
This is very advanced
social engineering and automates already existing "behavioral
government" and cognitive warfare programs. 227
One example that was widely discussed in the legacy media is
revealing. Through voluntarily submitted personal data to
Facebook, detailed individual psychological profiles had been
created for a large population.
People have come to
expect such information to be used for personalized advertising,
but in the case of Cambridge Analytica, it was used to bombard
doubting voters with personalized propaganda and "nudge" them toward
different voting choices. 228
Might such technology
have been applied during the lockdown years to "nudge" people toward
obedience or vaccination compliance?
Just as data on humans can be turned into an investment vehicle,
a similar scheme is being applied to nature.
In "Wall Street's
takeover of nature advances with launch of new asset class,"
researcher Whitney Webb explains how the Natural Asset
Company (NAC) converts,
"natural processes
and ecosystems that were previously deemed to be part of 'the
commons, ' i. e. the cultural and natural resources
accessible to all members of a society, including natural
materials such as air, water, and a habitable earth"
into a new asset class. 229
Of course, if you
want to turn natural resources and their "ecosystem services" into
financial vehicles, you need to record or digitize these
assets somehow. The changes proposed to the Biodiversity
Convention in 2021 appear to be preparation for the digitization of
the natural world.
In the 2021 article
"Global blueprint exposed: the takeover of all genetic material on
Earth," Patrick Wood explains how the Biodiversity Convention first
laid the groundwork for the use of natural resources by biotech
companies, quoting from the 1994 book by Pratap Chatterjee
and Matthias Finger titled The Earth Brokers: Power,
Politics and World Development:
"The convention
implicitly equates the diversity of life - animals and plants -
to the diversity of genetic codes, for which read genetic
resources. By doing so, diversity becomes something
that modern science can manipulate.
Finally, the
convention promotes biotechnology as being 'essential for the
conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity.'" 230
Wood elaborated,
"Because
biotechnology and genetic science has progressed so rapidly over
the last 25 years, the previous phrase 'genetic resources'
is now deemed to be unsuitable going forward, and it is
being replaced with the phrase 'digital sequence information on
genetic resources'".
Taken together, the
agenda is clear: everything tangible in the real world - such as
nature and humans - as well as the data that can be generated about
real assets, will be digitized or tokenized.
Another name for this
process is "digital twinning."231 An earlier attempt to model the
world was called the "Sentient World Simulation" (SWS), and
there are questions about whether something similar was tested as
part of the Going Direct Reset. 232
Technocrats assume that if you can model the real world in a
significant manner, you can predict and steer all behavior.
Following this line of reasoning, if you can digitize
everything in the world, you can control it.
And you can sell it as a
financial product.
XII.
Solutions: Securing Our Access to Real Food
Clarifying the
Challenges
Before going into solutions, it is important to reemphasize
that farms operate under different business models, and
depending on their model, their challenges will differ.
There is the industrial
model, which tends to be highly leveraged and deeply dependent
on international market forces.
And then there is the
peasant model, which, as much as possible,
generates the resources it needs from its own soil and local
communities. Both farming models are at risk when they are
located near nature reserves.
The peasant model is the most resilient and is making a worldwide
comeback, as van der Ploeg amply documents in his book The New
Peasantries. Within this model, there is also a lot of
innovation.
Some individuals just
stick to farming, but many farms are hedging their risks by
making their enterprise "multipurpose."
This can include adding
activities such as running a farm-based store; making and selling
cheese, yogurt, meat, and other products on-site;
offering farm-based mini-camping or other forms of "agritourism";
providing farm-based daycare; establishing "care farms" that provide
employment or care for the disabled; managing the landscape; and
more. 14, 73, 233
In its policy proposals, the Dutch government currently
supports the small-scale, "nature-friendly, " multifunctional
peasant farm. 233
However, farmers
operating within the industrial model are debt-trapped. Even
if they would like to change, they are caught in a model in
which scale enlargement is the only way to survive.
The banks will not
provide them with loans to make a transition.
Once these farms become
so large that the individual no longer can handle the debt,
the government, corporations, or institutional investors
can easily pick up the land.
Two Dutch Examples of
Multipurpose Farms
Erfgoed Bossem (https://www. bossem. nl/) in Lattrop near the German
border is a former industrial farm that made the transition to a
smaller organic herd of cows and a diversified business model.
Further, it is part
hotel, part restaurant, and part camping, as well
as offering a location for events such as weddings. The farmer
will give you proud tour and share what the transition has done for
him and his family.
Heerlijkheid de Linde ("Glorious Linden Trees") is an organic cow
farm (https://heerlijkheidlinde. nl/) located near a suburban part
of Deventer.
The cows are on pasture
but can go into the open stable when they prefer, or go to the
milk robot on their own timing.
There is a shop where you
can buy meat and raw milk, and a small café-bar for ice cream
and coffee, as well as a playground with picnic tables and
meeting spaces that can be rented.
Exploring
Solutions
There are many actions that each of us can take - as consumers,
as investors, and as citizens.
It is also important that
farmers (including both organic farmers and those practicing the
industrial model) join forces with investors and citizens/consumers
who understand the importance of strong local food systems and
together cultivate opportunities to "crowdsource" solutions.
The actions outlined below are just a starting point.
The Solari Report's 2022
Annual Wrap Up on "Pharma Food" offers additional suggested actions
and includes sections on "Finding Sources of Fresh Food" and "Local
Food Legislation."
That Wrap Up is essential
complementary reading to fully understand the threats to local food
production, food quality, and food sovereignty.
Consumer Actions
"Never finance
your enemy."
Catherine
Austin Fitts
Vote with your pocketbook: #Boycott Agribusiness.
Do not spend your food
money supporting entities that are centralizing the food supply and
squeezing farmers' profit margins. This means avoiding to the
extent possible large supermarket chains and the corporate brands of
processed foods such chains sell.
If you can afford it,
be willing to pay a premium for healthy, honest food.
Buy from farms directly. Over the last three years in the
Netherlands, people have begun to buy more and more products
directly from farms. 234 If you do not have an (organic) farm
nearby, you likely can buy from an intermediary that buys
directly from farmers.
In the Netherlands,
there are many such intermediaries. I list two illustrative
examples below. If you do not have even an intermediary in
your area, perhaps it is a good idea for a startup!
De Gouden Pompoen or "The Golden Pumpkin" (https://www.
goudenpompoen. nl/) buys directly from organic farmers in the
counties of Achterhoek and Salland.
From them, you can
buy almost everything that you would find in a supermarket - and
things you cannot, such as artisanal sourdough bread and raw
milk. Over the course of time, they have added some
products that are not regional. Customers place orders before
Wednesday, and the products are delivered to their home on
Fridays.
After a customer canceled a very large order of 300 tons of carrots
on a whim, the Frisian organic farmer Pyt Sipma was afraid
that he would need to compost them.
Two entrepreneurial
people in his area heard about his conundrum and used their social
media accounts to sell the carrots.
To everyone's surprise,
thousands of people applied in no time. Subsequently,
the three men started exploring other ways to create non-corrupted
short supply chains. 235
Investor
Actions
If you can, invest in farms. In doing so, you are
not only helping the farmers but are securing your own access to
food. For farmers, it is very beneficial not to be
dependent on banks.
Lodewijk Pool, farmer of De Hooilanden (https://dehooilanden.
nl/), observed that the dependency on banks is a real
bottleneck for farmers. He surmised that to avoid this
dependency, one could bring land into common ownership -
whether of a family, street, church, or village -
and he put this idea into practice by selling part his land
(one-third of a hectare) for €25, 000 to fellow citizens.
The owners, in
turn, lease the land back to him to grow food on it.
Pool explains that this approach not only reduces dependency but
helps people take responsibility and connects them with their food.
236
Innovate with the investment fund model. Many farmers realize
that a shift is needed out of the industrial agricultural model.
However, a pivotal issue is that the land needs to be in
honest hands rather than being bought up by governments or BlackRock
and associated entities.
One possibility might be
to create an investment fund that buys up the industrial farms and
supports them in making a gradual transition to organic approaches
over time, taking food security into account and avoiding
abrupt changes that collapse food production (such as occurred in
Sri Lanka). This would also require continuing education for
the farmers.
Jon Bergeman and
Alex Brouwer explained how they were taught to use a lot of fertilizer,
to feed their cows corn, and to use antibiotics.
The VBBM (the Association
for the Preservation of Farmers and Nature) with which Bergeman now
works helps farmers to make the transition smoothly - not through
shock therapy. The farmers they help are surprised to learn
that they can do without the external inputs. Once they see
that the approach works, they are completely on board.
But none of them learn it
as part of their formal agricultural education.
The transition from industrial to organic could also be accomplished
by breaking land up into multiple smaller plots for multiple farms
that could be leased to young people who would like to start a farm
but have no access to capital.
This would help address
some of the barriers to entry for starting a farm.
Citizen Actions
"These
two commons,
access to nature
and the right to food,
are central to
civilization -
and this gives
peasant movements
an enormous
potential strength
and the
possibility to ally with others."
Jan Douwe
van der Ploeg
In the end, the push to get farmers and people off the land
and fishermen out of the seas is a political agenda.
The oft-repeated
narrative is that nature needs to be protected from man. If
you follow that narrative, you will be presented with numerous
distractions intended to take your attention away from the real
issues - distractions such as complex models, debates about
the extent of environmental destruction, assessments of how
much "damage" should be allowed, and so forth.
These are the wrong
debates. It is vitally important to contradict the false
narrative and shift the parameters of the debate.
As my deep dive into the regulatory background of the current
madness shows, the real aim of this thicket of regulations is
a long-planned attack on property rights, autonomy, and
freedom.
These should be the focus
of discussion and of political action, starting with demands
for policies that protect access to food and land and develop food
sovereignty.
The real solutions to combat environmental destruction lie not in
further separation but in stewardship and in reconnecting the bonds
between animals, the land, people, and
communities.
As Wendell Berry
said,
"For our healing we
have on our side one great force: the power of Creation,
with good care, with kindly use, to heal itself."
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