PENNY FOR YOUR THOUGHTS, MORDAUNT
MP's "conspiracy theory" slur over push to eat insects has been planned by United Nations for a decade
By Oliver May
IS Commons Leader Penny Mordaunt ignorant, incompetent or potentially compromised?
Her unnecessary belittling tone to Andrew Bridgen, former Tory and now Reclaim MP for North-West Leicestershire, will come back to haunt her.
In March, she warned Bridgen to “check his behaviour”, saying: “I would just again caution him, who this week has been inviting us to join the dots, promoting that Anthony Fauci has created Covid in the United States and then offshored that operation to Wuhan, and in the previous session prior to this Business Questions in Defra, is starting a new campaign to tell the public that this Government and its international network of World Economic Forum stooges are encouraging everyone to eat insects.
“These are outrageous conspiracy theories that he is promoting on his social media and more frequently on the floor of this House and I would urge him to check his behaviour.”
On the subject of insects at least, News Uncut would urge Mordaunt to check her facts.
The image above is the front cover of the United Nations 2013 study and proposal into making humanity’s main source of protein one that is derived from insects.
Indeed, part of the Executive Summary states: “Insects as food and feed emerge as an especially relevant issue in the twenty-first century due to the rising cost of animal protein, food and feed insecurity, environmental pressures, population growth and increasing demand for protein among the middle classes.
“Thus, alternative solutions to conventional livestock and feed sources urgently need to be found. The consumption of insects, or entomophagy, therefore contributes positively to the environment and to health and livelihoods.”
The document was also reviewed by Forbes, which ran an opinion piece stating: “The Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), a part of the United Nations, has released a report saying that we should all get ready to start eating insects.
“The true parts of the report are that yes, insects are indeed highly nutritious. They’re also a very efficient method of turning various forms of vegetable matter into proteins and other materials that humans can actually digest: we do better eating a locust that has eaten the grass than we would eating the grass directly. It’s also true that there’s plenty of insects to eat, even that with some decent saucing they can be very tasty (well, OK, some of them).
“Finally, almost all of us have eaten insect derived products, if not an entire bug itself directly. Cochineal is a widely used food dye and it’s derived from a bug that feeds on cacti. It’s so common that anyone who had eaten Smarties until the recipe was changed a few years back (cochineal not being kosher was the reason for the change I think. And it might have applied to M&Ms as well, not sure) will have consumed some.
“Everything that they say on this side of the subject is entirely correct. However, what they say about us needing to do this almost certainly isn’t. Yes, population is going to rise to nine billion or so: but that doesn’t actually mean that there’s going to be a shortage of more conventional foodstuffs. There are three very strong reasons why this need not be so.
“The first is that yields on conventional crops are still going up at 1% and more per year. Add in the compounding effect and if this continues (as it has for many decades already) and food supply will be growing more than population up to and past that year of 2050.
“The second is that even if you want to posit slower growth in the technological edge of food production, there’s still vast areas of the world where productivity is seriously and severely behind that technological leading edge. If we could, just as an example, bring African production levels up to Indian or Asian levels, let alone US or Northern European, then we’d be awash in food and no need to eat the bugs at all.
“Thirdly, we don’t actually need to increase food production in order to be able to feed everybody: even that other two billion that would take us up to nine billion in total. For of the food currently grown some 50 per cent is wasted along the way anyway.
“Some of that waste is us in the rich world buying too much, not finishing our plates and so on. But the vast majority of it is, ironically, being eaten by those very bugs that we’re being told to go and eat.
“The biggest contributor to food shortages in the poor parts of the world is that far too much of the food, up to that 50 per cent level, rots somewhere between being ready for harvest and being prepared to be put on someone’s plate. If we could just get such poor country food losses down to the same sort of level of loss we have in the rich countries then, again, there would be no shortage of food.”
Looking at the same study, award-winning journalist Alex Newman (above) added: “So how are they gonna get people to eat bugs? Well, a combination of propaganda, indoctrinating children and making you very, very hungry... The goal, folks, is not to save the planet. It’s not about global warming. It’s not about sustainable development. It’s about enslaving humanity.
“They want to wipe out small and medium sized producers, centralise food control in the hands of mega corporations in bed with the mega governments. They want to move the population into the mega cities, and ultimately bring about this Great Reset and what they call the New World Order.”
Mordaunt needs to stand in the House of Commons and issue a full and frank apology and News Uncut would urge her to check her behaviour in future.
United Nations guide to eating insects
DID THE TIMES REALLY JUST PRINT THIS STORY WITHOUT ASKING ANYTHING?
FRIDAY morning’s headline would be funny if were not so seriously negligent.
Screaming from the newsstands read the headline: Rule change lets anyone buy a Covid booster jab.
The JCVI has already published information on its autumn booster campaign, with details of those people it says are eligible. But The Times reported that, perhaps starting next year, those who are not offered a jab through the NHS would be able to buy one instead.
News Uncut cannot help but think this move is akin to paying to play Russian Roulette.
The Covid jabs are associated with stokes, blood clots, myocarditis and pericarditis and are about as far removed from ‘safe and effective’ as it is possible to be.
The Times failed to mention any of the risks, instead reporting: “Some pharmacists and private clinics say they are interested in selling coronavirus vaccinations on the high street to the tens of millions of people no longer eligible on the NHS.
“The declaration by the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) that it is happy to see the jabs for sale privately, as flu jabs are, marks another key moment in normalising the disease.”
Moderna are thought to be pricing jabs available in America at about $130 per dose.
Numerous scientific studies have proved that Covid jabs do not stop you getting Covid and do not stop you from transmitting the respiratory infection.
The answers to the questions posed in the opening sentence of your article are yes, yes and yes. With luck this ridiculous excuse for a politician will lead by example - and choke to death on a toasted cockroach.
Mordaunt is delusional. Then again most of the WEF is.