Friday, December 29, 2023

Yes, They're Coming for Your Burgers

At PM, WHO head Tedros declares war on meat and traditional farming to fight ‘climate change’

A new declaration from the World Health Organization has revealed that it wants the masses to eat less meat and more plant-based foods in order to supposedly combat "climate change."

World Health Organization Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus issued a grave warning on the matter, saying in a video address, "Our food systems are harming the health of people and planet. Food systems contribute to over 30 percent of greenhouse gas emissions, and account for almost one-third of the global burden of disease. Transforming food systems is therefore essential by shifting for this healthier, diversified and more plant-based diets."

"If food systems deliver healthy diets for all we could save 8 million lives per year," Tedros claimed, "WHO is committed to supporting countries to develop and implement policies to improve diets and fight climate change. I'm therefore very pleased that over 130 countries have signed the code 28 UAE Declaration on climate and health. Together, we can protect and promote the health of both people and planet. Thank you."

Leslie Eastman at LI notices the NYT Pushes “Groundwater Crisis” to Attack America’s Poultry and Dairy Industries

Watch for 2024 to be the Year of Water Crisis. As we head into the New Year, The New York Times has decided to push a story about a “groundwater crisis” created by the American love of poultry and dairy products.

America’s striking dietary shift in recent decades, toward far more chicken and cheese, has not only contributed to concerns about American health but has taken a major, undocumented toll on underground water supplies.

The effects are being felt in key agricultural regions nationwide as farmers have drained groundwater to grow animal feed.

In Arkansas for example, where cotton was once king, the land is now ruled by fields of soybeans to feed the chickens, a billion or so of them, that have come to dominate the region’s economy. And Idaho, long famous for potatoes, is now America’s largest producer of alfalfa to feed the cows that supply the state’s huge cheese factories.

Today alfalfa, a particularly water-intensive crop used largely for animal feed, covers 6 million acres of irrigated land, much of it in the driest parts of the American West.

These transformations are tied to the changing American diet.
This is a subject that will likely require even more attention in 2024. In early 2023, the World Economic Forum decided that the world wasn’t panicked enough about COVID-19 or carbon dioxide but began turning its attention to a “water crisis.”

From my cold, dead hand . . . 

The Wombat has Rule 5 Sunday: Happy New Year! ready at The Other McCain.

2 comments:

  1. My spouse who is a 24/7 follower of msm & it's subsidiaries on the internet, yesterday told me that pretend meat was better because "cow farts hurt the enviroment".
    I tried to explain that cows turn grass into protein but I was again wasting my breath, meat seems to be the new thing "they" want people afraid of.

    ReplyDelete
  2. It’s not the cows, and it’s not the meat, and it certainly isn’t the false god of climate change, it’s the incredible amount of chemicals in the food supply.

    ReplyDelete