Amsterdam’s decision to ban meat advertising should be viewed as part of a much broader trend that has been unfolding for years. Politicians insist this is about climate change. Every new restriction is presented as a noble sacrifice for to save the environment. Yet the target is almost always the same: farmers, ranchers, livestock producers, and regular people who are forced to sacrifice their health and livelihood for the globalist agenda.
The Netherlands has already spent years battling its own farming community through nitrogen regulations, forced buyouts, and restrictions that have pushed many family farms to the brink. Massive farmer protests erupted because people recognized that this was never merely about emissions. Agriculture was being redesigned from the top down. Now the campaign has moved beyond production and into culture itself. If citizens cannot be persuaded to abandon meat voluntarily, then governments will gradually make meat less visible, less available, more expensive, and increasingly stigmatized.
Many people dismissed concerns years ago when international organizations began discussing alternatives to traditional meat consumption. The World Economic Forum published articles exploring insects as a future protein source and repeatedly promoted dietary shifts away from actual meat. The argument was always framed around sustainability, carbon reduction, and environmental goals. They attempted to normalize chewing on bugs as an alternative to a steak. They claim it is our duty as global citizens to sacrifice essential nutrition to save the planet, despite knowing well that these measures would not make a meaningful dent in anything.

A tremendous amount of capital has flowed into synthetic foods, lab-grown proteins, precision fermentation, artificial dairy products, and engineered meat substitutes. Consumers are being told these products represent the future. Agriculture, now termed “traditional agriculture,” faces an ever-growing wall of regulations. The result is a food system that is composed of chemicals, cloned cells, and substances that are simply not safe for human consumption.
Food security has always been a cornerstone of national stability. Nations that lose control over their food production eventually become dependent on distant supply chains and centralized systems. That dependence creates vulnerabilities that cannot be solved by slogans or marketing campaigns. When domestic farmers disappear, replacing them is not as simple as passing another regulation.

The debate over meat is not really about environmental rights. It is about who gets to decide what people can and cannot eat. Consumers are no longer permitted to decide, and are often deceived by labeling and synthetic imitations. Europe is attempting to alter human behavior by banning the promotion of meat, and bit by bit, they will begin to normalize protein alternatives.
Citizens should pay close attention whenever politicians begin treating ordinary food as a social problem that must be managed. Once governments assume the authority to decide which foods deserve promotion and which deserve suppression, there is no obvious limit to where that philosophy ultimately leads. The long-term repercussions of poisoning civilization with synthetic food are unknown. They could theoretically put anything in the food supply to ultimately suppress the people, as a sick population is easier to control. Rest assured, the elites will continue eating real food that will become increasingly scarce in the years to come, especially as sovereign defaults begin one by one.




















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