Home › Forums › ATTACKS AND MURDERS ON OUR SOUTH AFRICAN FARMERS. › SA Farmers Next? Ireland also Attacks their Farmers, Like the Netherlands, Germany and Canada!
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2022-11-27 at 18:34 #384045
Nat Quinn
KeymasterSA Farmers Next? Ireland also Attacks their Farmers, Like the Netherlands, Germany and Canada!
As part of the World Economic Forum’s (WEF) “Great Reset” agenda for humanity, Irish leaders have joined their co-conspirators in the Netherlands, Germany and Canada, to phase out farmers and their farms, further risking global food shortages. The Irish government plans to impose a reduction in emissions of around 28 percent on Irish farmers.
It is well known that a core pillar of Socialism and Communism, is to control the people, by gaining control of food production. Literally starving them if they do not comply, like Stalin and Lenin did. We have been warning about this Red Danger for years and now the far left Canadian leader, Justin Trudeau has already announced that he is going ahead with the WEF’s socialist plan to phase out farms by 2030. He said he plans to do this by reducing the use of Canadian fertilizers, which would bankrupt many farmers.
Meanwhile, Dutch farmers have been protesting for weeks after their government plans to bankrupt them and destroy the food supply in Europe. Prime Minister Mark Rutte is one of the WEF’s “Young Global Leaders” who has promised to help bring in “The Great Reset”.
According to Breitbart News, farmers in Ireland may soon be forced to make potentially damaging changes to their businesses as Irish government ministers, who spread climate panic and other far-left ideas, plan to cut the sector’s emissions by around 28 percent.
Officials within the Irish government have been bickering for some time about how to penalise the country’s farms with green legislation, despite the protests and reactions of farmers in fellow EU member state the Netherlands, to the reduction of nitrogen emissions, due to the damage that the EU-inspired restrictions will cause on their businesses.
According to a report in The Times, Ireland’s agriculture minister Charlie McConalogue has already agreed to impose a 27 or 28 percent cut on the Irish agricultural sector, a measure that will seriously disrupt farms and local businesses. However, the paper also claims that McConalogue is still under intense pressure to force a 30% cut, a move which the head of one of the country’s largest agricultural organizations, Tim Cullinan, said will lead to a massive reduction in the country’s livestock.
“A target of 30 percent would lead to a significant reduction in production, which could have a devastating effect on Ireland’s agricultural sector,” Tim Cullinan, president of the Irish Farmers’ Association, said of such a measure.
Even at the lower estimate of 28 percent, one of the Irish government’s own officials admitted that it would not be “business as usual” as such a move would mean drastic changes to Irish agriculture.
“The targets for each sector must be proportionate and in proportion to the total contribution,” Bill Callanan, the Department of Agriculture’s chief inspector, told a parliamentary committee last week.
“Unlike other sectors, where technologies and/or lifestyle changes can be applied, there is no magic pill to reduce agricultural production and land use,” he continued.
Ireland’s enormous push to cut agricultural emissions by more than a quarter comes at a time when roads and distribution centres in the Netherlands are being blocked by farmers, who say their livelihoods are being wiped out by the enforcement of the EU’s green goals through their country.
The Dutch government wants to reduce nitrogen emissions in some areas by 95% – a measure that will mean that 30% of livestock farms in the country will be forced to close.
Despite the devastating consequences, the government pushed through enforcement, describing the closures as simply an “inevitable transition” that is part of the EU’s reforms.
“For some reason they don’t go after the airlines or other industries, which actually contribute to these emissions, only the Dutch farmers,” political commentator Eva Vlaardingerbroek told Breitbart News, during an interview with Alex Marlow, editor-in-chief of the network.
“They say the farmers have to give up 30 percent of their land by 2030, and for many of these farmers that means closing their business completely, depending on where they are in the country, and that land then goes to the state – surprise surprise!” she revealed.
“Our farms are being expropriated and the state is stealing their land… and often these are businesses and farms that they have had in their families for centuries, because the agricultural sector in the Netherlands is very strong,” she explained, pointing to the ties that the First Minister of the country, Mark Rutte, has with the World Economic Forum (WEF).
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