As Skip likes to say, people send us stuff. Stuff about this or that, the other thing, or the other “other” thing. That includes links to stories about how the elites think we should be eating bugs, and I don’t mean the bunny. So, what about that? Eating Insects.
It’s all about saving the planet.
Insects will solve problems, they say. We’ll be able to feed more people, and it will be better for global communism everyone.
And look, they are already training the ‘yutes’ to eat grasshoppers!
Brainwashing in real time! pic.twitter.com/R6Ayk2ZFMI
— Dr Shawn Baker 🥩 (@SBakerMD) August 18, 2022
This type of content is piling up on the internet (and my In-Box) faster than poll workers in Atlanta can scan suitcases full of ballots for Biden.
It’s everywhere, like insects, because the narrative mills promoting it as our feed-trough future are pushing hard to convince people this will be – if not great – necessary.
Related: WEF Wants You to “CHIP” Your Kids, I think We Should CHIP The Elites First and See How That Goes …
Neither is accurate and not just because I’d rather starve than be accused of culinary cultural appropriation (Grasshoppers are supposed to be a delicacy in Uganda).
There are edible bugs, but eating bugs (even if you misgender them, you bigot) is not healthy for humans.
Insects contain a natural structural component in their exoskeletons called chitin. This fibrous polysaccharide happens to be extremely toxic to humans.
Research shows that Chitin can decrease our ability to absorb essential vitamins A and E and contributes to shrinking our thymus. But wait, there’s more!
A study published in Nature entitled, Chitin induces accumulation in tissue of innate immune cells associated with allergy showed that chitin triggers allergic airway inflammation and possibly asthma
So, “What would happen to a person that developed asthma, inflammation, immunocompromisation, vitamin depletion, etc., from an insect heavy diet if they contracted COVID and/or received a spike protein-inducing injection?”
I got this: they’d die, and public health officials would blame the unvaccinated even though mRNA vaccines compromise the immune system.
The Jabbed are already at increased risk of illness or hospitalization and even death if they contract the flu. Add a known toxin that can induce inflammation, and you are asking for more trouble, not less.
That’s not it, there’s more.
Edible insects are an underestimated reservoir of human and animal parasites. Our research indicates the important role of these insects in the epidemiology of parasites pathogenic to vertebrates. Conducted parasitological examination suggests that edible insects may be the most important parasite vector for domestic insectivorous animals.
If bread made from powdered crickets isn’t gross enough for you, this article won’t help: A new study from Italy finds that breads made with powdered crickets may be loaded with potentially dangerous bacterial spores.
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But brace yourself… there’s more. Crickets can introduce new diseases all by themselves. This from a 2021 study:
“Insects generally have high reproductive rates leading to rapid population growth and high local densities; ideal conditions for disease epidemics. The parasites and diseases that naturally regulate wild insect populations can also impact when these insects are produced commercially, on farms. While insects produced for human or animal consumption are often reared under high density conditions, very little is known about the microbes associated with these insects, particularly those with pathogenic potential…. his will become particularly relevant as-and-when cricket rearing facilities scale up and transform from producing insects for animal feed to producing insects for human consumption.”
You don’t build a strong civilization on a diet of insects, but you could probably undermine one with them. Especially if you also happen to be part of the depopulation cabal that pushed mandatory mRNA vaccines.
So what do we have to say about eating bugs? I will give you the same response as I did here. You first, elites, and after ten years, let us know how it worked out.
Any chance they’ll ‘bite’?
Two closing points.
- If we stop needing gasoline (which you’d love), what do you plan to do with the billions of bushels of corn we would no longer be shoving into gas tanks? Feed it to the crickets?
- How do you plan to balance your big bug-food agenda against Insect rights activist groups (clearly your sort of people on many other issues)?
And yes, we’re going to keep bugging you until we get an answer.