Italy rejects globalist agenda
Italy’s government recently backed a bill that aims to ban fake foods, including lab-grown meat, from the country. Violation of the bill carries a €60,000 ($67,263) fine.
The Meloni administration’s support for the legislation is a snub to the globalist agenda, which seeks to replace animal products on shelves with synthetic food to “fight climate change”. The World Economic Forum (WEF) has long encouraged the consumption of fake meat, promoting companies such as Eat Just which manufactures lab-grown meat, eggs, and other foods. Eat Just is in part funded by globalist billionaire Bill Gates, who admonishes “rich nations” that they must switch completely to fake beef.
Some European countries have already embraced lab-grown meat. Germany, Europe’s largest economy, sells synthetic meat products manufactured by Beyond Meat on shelves in over 1,600 stores.
Countries like the Netherlands are now closing farms because of their contribution to “climate change”.
Italy Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, however, counted farmers as one of the main reasons to ban fake food.
"We could only celebrate with our farmers a measure that puts our farmers in the vanguard, not just on the issue of defending excellence . . . but also in defending consumers," she said concerning the bill.
The legislation follows another law passed by Meloni’s administration requiring that all food items which contain insects be labeled as such.
Globalist Western powers, along with the WEF, have been pushing public consumption of insects —again to battle “climate change — as a healthy source of protein.
In January the European Union approved the use of cricket powder in major processed foods sold to the public.
In Australia children are fed crickets as a snack and conditioned to enjoy them. Frontline News reported in September that 1,000 Australian schools have added chips containing crickets to their canteens. Australian media have labeled this, “eco-friendly”. The chips are called Cricket Corn Chips and manufactured by Circle Harvest.
Canada’s government is investing C$8.5 million ($6.5 million) in a new production plant that will produce cricket protein for pet and human food. The facility, located in London, Ontario, is expected to house four billion crickets and produce 13 million kilograms (14,300 tons) of cricket protein per year.
“The Government has presented four inter-ministerial decrees which will introduce information labels on products that contain or derive from insects. Citizens must be able to choose consciously and be informed from every point of view,” Meloni tweeted in late March.
According to the Financial Times, Meloni expressed her disgust for insect consumption.
“Insect products are arriving on supermarket shelves! Flour, larvae — good, delicious,” she said sarcastically in a recent video. “But when a product contains insects . . . we tell citizens with a nice visible label so they can choose whether to eat insects or not.”
At the same time, Meloni also rebuffed another globalist darling — ChatGPT.
ChatGPT is an AI chatbot released in November and hailed by the World Economic Forum as “the start of the generative AI boom.” Users can chat with ChatGPT, which is programmed to generate automatic responses based on a machine-learning algorithm. The Microsoft-backed program has been confirmed to strongly promote globalist agendas, which includes creating a fake study to try to claim there are more than two genders.
The Meloni administration ordered in late March that both ChatGPT and its creator, San Francisco-based firm Open AI, be prohibited from processing data from users in Italy. The Guarantor for the Protection of Personal Data (GPDP) cited several concerns, including ChatGPT’s lack of age verification tools to block inappropriate answers for children and its use of user data to enhance its language model.
Meloni, Italy’s first female prime minister, may be learning that globalists make powerful enemies. Meloni has been so vilified by mainstream media that Google’s suggested searches for “Giorgia Meloni” add the word “Mussolini”.
Television outlets, including CBS News, ABC News, NBC News, PBS News, MSNBC, CNN, Good Morning America, have all used the phrase "roots in post-WWII neo-fascism" when talking about Meloni. Most have parroted the phrase that she is ushering in “the most Right-wing government since Mussolini.”
The mainstream media are joined by the tech oligarchy, which removed a speech of Meloni’s that went viral for its passionate defense of “God, family and country” and attack on the globalist establishment. University of Nebraska’s sophomore starting punter Brian Buschini, who praised the video, was forced to apologize.