Speaking of Dutch schoolchildren, I’ve yet to hear the Moslems weigh in on this whole bug-eating thing. I would think it would be against their religion, but I have not heard them say that just yet.
For all the problems they’ve caused, Moslems have helped a bit with the gay stuff. They should weigh in on eating bugs.
Dutch schoolchildren have been fed mealworms as part of a project aimed at encouraging people to consume alternatives to meat.
Aimed at encouraging the consumption of meat alternatives, the “Smaakmissie Avontuurlijke eiwitten”, or “Flavor Mission Adventure Proteins” project in the Netherlands has seen school children as young as ten fed mealworms.
The European nation has recently seen significant social unrest as a result of EU-level green agenda rules being imposed on its farming population, with planned restrictions on nitrogen emissions likely to put around 30 per cent of livestock farms in the country out of business.
Cracking down on farmers does not appear to be all the Dutch government is doing to push the Brussels green agenda, however, with the country now encouraging children to think positively about the human consumption of meat alternatives, including insects.
As part of such a drive, RTV Oost reports that elementary school children in the country are now being fed mealworms during lessons, with the Dutch state-owned regional broadcaster describing the young students as being “uninhibited” in regards to the idea of eating the bugs.
🇳🇱 WEF agenda in full force: Hundreds of schools in The Netherlands have started a campaign introducing 10-12 y/o kids to mealworms & insects as a ‘sustainable’ meat substitute. The goal is to bring about “behavioral changes through unprejudiced children”
pic.twitter.com/jiQTbvzTFZ— Eva Vlaardingerbroek (@EvaVlaar) October 15, 2022
Such a view might have some merit, with footage of some of the children engaged in the projects appearing to show them responding positively to the mealworms, with many declaring to the bugs to be “yummy” after eating them.
The project — which is being run by Wageningen University & Research in conjunction with the Dutch Ministry of Agriculture, Nature and Food Quality — will also see children go on a virtual reality “field trip” to a lentil burger factory to learn all about the food production chain.
While the nature of the Dutch food project aimed at children is likely to cause controversy, it ultimately appears to be more carrot than stick compared to other measures aimed at propagating the EU’s green agenda in the Netherlands.
As children in school are taught the wonders of bug eating, the pro-EU government has been in open conflict with the country’s farmers, pushing for massive restrictions on nitrogen emissions to be imposed on businesses in parts of the country.
Ultimately, authorities are demanding that farmers reduce their emissions by up to 95 per cent in some areas, a move that will see up to 30 per cent of the country’s livestock farms be put to pasture.
Hopefully everyone understands at this point that bug-eating is a serious issue. They actually want to make you eat bugs.
The memes about this went full-normie, and this can trivialize something.
To be clear, in the next couple years, schoolchildren all over the world will be eating bugs. They’re not joking around, they don’t think this is cute or a novelty. The global warming people are in charge, and you do what they tell you to do.
You’re supposed to feed these to your chickens, not your kids