The UN continues to spread its tentacles throughout the globe
by Alex Newman
As part
of its drive for global so-called “sustainability,” the United Nations has a new suggestion
for the people of the world: Eat bugs instead of burgers. The controversial
recommendations come from a new report by the UN Food and Agriculture Organization touting the supposed benefits of
“edible insects” and the role they might play in future “food security” —
assuming the bugs are farmed in a “sustainable” way, of course. The latest UN document
also outlines propaganda campaigns to persuade Westerners and shows how
expanding the international regulatory regime can help bugs-as-food proponents
achieve their vision.
According
to the controversial 200-page study, dubbed “Edible insects: Future prospects for food and feed security,” bugs are actually nutritious and
environmentally friendly. The UN also claims it is “urgent” for people to start
understanding that. “Insects as food and feed emerge as an especially relevant issue
in the twenty-first century due to the rising cost of animal protein, food and
feed insecurity, environmental pressures, population growth and increasing
demand for protein among the middle classes,” the report claims, citing an
array of real and imagined problems.
As
such, according to the UN study, “alternative solutions” to conventional
livestock and feed sources “urgently need to be found.” The consumption of
insects — formally known as “entomophagy” — “therefore contributes positively
to the environment and to health and livelihoods,” the UN FAO said in its
report. It claimed, among other things, that there are numerous “environmental
benefits” to rearing insects for food — especially if the bugs are fed human
and animal waste. Among the potential benefits: reduced “greenhouse gases” that the UN blames for non-existent global warming, and fewer resources needed to produce
insect-based food.
Plus,
as the UN and legions of its functionaries point out in the document, press releases, and other efforts to promote the eating of insects, people in some
cultures already eat bugs. “Insects are often consumed whole but can also be
processed into granular or paste forms,” the report notes, adding that new ways
of enjoying bugs are also in the pipeline. There are, however, numerous
obstacles to convincing the world to consume creepy crawlers instead of beef
and chicken.
Of
course, the UN knows the idea of eating bugs sounds repulsive to most
Westerners — it admits as much in the report. The global body and its
proponents, though, already have a plan to deal with that. In the UN FAO
report, created in partnership with Wageningen University in the Netherlands,
the planetary body outlined a giant propaganda campaign that would include
“tailored media communication strategies and educational programs that address
the disgust factor.”
Indeed,
much of the report focused on the “public relations” and “education” campaigns
that would be needed to prod people into eating insects. Westerners would be the
primary targets of the PR gimmicks, and the report outlines a full-spectrum
plan to change hearts and minds, starting in school and reaching all the way
into the press and even social media. Populations in poorer countries would
also be targeted but with a different approach.
“The
polarity of views surrounding the practice of entomophagy necessarily requires
tailormade (sic) communication approaches for each of the various
stakeholders,” the report argues. “In the tropics, where entomophagy is well established,
media communication strategies should promote edible insects as valuable
sources of nutrition to counter the growing westernization of diets. Western
societies require tailored media communication strategies and educational
programmes (sic) that address the disgust factor.”
The
so-called “disgust factor” is mentioned all over the report, but the UN claims
it is wrong and can be changed with enough propaganda and supposed education.
"Common prejudice against eating insects is not justified from a
nutritional point of view,” the study continues, touting the supposed benefits
of eating possibly nutritious bugs. “Insects are not inferior to other protein
sources such as fish, chicken and beef.”
The UN
claims that Western populations’ feeling of disgust surrounding the eating of
insects contributes to what it calls “the common misconception” that the
consumption of bugs in poor countries is driven by starvation and is merely a
survival mechanism. “This is far from the truth,” the report claims. “Although
it will require considerable convincing to reverse this mentality, it is not an
impossible feat.”
Citing
other studies, the UN food bureaucrats complained that Western attitudes toward
insect eating have influenced people in poorer countries. The study argues that
“influencing” policymakers, investors, and the public at large using “validated
information” on the potential of edible insects “can help to push insects
higher on political, investment and research agendas worldwide.” It cites the
controversial UNESCO to claim that “success of education for sustainable
development” hinges on “cooperation between all sectors of the education
community.”
Those
“sectors” include education — primary schools through universities — as well as
so-called “non-governmental organizations” (NGOs), private companies,
traditional media like television and newspapers, online media, and even social
networking services. “Taking this as a building block, addressing the
entomophagy disgust factor in Western societies might depend largely on the
ability to involve the entire educational community,” the report continues.
“For this reason, engaging all sectors is recommended, particularly in Western
societies.”
Aside
from having to propagandize people about bug eating through schools and the
media, which is already dutifully regurgitating UN talking points, another
major barrier to more widespread insect consumption is the lack of a global
regulatory regime to encourage it, the report states. “International standards
can serve as a useful basis for countries to set up their regulatory frameworks
for food and feed,” the report claims. “Aligning legislation with international
standards, particularly Codex [Alimentarius] Standards, facilitates their compliance with trade
rules and enables and facilitates the trade of food and feed products.”
In
essence, the report argues for the incorporation of bugs-as-food guidelines
into the controversial and bloated UN food regime known as Codex Alimentarius.
“For developed countries, the absence of clear legislation and norms guiding
the use of insects as food and feed is among the major limiting factors
hindering the industrial development of farming insects to supply the food and
feed sectors,” the FAO claimed, saying that international standards to push
national legislation would help drive the changes sought by UN officials.
UN
functionaries echoed those demands in the global body’s press releases urging
people to eat more bugs. “The private sector is ready to invest in insect
farming. We have huge opportunities before us,” claimed FAO bureaucrat Paul Vantomme, one of the authors of the report.
“But until there is clarity in the legal sphere, no major business is going to
take the risk to invest funds when the laws remains unclear or actually hinders
development of this new sector.”
Even
with a massive propaganda campaign and new global regulations to push insect
eating, however, there are still obstacles to deal with before the UN vision of
“sustainable” sewage-fed bugs as food can become reality worldwide. The report
identified four “key bottlenecks and challenges” that must be addressed at the
same time for the whole scheme to be successful.
First,
the FAO said, proper evidence is needed to document the UN’s nutrition claims
about bugs. Investigations comparing the environmental impacts of insect
harvesting and farming versus traditional farming and ranching are also needed
to support the oft-cited assertions that bug eating is actually more
environmentally friendly. In addition, research is needed into the alleged
“socio-economic benefits” potentially available — especially to determine
whether or not it would really enhance “food security” for the
poor.
“Finally,
a clear and comprehensive legal framework at (inter)national (sic) levels is
needed to pave the way for more investment, leading to the full development
(from the household to the industrial scale) of production and international
trade in insect products as food and feed sources,” the report claims. In other
words, the UN needs more money to prove its claims and to “influence” humanity,
as well as more power for central planning in the form of an expanded global
regulatory regime.
While
the latest leap toward influencing people’s dietary choices has drawn criticism
and ridicule, the UN has long sought to expand its powers over virtually every
sphere of human life. Despite growing opposition in the United
States to
the global body’s “sustainable development” scheme known as Agenda 21, the UN continues to spread its tentacles
throughout the globe.
Whether people in the West will eventually eat UN-approved bugs remains
to be seen. The fact that the international organization continues to broaden its size and
scope, however, is indisputable. And it will keep happening in more and more areas of life as long as the American
people put up with it — and pay for it.
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