Grubby little dense denise and sharktit will doubtless tell you they have been eating bugs already for years and are all in favor of the elimination of climate change facilitators those beastly cows.
Bye the ay Oaks can anybody tell me how much sea levels have risen ( I want to arn Hussein Obummer that his sea side home is about to get flooded - which come to think of it he knows about) and whether Co2 will next be heating the planet or cooling it. Apparently it can do both maybe even at the same time.
Meanwhile chief Co2 "polluters" ( carbon is great for plant life) India and China get a free pass. Its a lot like having people travelling legally to the USA having to be jabbed but millions are allowed illegally into the USA with no jab and indeed no vetting at all. All thanks to traitor China Joe and his handlers.
But I digress. Here is the story oaks:
In the Netherlands, dairy farmer Martin Neppelenbroek is near the end of the line.
New environmental regulations will require him to slash his livestock numbers by 95 percent. He thinks he will have to sell his family farm.
“I can’t run a farm on 5 percent. For me, it’s over and done with,” he said in a July 7 interview with The Epoch Times.
“In view of the regulations, I can’t sell it to anybody. Nobody wants to buy it. [But] the government wants to buy it. And that’s why they [have] those regulations, I think.” ( You recall that Depopulationist Bill Gates is buying up farmland like crazy, last purchase was in North Dakota - he is no the biggest land owner in America.
Farmers, truckers, and others across the Netherlands have led nationwide protests against that vision, partly spurred by a June 10 national and area-specific plan for curtailing nitrogen greenhouse gas emissions.
There’s a sword of Damocles hanging over them: the possibility of compulsory seizure of property by the government.
NOS Nieuws reported that Christianne van der Wal, the country’s minister of nature and nitrogen policy, has not ruled out expropriating land from uncooperative farmers.
According to a report from the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Foreign Agriculture Service, the Dutch government has said its approach means “there is not a future for all [Dutch] farmers.”
For now, Neppelenbroek’s 170-acre-plus property is home to roughly 130 milking cows. It’s been in his family for half a century.
“I’m the second generation,” he said, adding that many farms in the Netherlands have been in families for much longer.
The Netherlands punches well above its weight in agriculture. The small, coastal country is one of the world’s top 10 food exporters.
“When you have not a lot of space, you have to use it as effectively as possible,” Neppelenbroek said.
“It’s a delta, and the climate is not too hot, not too cold. It’s an ideal place to grow.”
Cows, Neppelenbroek acknowledged, produce lots of ammonia through their bodily waste.
Yet, “you can’t blame just one small group in your country for polluting the environment,” he said, adding that farmers feel they’re being overburdened.
Closing Dutch farms will just necessitate food imports from elsewhere, he argued.
He noted that cow manure can benefit soil health—certainly more so than the synthetic fertilizers that would need to replace it.
Cows can also be fed leftovers that people won’t eat: “They can get rid of a lot of stuff we can’t use as humans and put it into high-quality food,” he said.
Like many others in the Netherlands, he suspects the government wants to use the land that it takes to build housing. (EXACTLY SO. THEY NEED LAND FOR HOUSING THE I NVADERS WHICH IS PART OF THE GLOBALIST REPLACEMENT AGENDA)