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Froggie's avatar

Great progress, congratulations but if you really want to make a difference, stop the mRNA in all its manifestations - not incrementally but immediately and totally - it will kill us as it is integrated into SynBio. The quickest and easist route - Bobby needs to revoke the HHS Secretary's permission for the Prep Act Emergency Authorisation as detailed by Sasha and Katherine - please (your supporter in Australia - yes we are subject to the Prep Act too!0

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Lhfry's avatar

This was interesting and so different from the left where scaling up organic farming has been a longtime goal. Rather than applying for grants and setting up coops, these people are making farming profitable and lowering costs for healthy food for consumers. They are not small farms. They have scaled up the regenerative techniques for farms of thousands of acres. Joel Saletan has 1000 head of cattle that he rotates from field to field every day!

The goal is to reduce medical costs too by eliminating illnesses caused by bad food. It will be a huge fight because bad food and the pharmaceuticals needed to treat its consequences are firmly entrenched and will take a long time to dislodge if even possible. I go to the occasional Heritage event and this was the best attended I’ve seen full of interested people of all ages eager to learn.

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VictorDianne Watson's avatar

I am encouraged to see these panels discussing a most important aspect of health; healthy farming. Too long the subsidies have been for crops that don’t necessarily benefit humans. Those subsidies could instead go to healthy farming methods that improve the quality of food. Labeling of foods to indicate what pesticides may have been used in their production would certainly make consumers aware. The difficult part for consumers is the high cost of organically grown foods. Some do not have the means to spend those extra dollars. Is there any way to bring down the cost of organically grown foods so that it is more commesurate with unorganically grown foods?

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Kathryn A. Vermeer's avatar

It’s wonderful that we will get healthy food, but no one has discusses how accessible this good food will be affordable to lower income groups. I’m not talking about food stamps because the limitations make them still inaccessible to low income families and especially senior citizens on low social security. In many instances it’s barely enough to buy low priced bad food much less good organic food that doesn’t make them sick.

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Suzanne O'Keeffe's avatar

This is a tactic to AVOID tackling the clear fact that the DOD launched an act of war on humans with the "covid" op and the prototype EUA countermeasures made by the Pentagon. "Food reform" is merely a look-over-here gesture used as a psyop weapon to DISTRACT and pretend "something's happening," which is all to help the globalists avoid jail and avoid full collapse of Agenda 2030. No one should fall for this. Yes, regenerative farms. Don't need MAHA / gov't for that! But the only thing that will substantially and immediately broadly improve the health of Americans is immediately STOPPING the wider "vaccine" intentional harm that causes almost all our "chronic" disease. And the main thing we all need to do is process the DOD's role in leading this psyop act of war that obviously had nothing to do with "health."

https://open.substack.com/pub/unbekoming/p/vaccinated-60-vs-unvaccinated-264

The Control Group study

The study calculated the odds that vaccines are not the cause of over 90% of disabling chronic conditions in adults at 1 in 245,083,100,778,672,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 (p < 4.08E-63).

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Arden's avatar

As nice as this forum may have been, more farm welfare subsidies are not the answer to solving our food production problems. We have a $36+ trillion federal debt. The problems are solved by getting information out to policy makers that address main-stream American agriculture. We need people such as Don Huber, Michael McNeill, Gary Zimmer, Arden Andersen, Ben McClean, Todd Harrington, Ray Archaleta, Darin Moon, Mike Serant, Lynn Brakke, Adam York https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TwKEkskAJYE Dwayne Bowman, Tom Dykstra, Alan Perry, Sheldon Rockey to be brought into the discussions and policy planning.

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Lhfry's avatar

The farmers at this event specifically opposed subsidies and the film about them, Common Ground argues against them too.

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Arden's avatar

Means emphasized that shifting agricultural systems and reconnecting people to healthy soils will be a long-term effort requiring greater monetary support for farmers...

Where does Means suggest this "support" come from? I interpreted, perhaps incorrectly, it meant from government subsidies. My mistake. Any comments on the rest of my post?

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Stan Schultz's avatar

Thanks for the good news! God knows we need all we can get of that.

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