quarta-feira, 7 de janeiro de 2026

Sudan’s War, UAE Gold Networks, and the Rise of Anti-Imperialist Alliances


 

Mnar Adley 
December 5, 2025    

Even as the U.S. empire’s gaze is turned towards Venezuela, it continues to meddle in Africa. Foreign intervention is fueling a bitter civil war in Sudan, the Trump administration is pushing a line about a genocide against Christians in Nigeria, with an eye on military intervention, and across the Sahel region, anti-imperialist forces continue to rise and organize, dreaming of a united, pan-African continent that will resist American imperialism and reject Israeli colonization.

Joining MintCast host Mnar Adley today to talk about the continent is Ahmed Kaballo. Ahmed is a British-Sudanese journalist and the CEO and co-founder of African Stream, a media outlet shut down by the U.S. government for publishing inconvenient truths.

Sudan is a nation gripped by a civil war. Since 2023, the country has been in the midst of a bitter conflict between rival military factions. The country’s internationally-recognized government is losing ground to the breakaway Rapid Support Forces (RSF).

The RSF is widely accused of carrying out a genocidal massacre at El Fasher in the west of the country. Since October, satellite images have hinted at the scale of the slaughter, with some estimates suggesting up to 68,000 people have already been killed.

The RSF would not be such a potent force without significant financial, military, and logistical support from the United Arab Emirates. In turn, huge quantities of freshly mined Sudanese gold finds its way into the Middle Eastern nation; the jewelry stores of Dubai are awash with African gold.

Under huge pressure from the United States, the government of Sudan signed a normalization deal with Israel, paving the way for more regional acceptance of Israel’s colonization of its neighbors.

Meanwhile, in Nigeria, the Trump administration has been promoting the idea that there is a genocide against the country’s Christian community taking place, and even floating the idea of U.S. involvement in the west African nation’s internal affairs.

In this endeavor, he has found an unlikely ally in Nicki Minaj. The rapper (who has no ties to Nigeria) recently spoke at the United Nations, praising Trump for his commitment to protecting the Christian community there. Others have stated that while radical armed Islamist forces are indeed operating all over the Sahel region, their guns are pointed at everyone, and there is no specific purge against Christians.

These threats against Nigeria likely come as a shock to the country’s president, Bola Tinubu, who has been among America’s most servile allies on the continent. Nigeria has played a key role as the U.S.’ enforcer in the region, is a key member of the NATO-approved ECOWAS regional bloc, and has taken steps against anti-imperialist movements developing in Western Africa. Nigeria has also maintained extremely close ties with Israel, unusual for an African nation.

Tinubu spent his earlier years laundering money for heroin traffickers in Chicago, making a fortune in the process, and is widely suspected of being a U.S. national security state asset.

On the opposite side of the spectrum to Tinubu is Ibrahim Traoré of Burkina Faso. Since coming to power in 2022, the young military leader has expelled French troops, ejected Western corporations, and aligned his country with Russia, Cuba, and Venezuela. Promoting pan-African unity and national self-reliance while surviving coup attempts, Traoré is positioning himself as a radical anti-imperialist and has drawn fire from Washington and Paris.

Africa, then, stands at a crossroads between resistance and assistance, between struggle and servitude. What happens in the next few years could decide the fate of the continent in the 21st century.

Don’t miss this exclusive interview, only at MintPress News.

 


 

Mnar Adley is an award-winning journalist and editor and is the founder and director of MintPress News. She is also president and director of the non-profit media organization Behind the Headlines. Adley also co-hosts the MintCast podcast and is a producer and host of the video series Behind The Headlines. Contact Mnar at mnar@mintpressnews.com or follow her on Twitter at @mnarmuh.

Source: https://www.mintpressnews.com/africa-sudan-war-uae-gold-anti-imperialist-rise/290580/

Bill Gates' multinational synthetic meat company is crashing with a 77% stock market drop in 2025

 


Unai Cano

December 30, 2025

Another blow to woke ideology: the multinational company Beyond Meat, known for its artificial "meat," has seen its stock plummet, confirming that the experiment is failing. The company, presented for years as the emblem of the future of food, has accumulated a drop of over 77% so far this year, reflecting the erosion of a model that has failed to convince either consumers or investors.

The stock market collapse is not an isolated event, but rather the consequence of several consecutive failures. Beyond Meat promised to replace traditional meat with supposedly more sustainable and ethical products, but has instead encountered declining sales, increasingly narrow margins, and growing public rejection. The average consumer not only perceives these products as expensive and ultra-processed, but also doubts their supposed health and environmental benefits.

For years, the company was backed by major funds and figures in the tech global movement, including Bill Gates, who championed synthetic meat and plant-based substitutes as a climate necessity. However, the market is sending a clear signal: ideological rhetoric isn't enough when the product isn't appealing or competitive against traditional meat.

While Beyond Meat is plummeting, the traditional meat sector is showing remarkable resilience. In many Western countries, meat consumption remains stable and is even increasing, driven by distrust of food experiments perceived as artificial. For a growing segment of the population, "lab-grown meat" and plant-based substitutes have gone from being a futuristic promise to a cultural imposition associated with radical progressivism.

In Europe, the rejection has gone even further. Italy passed an explicit ban on the sale of lab-grown meat, citing the defense of its culinary traditions and its agri-food sector. Hungary has followed a similar path, banning these types of products and warning of the economic, health, and cultural risks of replacing livestock production with industrial experiments.

All of this paints a clear picture: the initial enthusiasm for synthetic meat and ideologically driven ultra-processed products is waning. The bankruptcies of insect companies, the collapse of Beyond Meat, and political decisions in several countries all point in the same direction. Far from "saving the planet," this model has ultimately clashed with market realities and the common sense of millions of consumers.

More than a simple stock market correction, what is happening is a shift in trend. Traditional meat is not only holding its own but gaining ground against a woke experiment that promised much but delivered little. For many, the conclusion is obvious: when ideology tries to impose itself on taste, culture, and the real economy, the result is inevitably failure.

 

Source: https://noticiasholisticas.com.ar/se-hunde-la-empresa-multinacional-de-carne-sintetica-de-bill-gates-con-una-caida-en-bolsa-de-un-77-en-2025/ 

Land of Confusion: The Great Reset in Motion


 

Colin Todhunter
January 1, 2026

The global disruptions we have seen in recent years are frequently presented as a chaotic sequence of events: a ‘pandemic’, inflation, energy shortages and war. Little wonder that most people are confused. However, a structural analysis reveals a more deliberate controlled demolition of the 20th-century social contract.

We are witnessing a transition from a productive capitalist model, which required a healthy mass labour force, to what Yanis Varoufakis calls a techno-feudalist order.

The engine of this transition was a desperate financial stabilisation strategy carried out by means of a public health event. As identified by Professor Fabio Vighi, the global financial system reached a point of terminal instability in late 2019, evidenced by the collapse of the US repo market (where banks lend to each other).

By freezing the real economy through lockdowns, central banks performed massive liquidity injections to save the banking-finance tier. If that money had entered a functioning economy, it would have triggered hyper-inflation. By keeping the population at home, the elite performed a stealth bailout that preserved the dominance of the financial class by sacrificing the productive middle class.

However, a geopolitical reset also had to take place. For decades, Germany’s economy relied on three pillars: cheap Russian gas, high-tech exports to China and a US security umbrella. By late 2025, all three have been fractured. As Prof Michael Hudson notes, the ‘sabotage’ of the Nord Stream pipelines was a structural necessity for the Western financial elite.

If Germany continued to integrate with Russia and China, it would have created a power pole independent of the US dollar. The conflict in Ukraine served a purpose: it resulted in Germany replacing Russian pipeline gas and being forced into a massive build-out of liquefied natural gas (LNG) infrastructure and reliance on LNG from the US. Unlike pipeline gas, LNG must be super-cooled, shipped and re-gasified, a process that is inherently 3–4 times more expensive.

The result is that, in 2025, German industrial output is at its lowest since the 1990s. Heavy industries like BASF (chemicals) and ThyssenKrupp (steel) are relocating to the US or China. Meanwhile, Germany is pivoting from an industrial giant by betting on creating jobs in the likes of the green energy sector (including becoming a ‘hydrogen hub’), semiconductors and microelectronics, robotics and biotech and diverting its capital into a €150 billion annual defence spend.

At the same time, while Germany collapses, the City of London thrives on global volatility. Among other things, the City is the global hub for war risk insurance and energy brokerage. When a pipeline is destroyed or a strategically important shipping lane is threatened, the price of war risk insurance triples. The London insurance market (Lloyd’s) extracts these ‘risk premiums’ from the global economy.

The City’s brokers treat geopolitical instability as a volatile asset class. Even as British households are crushed by energy bills, the financial centre remains profitable by extracting wealth from the very chaos that foreign policy helps to manufacture.

Moreover, the City of London has secured its position as the indispensable middleman of the transatlantic energy pivot. While the physical gas originates in the US and is consumed in Europe, the financial and legal architecture of this trade is almost entirely managed in London.

Commodity brokers and exchanges like ICE (Intercontinental Exchange) in London have seen record volumes in LNG futures and derivatives. These are financial bets on the future price of gas. As volatility increases, the fees and commissions extracted by London-based traders and clearinghouses skyrocket.

More than 90% of the world’s marine insurance, including the specialised, high-premium coverage required for LNG tankers, is underwritten through Lloyd’s. By enforcing strict war risk premiums on any ship entering European waters, London effectively imposes a private tax on every molecule of gas that replaces the lost Russian pipeline supply.

This ensures that while European industry is struggling with high energy costs, the City’s financial firms extract a massive toll from the logistics of the replacement supply.

Of course, the structural readjustment of economies leads to huge social tensions. This is where the ‘Russian threat’ comes in. It has been elevated to an all-encompassing internal narrative used to manage domestic dissent and to galvanise the public to rally behind the flag. The bogeyman serves a vital psychological function by converting the growing anger of the impoverished into a patriotic duty to endure hardship.

Under this regime of ‘permanent emergency’, any industrial action, protest or systemic critique can be branded as malign foreign influence or subversion, allowing the state to use new, expansive policing powers to suppress internal friction.

To justify the redirection of billions in tax revenue away from failing public services and into the military-industrial complex to create ‘growth’ in a failing economy (a desperate attempt to revive a collapsing neoliberalism—see chapter two here), the state must maintain a high-decibel level of existential fear. In the UK, the Defence Industrial Strategy 2025 explicitly frames militarisation as an engine for growth, using the spectre of a Russian invasion to legitimise a state-subsidised transfer of wealth to high-tech defence contractors.

By manufacturing a permanent state of war-footing, the elite ensure that a main pillar of the economy is the one that directly serves the security of the state, while the population is told that their dwindling healthcare and pensions are a necessary sacrifice for national survival.

In this respect, we also see the changing status of the human being. In the industrial era, the state ‘subscribed’ to the working class, investing in the NHS and education because it required a fit population to drive production. Artificial intelligence, robotics and economic decline increasingly make much of this labour force redundant.

As capital may no longer find the reproduction of labour desirable or profitable, the state withdraws its subscription. The visible rot in the NHS is the result of deliberate divestment. (The UK private health insurance market has surged to a record £8.64 billion, a nearly 14% year-on-year increase.)

If the worker is no longer required for production, the state views healthcare as a ‘non-performing cost’ to be liquidated.

When a population is no longer an asset but a fiscal liability, the state moves from care to managing exit. It’s no accident that we have seen calls for the rapid legalisation of assisted suicide across the West. It might also help to explain the prescribing of midazolam and do not resuscitate orders in care homes during the COVID event. Data shows that the UK government purchased vast quantities of midazolam (two years’ worth of stock in just two months) in early 2020.

In 2025, official impact assessments noted that legalising assisted dying would result in “considerable cost savings” for the NHS and state pension system—estimated at up to £18.3 million within a decade for pensions alone. The Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill Impact Assessment (May 2025) officially quantified the ‘benefits and pensions’ impact. It estimated that by year 10, the state would save roughly £27.7 million per year in unpaid pension and benefit payments due to assisted deaths.

By accelerating the ‘offboarding’ of the non-productive elderly (whatever happened to the COVID era marketing slogan of ‘saving granny’?), the system wipes billions in future pension liabilities off the state balance sheet.

Moving forward, what can we expect? We will see the elite continue to rollout the narrative of permanent emergency under the guise of climate crisis and Russian threat to provide the ideological discipline required to justify a boosted austerity. Meanwhile, digital ID and central bank digital currencies will create a system of total surveillance. In this emerging system, the citizen is replaced by the ‘managed subject’, whose access to the economy is contingent upon a social credit score.

Sources and References

Deutsche Bundesbank (Dec 2025): “Current Economic Policy Challenges in Germany.” (Primary data on the contraction of German industrial output and the fiscal burden of energy transition).

Hudson, Michael (2025): American Imperialism in Plain Sight. (On the “Super-Imperialism” of the US dollar and the structural dismantling of European industrial autonomy).

ICE (Intercontinental Exchange) (2025): Global Energy Derivatives Annual Report. (Statistics regarding the surge in LNG futures trading and the financialization of European energy markets).

Law Society of Ireland Gazette (May 2025): “Assisted Dying Will Result in Huge Savings in Britain.” (On the fiscal implications of legalizing MAiD in relation to state pension and NHS cost reductions).

Lloyd’s of London (Nov 2025): “The Geopolitics of Marine Risk.” (On the expansion of war risk premiums and London’s role in underwriting the transatlantic energy corridor).

London Market Group (Nov 2025): “Helping to Secure the Future.” (On the City of London’s strategic positioning within the post-pipeline energy architecture).

Robinson, S. (2020) ‘Supplies of sedative used for COVID-19 patients diverted from France to avoid potential shortages’, The Pharmaceutical Journal, 19 May.

UK Ministry of Defence (2025): Defence Industrial Strategy 2025. (Official policy framing military expansion as a central pillar of the new national economic model).

Varoufakis, Yanis (2024): Technofeudalism: What Killed Capitalism. (The foundational theoretical framework for the shift from profit-based production to rent-based digital extraction).  

Vighi, Fabio (2025): Emergency Capitalism. (On the use of systemic “crises” to manage the terminal instability of the global financial system).

World Economic Forum (2025): Global Risks Report. (Data regarding “social fragility” and the management of populations in the age of automation).


Dr Mike Yeadon: the Great Reset on Trial 

Source: https://www.activistpost.com/land-of-confusion-the-great-reset-in-motion/

terça-feira, 6 de janeiro de 2026

Trump putting Venezuela’s interim leader on ‘short leash’ – Politico

 


The US wants to “whip” Delcy Rodriguez into taking several pro-American steps and then “dispose of her,” a source told the outlet

RT
January 6

President Donald Trump’s attack on Venezuela marks a “restoration of a bygone era in the Western hemisphere,” Wyatt Reed has told RT

The US has sent a chilling message to the whole of Latin America with its abduction of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, Grayzone editor Wyatt Reed has told RT.

The US military’s raid in Caracas over the past weekend marks a “restoration of a bygone era in the Western hemisphere, where might makes right now,” the journalist said on Tuesday.

“Basically, you have an entire continent full of hostages that are just trying to avoid being next on this new ‘Donroe Doctrine’,” Reed said. The modern iteration of the Monroe Doctrine espoused by US President Donald Trump boils down to the belief that ‘If I see it, it’s mine. If I want it, I’m gonna take it,’ he added.

According to Reed, Trump likely views the attack on Venezuela as a “military action… which will make him look big and strong, maybe boost his poll numbers a little bit.” 

However, Trump’s latest actions, albeit a bit more bold-faced, are nothing new in terms of Washington’s attitude toward Caracas, he asserted.

“The US never forgave Venezuela for kicking out its preferred, pro-US puppet leadership, for removing by force, you know, these very unequal sort of oil arrangements that had prevailed in Venezuela prior,” Reed told RT.

Washington’s animosity toward Caracas dates back to the days of Maduro’s predecessor, Hugo Chavez, “who had a way of constantly irritating the US establishment,” according to Reed.

The US leadership did not want “this alternative model to the kind of capitalist system to be able to flourish just a few hundred miles from Miami,” the journalist concluded.

The US special forces descended upon the Venezuelan capital last Saturday, abducting Maduro and his wife. The couple was transported to New York, where they appeared in court on Monday on charges of drug-trafficking conspiracy. Both entered a not-guilty plea.

Russia, China, as well as several other BRICS and Global South nations, have strongly condemned the US actions and called for the immediate release of Maduro and his wife.

 


Source: https://swentr.site/news/630662-trump-venezuela-leader-short-leash/

From "Peace President" to Mad King: an updated CV of the "only American president to have never started a war"

 


avic
January 5, 2026 

Trump, after one year in office:

February 1, 2025, Somalia

March 15, 2025, Yemen

June 22, 2025, Iran

December 19, 2025, Syria

December 25, 2025, Nigeria

January 3, 2026, Venezuela 



Continuing the pattern of what all US presidents have always done, but even better. This proves that the kingmakers have once again made the right choice in Trump. The most cynical aspect of all this is that Trump is still considered by his fans to be the enemy of what they call the deep state. For his worshippers, the difference between their god and other US presidents is that the latter are held fully responsible for all their actions, good and bad, while their MAGA idol's poor decisions are systematically attributed to bad advice from his inner circle or malevolent intelligence services.

 

Source: https://en.reseauinternational.net/mise-a-jour-du-cv-du-president-de-la-paix-en-une-annee-de-mandat-le-seul-president-americain-a-navoir-jamais-declenche-une-guerre/ 

White House says U.S. military can be used to acquire Greenland

 


Peter Alexander, Monica Alba, Dareh Gregorian
Jan. 6, 2026  

Source: https://www.foxnews.com/politics/white-house-says-range-options-us-military-table-trump-renews-push-acquire-greenland

Stolen Soil and Corporate Welfare: The Global Scam of ‘Feeding the World’

 



Colin Todhunter
January 6, 2026

Supermarket shelves have never been fuller, yet diets have become poorer. Across the world, food systems praised for their productivity now deliver an abundance of calories alongside widespread micronutrient deficiency, ecological collapse and rural precarity.

This is the outcome of an agricultural model that equates food security with yield and mass production with nourishment. Sustained by billions in subsidies, industrial agriculture increasingly resembles a welfare state for agribusiness and retail giants whose profits depend on public money.

Nutritional decline

Corporate-driven industrial agriculture claims to feed the world but too often delivers empty calories while starving populations of nutrients. Consider that high-yield rice produces empty calories while becoming nutritionally impoverished. Since the 1960s, the concentration of zinc and iron in wheat and rice in India has fallen by 30 to 45%. In contrast, millets and pulses deliver far higher levels of protein, zinc and iron per square inch.

This is not unique to India: Rothamsted Research in the UK has evaluated the mineral concentration of archived wheat grain and soil samples from the Broadbalk Wheat Experiment. The experiment began in 1843, and their findings show significant decreasing trends in the concentrations of zinc, copper, iron and magnesium in wheat grain since the 1960s.

At the same time, nutritionally dense millet acreage in India has declined by 60% over the last seven decades. The decline is a result of structural shifts in Indian agriculture following the Green Revolution.

In the UK, the logic is similar, albeit expressed differently. Ultra-processed foods dominate, monocultures deplete soil and calories are abundant while nutrition is undermined. Obesity coexists with micronutrient deficiencies; grass-fed livestock and diverse rotations have largely been replaced by input-intensive systems, while supermarkets dictate production priorities and shape farming.

Industry PR frequently attempts to justify its role by implying the world would starve without its seeds and chemicals. The industry justifies this claim through the enduring myth of the Green Revolution; a narrative Prof. Glenn Stone and others have effectively debunked. The claim that industrial seeds ‘saved’ India from mass starvation, for instance, is less history than PR.

In reality, the Green Revolution represented a pivot towards input-intensive farming that displaced existing productivity gains in favour of a model that mandated dependency on proprietary seeds, chemical fertilisers and pesticides supplied by an increasingly concentrated global industry.

Displacement and precarity

When traditional farming is destabilised through state withdrawal, corporate inputs, global supply chains and monocultures, it becomes financially unviable for many farmers. Rural communities are removed from the soil. In India, this displacement is leveraged as part of a broader neoliberal strategy, clearing land for industrial-scale corporate agriculture.

In rural Britain, young people leave for cities as rural life becomes economically untenable and villages lose schools, healthcare and transport. Meanwhile, farmers rely heavily on subsidies, rural development grants and agri-environment schemes.

These payments mainly stabilise industrial supply chains and supermarket profits. In the UK, more than half of farm income comes from subsidies rather than market sales and larger farms disproportionately capture payments. In effect, subsidies sustain monocultures and high-volume production for supermarkets.

UK subsidies like the Basic Payment Scheme and its successors provide a non-market floor for farm income. They therefore function as an indirect subsidy for retail giants. By covering the farmer’s basic survival costs, the taxpayer effectively lowers the break-even point for producers, allowing supermarkets to use their purchasing power to negotiate farm-gate prices that are frequently below the actual cost of production.

So, the taxpayer pays to keep the farm viable, only for the supermarket to extract the resulting value through suppressed prices and high retail margins.

Mugging the public

These national subsidy regimes are embedded within a transnational agricultural input economy dominated by a small number of food retail, agrochemical and seed corporations, including firms such as Bayer and Syngenta, which sell proprietary seeds and chemicals at prices the farmer could not otherwise afford.

In the UK, publicly supported farm incomes stabilise demand for proprietary seeds, pesticides and fertilisers integrated into supermarket-led supply chains, ensuring predictable markets for input suppliers even as farm-gate prices are driven down.

The farmer is squeezed by both sides (inputs and retail), and although the mechanisms might differ per country, the underlying logic is consistent: the state absorbs risk while private firms profit from farmer dependence on proprietary inputs and chemically intensive production systems. We see a globally integrated system of public risk management for agribusiness.

While India still (however precariously) attempts to buffer the producer (through mechanisms like the Minimum Support Price for crop assurance and the Public Distribution System to stabilise consumer costs), the UK system has been fully utilised to de-risk the balance sheets of private giants.

The British public is being ‘mugged’ twice: once at the tax office and again at the checkout. At the same time, the state is subsidising a third ‘mugging’: a taxpayer-funded public health collapse. By bankrolling volume over nutrition, the government pays corporations to manufacture a health crisis, then taxes the public to treat the fallout. The taxpayer funds the hollow calories, the supermarket margins and the resulting chronic diseases whose cost falls on the NHS.

Welfare scroungers

The media too often vilifies the poor (whether families in the UK or struggling farmers in India) for needing public support. However, the biggest ‘scroungers’ are not families supposedly ‘fiddling the system’ but the shareholders of retail and input corporations whose profit margins are underwritten by public money.

In the UK, the agricultural sector is ensnared in a subsidy trap that functions as a taxpayer-funded life-support system for corporate retail. While the annual farming budget has remained largely stagnant at £2.4 billion since 2007 (effectively a significant cut when adjusted for inflation) it remains the only thing standing between many British farmers and bankruptcy.

According to Defra’s 2024/25 statistics, these payments now account for 30% to 55% of farm business income. Without this public intervention, the majority of UK farms would operate at a net loss. This means that the current market price for food is a policy choice to protect the margins of retail giants such as Tesco, which recently reported an adjusted operating profit of £3.13 billion.

In India, every time a farmer scans their fingerprint to purchase a subsidised bag of fertiliser, they trigger a transfer of public funds to chemical manufacturers. According to policy analyst Devinder Sharma (in numerous articles in The Tribune newspaper), by fixing the retail price of urea while guaranteeing cost recovery, the government has created a low-risk environment for input-intensive agriculture.

The average Indian agricultural household earns just ₹10,218 ($113) per month, while chemical companies—buffered by ₹1.91 lakh crore ($23 billion) in public funds—remain highly profitable.

Whether through the stagnant grants of the UK or the biometric pipelines of India, the state has become the ultimate guarantor of a high-input, high-cost agricultural model that would otherwise be commercially unsustainable for producers.

Towards a new system

In the UK, breaking this model requires a structural dismantling of the ‘supermarket state’. A genuine transition would necessitate land reform that decouples land value from real estate speculation alongside a strengthened retail code that mandates a minimum producer share of the retail price, ensuring value is not siphoned off by shareholders before it leaves the farm gate.

The current predatory model is a conscious political choice. An alternative is required—one rooted in community resilience, ecological health and nutritional sufficiency rather than corporate extraction. This shift is already visible in fragments of resistance emerging in both India and the UK.

In India, the revival of millet cultivation in Odisha demonstrates how subsidies can be reclaimed for social justice. By linking minimum support prices (MSPs) to decentralised procurement and school meal programmes, the state has transformed millets from ‘forgotten foods’ into pillars of nutrition and soil health.

In the UK, community-supported agriculture, seed-saving networks and local co-operatives act as quiet secessions from the corporate supply chain. While inheritance tax and market consolidation threaten land access, these projects prioritise health per acre and local autonomy, ensuring that the value created by the soil remains within the community rather than being siphoned off to retail headquarters.

The path forward requires a fundamental decoupling of food from the logic of extraction. This means a transition from a state that subsidises shareholder dividends to one that invests in soil sovereignty, small-scale farming and the long-term health of its people.

 

Source: https://off-guardian.org/2026/01/06/stolen-soil-and-corporate-welfare-the-global-scam-of-feeding-the-world/