Some vegetables are currently being “rationed” by major United Kingdom supermarkets. Aldi, Morrisons, Tesco and Sainsbury’s have all put limits on customer purchases of peppers, tomatoes, and cucumbers.
So far, the mainstream media has blamed Brexit (which makes little sense considering the bulk of the UK’s vegetables come from Morocco) or the weather. Both of these are advantageous for the public to believe regarding the plans to install a “New World Order” totalitarian slave system using “climate change” as the scapegoat.
The best news is that a whole lot of people are figuring this out and opening their eyes.
As Off-Guardian so eloquently put it:
The real reason there are shortages – supposing there are real shortages, not just psy-op nonsense like the toilet paper fiasco at the beginning of the “pandemic” – is that one way or another, they have been engineered. –Off-Guardian
The cost of producing, harvesting, and transporting all crops has spiked because the cost of oil and gas was deliberately inflated. The cost of growing crops has increased because there is a “shortage” of fertilizer which was likewise purposefully created. Both of these “shortages” are being blamed by the ruling classes on the war in Ukraine. However, both the energy crisis and fertilizer crisis predates the war in Ukraine (see here and here).
PREPPING FOR THE UPCOMING GOVERNMENT-INDUCED FOOD SHORTAGES
Speaking of Ukraine, it’s currently easier to get tomatoes in war-torn Kherson than in London. That’s the reality we’re being presented with.
The governments of the world are intentionally creating shortages and then blaming them on whatever else they can to convince people that enslavement and their salvation are the only way.
These sociopaths that most believe control their lives are trying to see what they can get away with before the slaves rise up and realize that firstly, they are slaves, and secondly, they don’t have to be.
The Biggest Obstacle To Real Freedom Is The Belief That We Already Have It
They’re rationing tomatoes in the supermarkets. We’re told it’s about supply chains, bad weather, and the price of heating, but right now, in terms of the messaging, I suspect it’s more about pushing the word – rationing. Less about any believable shortage of food and more about getting us used to hearing the word. -Neil Oliver