A new book aimed at “exposing the billionaires” says Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates’ investments in patented fertilizers, fake meat and US farmland are not saving the planet but enriching his bank account.
“Controligarchs,” which hits bookshelves Tuesday, examines billionaires like Bill Gates and how their wealth controls the levers of power that dominate the everyday lives of ordinary Americans.
Author and investigative journalist Seamus Bruner – who led the team whose findings sparked multiple FBI investigations and congressional inquiries into the Clinton and Biden families – said his research exposed Gates’ efforts to buy up American farmland and invest in synthetic dairy and lab-grown meat. in the name of preventing climate change.
In the process, Bruner said, Gates did more to increase his net worth than eliminate carbon emissions.
“First, it was a patented seed and a patented fertilizer, and now they’re patenting a meat alternative. Banning cows would give an effective monopoly to alternative protein companies and benefit investors like Bill Gates, Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg and even BlackRock. Fake meat is about controlling the food market, not saving the planet,” Bruner said in an interview with Fox News Digital.
An author says that Bill Gates research reveals Gates’ efforts to buy American farmlandGetty Images for the Gates Archive
Peter Schweizer, author of “Red-Handed,” “Clinton Cash” and “Profiles in Corruption,” wrote an attack on “Controligarchs” in which he said the book “looks into the future and provides a haunting and revealing revelation of the left. elite playbook for the next five years.”
One chapter in the book focuses on the “war on farmers” and notes that tech giants like Gates monopolize the nation’s food supply.
“The takeover of the food system, like many other control schemes in this book, started with the Rockefellers and was advanced by Bill Gates. Like many of their monopolies – from oil to software and ultimately biotechnology – food takeovers are about controlling the intellectual property of food production through trademarks, copyrights and patents,” the book says.
The author also says Bill Gates is doing more to increase his net worth than to eliminate carbon emissions.petert2 – stock.adobe.com
Bruner outlined Gates’ connection to the “Green Revolution” – a series of agricultural advances made possible by Rockefeller-funded research and design in the 1940s to help solve the poverty and famine crisis of the time.
“The Green Revolution is simultaneously proof that problems like poverty and hunger can be solved through human innovation and that solutions, like genetically modified pesticide-resistant crops, can create new problems like pollution, resource exhaustion and the consolidation of small-scale and family-owned farms into giant corporate controlled plantations,” it reads.
“But instead of taking responsibility for the new problem, the Rockefellers took all the credit for the crop abundance while blaming the new problem on a convenient scapegoat for climate change,” Bruner wrote.
Bill Gates’ efforts are tied to investments in synthetic dairy and lab-grown meat in the name of preventing climate change. Getty Images for The New York Times
“Now, the Controligarchs claim they can solve the climate crisis with a new patented miracle product that makes themselves richer and, again, at the expense of small-scale independent farmers,” he added.
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Bruner documents the anger of farmers around the world after the push to ban more traditional and affordable crop nutrients, and he notes that restrictions on traditional fertilizers that farmers say will bankrupt them were only implemented “after Gates and his colleagues acquired the intellectual property for alternative fertilizers .”
Bruner continued that “for more than a decade, as he targeted the fertilizer industry, Bill Gates also quietly bought up large swaths of American farmland.”
“All told, Gates has spent over $1 billion dollars on the acquisition of the 2030 Agenda-compliant farms and technologies they are now using,” Bruner said. The 2030 Agenda is a United Nations initiative that aims to “eradicate extreme poverty, reduce inequality and protect the planet.”
“When Gates bought tens of thousands of acres, he wasn’t just buying the land — he was also buying the rights to underground water. In addition to fields (and irrigation) and fertilizers, Gates has taken a great interest in water and water treatment – important components when trying to control the agricultural industry,” said Bruner.
Another section of the book warns of Gates’ next targets are synthetic meat companies like Beyond Meat and Impossible Foods, which have received more than two dozen patents for their fake meat (and fake dairy) products and have more than 100 patents pending. Gates has invested millions in such companies, even though consumers in general are not yet interested in such products.
Bill Gates targeted the fertilizer industry but is now quietly buying up most of America’s farmland. sectoror – stock.adobe.com
Bruner noted that Gates’ entry into the fake meat market came as the Microsoft creator warned that cow bellies were a significant contributor to climate change.
“And it’s no surprise that while farmers are expected to eat fermented fungi, lab-grown meat, and worm milkshakes, the Controligarchs — with their personal chefs — have no intention of doing the same if recent behavior is any indicator,” Bruner said.
“Bill Gates and Warren Buffett are known to eat beef burgers and steaks when Gates visits his mentor in Omaha. Zuckerberg likes to smoke beef brisket and roast pork ribs (from real cows and pigs) and says the meat tastes ‘twice as good when you hunt the animal for yourself,'” Bruner wrote.
Fox News Digital reached out to the Gates Foundation but did not receive a response in time for publication.
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Source: thtrangdai.edu.vn/en/