The UN Food Systems Summit is set for Sept. 23, in New York City, part virtual. It was initiated formally in Fall, 2020 by UN Sec. Gen. Antonio Guterres, who was put up to it, according to reports, by the World Economic Forum crowd, in 2019. The official goal is to improve world food systems and to help meet the 17 SDG (Sustainable Development Goals,) but the context is to not rock the boat on world cartel food control, preach the doctrine of saving the Earth, and therefore cause depopulation.
Early on, Guterres appointed as Special Envoy for the Summit, Dr. Agnes Kalibata, a Rwanda agriculturalist, with plenty of credentials, who is the current President of AGRA—Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa, an infamous outfit funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and Rockefeller Foundation. This fact, and many related aspects of months of five tracks of odious pre-summit events leading up to the Sept. 23 conclave, have now drawn criticism, to the point that many organizations are boycotting the whole affair. Some protesting groups are equally green, and amount to players—witting or not—in a gang-countergang operation. But other farm and consumer advocates just want to keep their distance from this obvious Green Reset dirty operation run through the UN.
The mode of the Guterres green food systems’ so-called “reform” is staged “stakeholder” action, exactly according to the World Economic Forum’s latest playbook “Stakeholder Capitalism,” released in January 2021 as a new book by Klaus Schwab. On Sept. 23, and at pre-events, there were statements from thousands of “stakeholders” on food and farming—from billionaires and the World Wildlife Fund, to small farmers, and eaters hither and yon—with man-made climate change considered unquestionable.
Letters of protest have been flying against the Food Systems Summit, and against this week’s AGRF Agriculture event as well. Usually cited are the glaring UN, AGRA and World Economic Forum connections. The UN and WEF formed a partnership agreement in 2019. Many groups have announced boycotting the Food Systems Summit, including Greenpeace, Friends of the Earth, Amnesty International. The gist of much of the complaints goes beyond food control and industrialized farming, to blast the use of chemicals, bio-engineered seed improvements, and other modern technologies.