Bill Gates Is Buying Up America’s Farmland; What Could Possibly Go Wrong?

He who controls the food supply controls the people.

Now that the coronavirus has been successfully weaponized as a means to remake America into something that is acceptable to the elites, a disturbing development has come to light with it being reported that billionaire Bill Gates has been buying up the nation’s farmland without any scrutiny from Congress, the media or the authorities.

The Microsoft co-founder and top driver of administering experimental vaccines to everyone on the planet as well as a man who has waxed poetic about eugenics and population control has quietly amassed 242,000 acres of the nation’s farmland, something that should have set off alarm bells with our so-called representatives in Washington D.C.

The stunning news was discovered by Eric O’Keefe who was researching the “mysterious’ purchase of 14,500 acres of “prime” farmland in Washington state for his magazine The Land Report which tracks major purchases of land and publishes an annual list of America’s biggest landowners.

O’Keefe notes that such large acquisitions are “blue-moon events” and that the Washington transaction “immediately set off alarm bells.”

According to a New York Post report, O’Keefe traced the purchase to “a small, obscure company in Louisiana” that upon further investigation, was discovered to be acting on behalf of the  “secretive investment firm” that manages much of Gates’ immense fortune.

O’Keefe writes in The Land Report:

Call it a hunch, but the story did not jibe. I scanned the headline for the umpteenth time and then read and reread the pertinent details. Something was missing. Either that or I had a screw loose. According to the Tri-City Herald, a 14,500-acre swath of choice Eastern Washington farmland in the Horse Heaven Hills of Benton County had just traded hands for almost $171 million. That’s a ginormous deal, one that pencils out to almost $12,000 per acre for a whole lot of acres. Pretty pricey dirt, right? That’s exactly what I thought. Especially when it comes to row crops like sweet corn and wheat, which were grown in rotation with potatoes on 100 Circles, which is the name of the property that changed hands. Then again, farmers and investors in the Mid-Columbia River market expect to pay $10,000 to $15,000 for good ground. Anyone who has ever studied the Columbia River Basin knows that the tillable acreage there is coveted ground, a geologic wonder. The soil profile and underlying silty loess are in a league of their own.

More often than not, farmland sales involve hundreds of acres. Thousand-acre transactions — such as the sale of 6,000- acre Weidert Farm to Farmland L.P. two years ago and the 6,175-acre Broetje Orchards acquisition by the Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan last year — are blue-moon events.

Tens of thousands of acres? Only sovereign wealth funds and institutional investors can stroke a check for tracts in that league, which is exactly what occurred on the sell side of the 100 Circles transaction: The seller was John Hancock Life Insurance, a multibillion-dollar asset manager with key holdings in all the major US markets as well as Canada and Australia.

The story went dark on the buy side, however. The Tri-City Herald reported that the purchaser was a “Louisiana investor,” a limited liability company associated with Angelina Agriculture of Monterey, Louisiana. Sorry, but that didn’t pass the sniff test.

The Land Report tracks numerous Louisiana landowners; Angelina Agriculture is not one of them. Let’s call that strike one. The burgeoning metropolis of Monterey, population 462, rang a bell, but despite my best efforts, I couldn’t connect the dots to anyone whom we had profiled in The Land Report or, for that matter, anyone who was on our watch list. So I took a look at Dun & Bradstreet. At its listed headquarters — 8318 Highway 565 — Angelina Agriculture boasted two employees and reported annual revenues just north of $300,000. Given the size and cost of 100 Circles, both of those figures made no sense at all. Strike two. How about Google Maps? An aerial image of the Highway 565 address revealed a small metal-sided building off by itself in the woods. Strike three, right?

One of my favorite Clint Eastwood movies is the 1999 mystery/thriller True Crime. In it, the four-time Academy Award winner plays an over-the-hill journalist who has “a nose” for a story. I am quite confident that Eastwood’s character, Steve Everett, would have picked up the stench from this setup a mile off: a $171 million acquisition by an LLC with two employees in a metal-sided building down a dirt road off the Bayou Teche? I forwarded the lead to our Land Report 100 Research Team. Minutes later, a terse response arrived:

“Ever hear of Bill Gates?”

Gates may have been one of former President Donald J. Trump’s biggest critics but he is completely on board with Joe Biden’s radical environmental policies. The Microsoft co-founder and philanthropist praised Biden’s efforts to destroy the domestic fossil fuels industry in order to replace it with utopian alternatives under the guise of an eco-friendly “sustainability” during a recent appearance on “60 Minutes” where he called for Biden to plow a staggering $35 billion a year into climate change energy research.

During his chat with the reptilian Anderson Cooper who moonlights for CBS’s flagship news program, Gates touted what he calls a “zero-carbon future” that over the next 30 years will require a “global cooperation on a scale the world has never seen” which is music to the ears of those who are rushing to dismantle Trump’s America first agenda.

Gates also rolled out some of his big ideas, one of them designed to end the planetary menace of flatulent cows by convincing people to eat foods created out of fungus.

Via from CBS:

Because cows account for around 4% of all greenhouse gases, Gates has invested in two companies making plant based meat substitutes, impossible foods and beyond meat. But farming the vegetables used to make many meat alternatives emits gases as well, so Gates is also backing a company that’s created an entirely new food source.

Bill Gates: This company, Nature’s Fynd, is using fungis. And then they turn them into sausage and yogurt. Pretty amazing.

Anderson Cooper: When you say fungi, do you mean like mushroom or a microbe?

Bill Gates: It’s a microbe.

The microbe was discovered in the ground in a geyser in Yellowstone National Park. Without soil or fertilizer it can be grown to produce this nutritional protein — that can then be turned into a variety of foods with a small carbon footprint.

Bill Gates: This is the yogurt.

Anderson Cooper: Oh this is good.

Bill Gates: Wow.

Anderson Cooper: I’ve had, like, cashew yogurt or oat yogurt. It’s– it’s sort of along those lines.

Some of Gates’ other ideas that didn’t make it into “60 Minutes” include his miraculous machine that turns human feces into drinking water. That’s right, the global elite want the rest of us to eat fungus and drink shit.

While Congress and a media that has largely been bought off by the Bill & Melinda Gates foundation are asleep at the switch, the same can’t be said of Robert F. Kennedy Jr. whose criticism of a man who he says is “fueled by a messianic conviction that he is ordained to save the world with technology and a god-like willingness to experiment with the lives of lesser humans,” has compiled a damning collection of articles on Gates at The Children’s Health Defense.

In a recent article entitled “Bill Gates and Neo-Feudalism: A Closer Look at Farmer Bill,” Kennedy writes:

The global lockdowns that Bill Gates helped orchestrate and cheerlead have bankrupted more than 100,000 businesses in the U.S. alone and plunged a billion people into poverty and deadly food insecurity that, among other devastating harms, kill 10,000 African children monthly — while increasing Gates’ wealth by $20 billionHis $133 billion fortune makes him the world’s fourth wealthiest man.

Gates has been using that newfound cash to expand his power over global populations by buying devalued assets at fire-sale prices and maneuvering for monopoly control over public healthprivatizing prisonsonline education and global communications while promoting digital currencieshigh tech surveillancedata harvesting systems and artificial intelligence.

For a man obsessed with monopoly control, the opportunity to also dominate food production must seem irresistible.

According to the newest issue of The Land Report, Gates has quietly made himself the largest owner of farmland in the United States. Gates’ portfolio now comprises about 242,000 acres of American farmland and nearly 27,000 acres of other land across Louisiana, Arkansas, Nebraska, Arizona, Florida, Washington and 18 other states.

Thomas Jefferson believed that the success of America’s exemplary struggle to supplant the yoke of European feudalism with a noble experiment in self-governance depended on the perpetual control of the nation’s land base by tens of thousands of independent farmers, each with a stake in our democracy.

So at best, Gates’ campaign to scarf up America’s agricultural real estate is a signal that feudalism may again be in vogue. At worst, his buying spree is a harbinger of something far more alarming — the control of global food supplies by a power-hungry megalomaniac with a Napoleon complex.

Gates is the creator and largest donor to the United Nations’ subsidiary, GAVI, a faux governmental agency that he created to push his diabolical chemical, medical and food concoctions, and conduct villainous vaccine experiments on Africans and Indians. Since 2014, The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nationsfunded by the Gates Foundation in the amount of almost $850K has aggressively pushed the use of insect protein — particularly for the poor. GAVI characterizes wasps, beetles, crickets and other insects as “underutilized” food sources.

Following Gates’ lead, GAVI is optimistic that bugs will soon be an important food supplement for impoverished and undernourished children.

Perhaps in anticipation of that happy day, the Gates Foundation has invested in a South African company that makes edible protein from cultivated maggots. The company’s factory houses a billion flies and produces 22 tons of maggots daily that graze on slaughterhouse, municipal and household waste. Since markets are still immature for maggots as human food, Gates sells his maggot-meal to factory meat operations like those owned by Gates’ partner, Tyson Foods, to feed battery-caged chickens, and to large-scale fish farms, like those owned by Unilever, a $58 billion multinational, which is both a business partner to Gates and a grant beneficiary of his peculiar public charity.

As usual, Gates has also mobilized the international agencies that he controls and the large corporations with which he partners to drive his fake food agenda including, most notably, The Gates-funded World Economic Forum (WEF), which assembles the world’s billionaires in Davos each year to plan and plot out humanity’s political and economic future.

Kennedy’s article is very long and filled with links to stories and other resources, it is well worth the time spent to read and to pass it around to others. It can be found HERE.

Perhaps it’s just greed that has driven Gates to corner the market on America’s farmland but with ample evidence of his megalomania and grand plans to remake the world, it is likely something far darker.

Bill Gates and the globalist elite have big plans for America.