The War on the Family Table: Globalists Label the Sunday Roast a 'Poison' #
For generations, the family gathered around a roast dinner has been the bedrock of a stable home. It is a time for gratitude, for the sharing of values, and for the simple, natural sustenance that has fueled our ancestors for millennia. Yet, the World Health Organization, in its latest display of detached elitism, has issued a report that can only be described as an ideological assault on the dinner table. They claim that animal products—the very foundation of human health and traditional agriculture—are 'unnatural' and laden with 'cadaveric poison.'
This is not science; it is a moral crusade masquerading as dietetics. The report suggests that meat causes everything from dementia to 'physical weakness,' citing a skewed study of elderly meat-eaters while praising a tiny group of vegan adolescents. The agenda is transparent: to strip away the traditions of the common man and replace them with 'seitan' and other processed, laboratory-born substitutes. They wish to turn the act of eating into a clinical, hormone-monitored experience, devoid of the heritage and heritage that livestock farming represents to our rural communities.
Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus’s public praise for these findings highlights the growing chasm between global institutions and the common sense of the people. To suggest that a mother providing milk and meat to her growing children is somehow poisoning them is a slander against the natural order. It is the same impulse that drives the 'America First' movement's skepticism toward these overreaching bodies: a refusal to let bureaucrats in Geneva dictate what is served in a kitchen in Middle England or the American Heartland.
We must resist this attempt to pathologise our way of life. When the 'experts' claim that a traditional diet is a threat to health, they are really saying that our independence and our connection to the land are threats to their control. The family table is a sacred space, and no amount of 'seitan' or bureaucratic posturing can replace the wholesome reality of a life lived in accordance with nature’s design.