Cheetos, Quaker Granola Oats and other processed grocery foods could already contain cricket protein, depending on the brand, so make sure you read the ingredient labels closely.
"There are at least six or seven companies in this world that are now using crickets, insects to make flour," explains the American farmer in the video below.
"Insect Gourmet says insect-related businesses in the Western world are producing insect proteins for foods, beverages, confectionaries, and other things such as butters, oils, and does as well as spice and seasoning."
American Farmer At Grocery Store Showing Showing Popular Foods Could Soon Have Bugs Added
“According to Drovers, PepsiCo is looking to use cricket proteins in products such as Cheetos and Quaker Granola Oats”
“There are at least six or seven companies in this world that's now… pic.twitter.com/xPQwvhICfp
— Wall Street Apes (@WallStreetApes) April 1, 2024
(Related: Chicken giant Tyson Foods recently partnered with a Dutch company to push bugs and insects on humans.)
Believe it or not, insect and bug ingredients can also apparently be added to American food items without explicit labeling. The plan in just a few short years is to lace ground-up bugs into everything sold at conventional grocery stores.
By 2027, the plan is to reach $4.6 billion in sales from bug ingredients, amounting to around 1.4 million tons in total weight.
Archer Daniels Midland (ADM) is already producing insect ingredients at its Decatur, Ill., plant in partnership with Innova Foods. On the company's website, it is stated falsely that crickets are 60 percent protein.
Human knowledge is under attack! Governments and powerful corporations are using censorship to wipe out humanity's knowledge base about nutrition, herbs, self-reliance, natural immunity, food production, preparedness and much more. We are preserving human knowledge using AI technology while building the infrastructure of human freedom. Speak freely without censorship at the new decentralized, blockchain-power Brighteon.io. Explore our free, downloadable generative AI tools at Brighteon.AI. Support our efforts to build the infrastructure of human freedom by shopping at HealthRangerStore.com, featuring lab-tested, certified organic, non-GMO foods and nutritional solutions.
Iowa State University's (ISU) etymology department says that crickets are only about 12.9 percent protein, which means ADM is lying (big shocker) in order to make crickets seem more "nutritious."
Whatever the case may be, crickets are not a suitable food item for humans. The Cleveland Clinic issued a warning that about 30 percent of all cricket farms, meaning the facilities where crickets are now being raised for human "food," are loaded with parasites that transfer to humans who eat them.
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) also expressed uncertainty about the alleged digestibility of crickets. The bugs' exoskeletons, also known as chitin, is claimed to be a "digestible fiber," but the NIH says it has no idea how it allegedly digests.
In other words, the human body cannot process crickets as food. And even the part that is claimed to function like "fiber" does not appear to digest, even though corporations like ADM insist it does.
Because the powers that be want only themselves to eat meat, everyone else has to eat bugs or "plants," these being the only two protein options for poor people moving forward.
It is already a bad idea to eat processed foods from the likes of PepsiCo, by the way. Cereals from Quaker, for instance, are loaded with pesticides like glyphosate that are linked to cancer and reproductive problems.
"I'll not eat bugs and only buy fresh meat from my local butcher," one commenter wrote about all this. "Not labeled? Just boycott their products."
"Stop eating processed foods," wrote another. "Eat more one-ingredient foods like eggs, avocado, and steak because processed foods are already poisoning you."
"The more processed, the more poison they can sneak in. Just look at the health of today's youth."
More related news can be found at FoodCollapse.com.
Sources for this article include: