Inflation and economic uncertainty is affecting many in Canada. One way that we’re seeing this manifested is in people deciding to eat out less. People are opting to prepare their own meals more and more, probably more than at any time in the past twenty to thirty years.
And frozen foods are a popular option, especially for people used to eating out because they don’t like to cook or they don’t know how to do it well. Sounds like a recipe for companies to increase their offerings in terms of frozen food at the grocery store doesn’t it? But that’s not what Nestle is doing. Instead the Swiss based company, a member of the WEF and with Bill Gates as a noted shareholder, they will be removing some of their most popular products from Canadian shelves over the next six months.
Welcome to the the transitionary phase of the (sic) ‘great’ reset as we move into Klaus Schwab’s fourth industrial revolution, something I refer to as the fourth reich. A few years back the WEF came out with a branding statement: “You will own nothing and be happy”. That’s the road they have us on, but before having us owning nothing, they first have to accustom us to having less. And one of the things we’ll have less and less of in the coming years is choice.
Here’s a little economics 101 primer that most know, either because they’ve learned it or by simple intuition. In a free market economy buisnesses create services and products that chase consumer dollars. If you have a popular product that people are buying, then your company succeeds. This is what Nestle has done with their frozen pizzas and frozen dinners.
So what we have here is Nestle basically saying: “Damn, we have popular products in a sector that is only going to be getting more popular in the future, let’s pull them. Yeah, that makes good business sense”.
Let’s cut right to the chase here shall we. Klaus Schwab stated it quite clearly recently when addressing the G20 Summit in Bali Indonesia. This is the transitionary phase, and they’re endeavouring to move us into their planned dystopian globalist future incrementally, so there are going to be lots of changes coming. But these changes will be slow and steady so as not to promote any serious backlash.
Farmers are being hammered by increased costs for fertilizers and diesel. The government in the Netherlands is seizing farms that have been run by families for generations, even hundreds of years. There is going to be less food and thus less choice for consumers in the years to come. With Ukraine accepting US and German tanks there’s the very real potential for an escalation in that conflict just as planting season starts in a country that supplies a lot of the world’s wheat.
Restaurants are already struggling, I won’t be surprised if sometime in the years ahead customers will be asked: “Do you want crickets with your plant based burger”?