Sadiq Khan Signs Up Londoners for the ‘Planetary Health Diet’ by 2030 With Meat Cut to WW2 Levels of 44g a Day

Khan to plebs – I’ve taken your horrible cheap cars off the roads, now I’m coming after your nasty, smelly, unhealthy food. By 2030 you will be on Second World War calorie rations with plenty of vegetables, and little or no meat. That’s because I have signed London up to implementing the Planetary Health Diet with just 2,500 individual calories per day. Now you know I love statistics – did I tell you that my globalist friends inform me that banning your burgers and meat pies will help save 11 million lives each year?

The Planetary Health Diet (PHD) is the work of the EAT-Lancet Commission. It is predominantly an organic vegetarian plan and is intended to provide a “balanced, nutritional” and climate-friendly diet for all 10 billion people around the world. In 2019, London mayor Sadiq Khan led the way, signing up London to implement the diet for all by 2030. The PHD was one of the first to suggest that individual calories should be cut to Second World War levels and meat rationed to just 44 grams a day.

Through the C40 group of 100 city mayors, Khan additionally signed up to the ‘Good Food Cities Accelerator’. This committed a sub-set of 14 cities around the world to work with residents, businesses, public institutions and other organisations “to develop a joint strategy for implementing these measures by 2030”. Of course, at one level the idea that an increasingly despised Khan will “work” with Londoners to trash traditional diets in favour of ones based on organic grains and vegetables is laughable. But then 15 years ago, so was the idea that older cars owned by the less well-off would be forced from the roads by a Labour mayor under the guise of a so-called climate emergency.

As always, it is a good idea to look at what the global elites are writing and planning, often in plain sight. The PHD is the work of EAT, a non-profit, green activist operation that says it is dedicated to transforming the global food system to mitigate climate change. To pursue its aims, it has a number of partners including the Stockholm Resilience Centre and the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research. Needless to say, the show is funded by numerous foundations channelling money, often described as philanthropic, to fund ways to control rather than gain outright ownership of the means of production. Often described as ‘stakeholder capitalism’, the money buys influence, if not effective control, over wide swathes of industry, politics, media, academia and science.

EAT is based in Oslo and was founded by the Stordalen Foundation, Welcome Trust and the Stockholm Resilience Centre (SRC). The founder and Executive Chair is Dr. Gunhild Stordalen, who is reported to be linking “climate, health and sustainability issues across sectors to transform the global food system”. She is said to advise the World Economic Forum, and was named a ‘Young Global Leader’ by the Davos operation in 2015. In 2011, with her former husband she established the Stordalen Foundation, which went on to start the EAT Initiative with Johan Rockstrom and the SRC.

SRC is chaired by Johan Rockstrom from the Potsdam Institute and he is the activist’s activist. No climate scare seems too outrageous for him to promote. In May 2021 he told the Guardian that a Potsdam climate model showed that warming on Earth had not passed 2°C over the last three million years, a claim easily debunked by recent historical scientific evidence. SRC has a long list of foundation funders comprising individuals such as Wallenberg, Walton and Packard, corporates such as L’Oreal and Ikea, and Government institution’s including the European Commission and the British Foreign Office.

Next year will see the publication of EAT-Lancet 2.0, hoping to build on the findings of the first publication and “accelerate” the 2030 agenda. To help this along, there will be new elements such as a greater focus on diversity, food justice and something called “social food system goals”. In addition to the work of the Commission, a 12-month global consultation will be conducted, “with the aim of increasing local legitimacy, buy-in and adoption of the Commission’s recommendations”. Use of IPCC-like modelling is promised to evaluate “multiple transition pathways to healthy, sustainable and equitable food futures”.

Whether any of this will actually survive a direct democratic vote is of course the key question. Citizens in New Zealand have just turfed out a green, anti-farmer administration, the Dutch Government hangs by a thread following a local war on the agricultural sector, while Irish rural voters are unhappy about plans to decimate beef herds. And as we have shown in past articles on the Daily Sceptic, one group of eco extremists trying to turn the world vegetarian is going to conflict with another attempting to re-wild the planet, and another banning nitrogen fertiliser and cutting crop yields by half, and another planting vast monoculture acres for bio-fuels, and another growing building materials for future mud and grass hut housing… to be continued.

Chris Morrison is the Daily Sceptic’s Environment Editor.

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Dr G
Dr G
2 years ago

As an Antipodean, who has just been part of a jubilant rebellion by the plebs, I pose the following:
Do the numbers of hard core Khan disciples, for whom support for every radical shibboleth is just another way of garnering even more social currency, outweigh those who just want a simple life?
If so, I would be leaving London, as my parents did 60 years ago.

transmissionofflame
2 years ago
Reply to  Dr G

Yup, already left London. Shame in a way, it could be so much better. The virtue signallers that can afford to live in nice parts of London stay there, others hold their nose and move to the home counties – some of them think the home counties are full of horrid racists. I think they are frightened by places that have a lot of white working class British people in them.

RW
RW
2 years ago
Reply to  Dr G

My guess would be that a large part of Khan voters are ethnic Pakistanis voting as the head of the family told them to who don’t even understand his political speeches.

Epi
Epi
2 years ago
Reply to  RW

Or English.

marebobowl
marebobowl
2 years ago
Reply to  RW

Not so sure. He is hurting them as well as everyone else living under this what? Fill in the blank.

marebobowl
marebobowl
2 years ago
Reply to  Dr G

Wouldn’t it be easier if he just left town?

wokeman
wokeman
2 years ago

Khan does not care what we eat, he only seeks destruction, poverty and chaos.

AethelredTheReadier
AethelredTheReadier
2 years ago
Reply to  wokeman

All going according to plan, all tying into the Great Reset and Agenda 21. They’ll be after our woodburners next.

BurlingtonBertie
2 years ago
Reply to  Jon Smith

You boaties are too damned independent of the government which is why you are in the cross hairs.
I live in a canal village so know & understand just how self reliant you are. Dangerous to the plan of control

Jon Smith
2 years ago

So, it’s the depth of winter, in the middle of nowhere, I light up the small wood burner, as you really don’t need it very large in such a small space, the bit of wood smoke is bothering absolutely no one and thats £300 is it..
🤦‍♂️

BurlingtonBertie
2 years ago
Reply to  Jon Smith

It’s absolutely ludicrous & in my book criminal. All designed to tip those who already live on very little into greater poverty. What does it matter if a few hundred boaties freeze to death??
We’re all expendable to the parasite class…

Jon Smith
2 years ago

I posted this a fews ago, but it relevant here..
Its not just Birmingham council that is broke, one of my employees was in magistrates here in Plymouth a few weeks ago as he wanted to stand his ground, he was being fined by the council for fly tipping, he left a cardboard box no larger than a shoe box next to his wheelie bin, as the bin was full a day before collection day.
Further to his research he notified the council that the legal definition of fly tipping was a bin liner or more.. They then changed the fine to “littering”
He had the day off work as court was 2pm, he stood his ground but to no avail, they fined him 375£,he has 5 kids and lives in the poorest area of the city….
This screams of desperation, but what does one expect after throwing 400 billion around like confetti during the Covid scam and spending 60 billion a year on keeping immigrants happy..

BurlingtonBertie
2 years ago
Reply to  Jon Smith

The poor man. They are nothing but tax collectors & thieves

Epi
Epi
2 years ago

And they always spend your money so wisely – NOT!

Pilla
Pilla
2 years ago
Reply to  Jon Smith

I don’t believe this would ever happen here in our unsmart part of south London. The bin men either take it or leave it, I really don’t think they’d report it. Besides which, it’s worth making friends with your bin men. We still give them a Christmas tip (£20 for each of three teams of three – recycling, landfill, garden/kitchen waste) and I go out there to chat with them when I give it (getting myself up at crack of dawn to do so). As a result, they take whatever we leave out (eg three or four bags of garden waste sometimes during the summer when it’s supposed to be only two); not only that, they push all our bins and bags, once emptied, back up three steps from the pavement, up our windy path and put them away down the side of our house for us. Every single week. We never asked them to do this. We, in our mid-70s, consider that cheap at the price. And shows how kind people can still be. But even just to go and chat with them once or twice a year and thank them for doing their job would probably help.

Jon Smith
2 years ago
Reply to  Pilla

Well, as the story goes, there was actual fly tipping at the other end of his street, and he suspects that when the council cleared that they saw this box and used it as a way to try to cover the cost of the clear up of this flytipping.
The council is broke, they are no longer true councils but for profit corporate entities

Pilla
Pilla
2 years ago
Reply to  Jon Smith

Your poor friend

Pembroke
Pembroke
2 years ago
Reply to  Pilla

Like you I still tip the bin men, although I think ours are all just one team. We also tip (Christmas box / card) everyone who delivers to us too.

Okay it’s not much, a token, but it results in friendly service every year. Perhaps we shouldn’t have to pay over the odds for good service but a little bit of acknowledgement of the people around us who do service jobs is no bad thing. The boot could be on the other foot sometime.

Pilla
Pilla
2 years ago
Reply to  Pembroke

I totally agree.

Smudger
2 years ago

Those who vote for establishment parties don’t deserve to have one😀

Smudger
2 years ago
Reply to  wokeman

Khan, like Sunak, Starmer and 90% of all establishment party grifters are just following orders from above. They don’t govern they are mere functionaries and they know it. They simply focus on building their political careers and accruing secondary income streams. It is those who vote for anyone (or spoil their paper) that appear to be the enlightened voters. They are the ones who can see the elephant in the room and not prepared to be taken for a sucker by the uni party.

iconoclast
2 years ago
Reply to  Smudger

The same story applies to Citizen Khan as applies to what I wrote here:

“What we all need to know is – who are the “theys” and how many and how many tiers of the “they” are there?

Who was the tip of the spear …..?

Who was holding the spear?

Who was nudging the spear holder forward?

Who was paying the nudger(s) to do the nudging?”

For a fist full of roubles

Just try to snatch a Big Mac out of the hands of a pleb!

AethelredTheReadier
AethelredTheReadier
2 years ago

Somehow the phrase ‘Big Meal Deal’ has a different ring to it when you consider insects!

Farmer Charlie
Farmer Charlie
2 years ago

As a beef farmer, I get very confused. No meat animals, no leather or wool.No fossil fuels either, so no plastic (‘fake/vegan leather’, anyone) or nylon. What are people going to wear?

zebedee
zebedee
2 years ago
Reply to  Farmer Charlie

Nothing, just like we used to in prehistoric times. It’ll be interesting when they come to take the smartphones out of the hands of the youf.

AnnExpat
AnnExpat
2 years ago
Reply to  zebedee

Didn’t we wear animal skins and twigs?

ebygum
2 years ago
Reply to  Farmer Charlie

Loin cloths knitted from the hair of virgins?

Don’t forget you will already be in your 15 minute mud hut village, using wooden spears to kill the local wildlife!! And using large leaves and tree bark as plates.
while your wife and children trudge the 20 miles and back to bring water from the nearest source….!

….and…the 40g of meat will not be real meat it will come from Bills ‘fake meat shit factory’ while he and his cohorts chow down on their chateaubriand …

no pets either .. as they are meat eaters….(and you may have had to kill little Timmy for food..)

This is the time to take that course (or make money from offering them?) in woodworking, ancient art of flint tool making, identifying mushrooms, and making meals from ingredients foraged from the hedgerows!!

LOL!!! ???…..

For a fist full of roubles
Reply to  ebygum

Loin cloths knitted from the hair of virgins?

You would freeze to death in Manchester.

ebygum
2 years ago

LOL! 😆

Covid-1984
Covid-1984
2 years ago
Reply to  ebygum

It’s fine for the Muslims. They have 72 virgins waiting for them in Paradise. No problem weaving a coat from a wife’s hair.

Freddy Boy
2 years ago
Reply to  ebygum

👍😂

RTSC
RTSC
2 years ago
Reply to  Farmer Charlie

What people? None of this will apply to “the Elite.”

Don’t you understand the real objective yet?

AethelredTheReadier
AethelredTheReadier
2 years ago
Reply to  Farmer Charlie

If it gets that far, Charlie, they’ll be rounding us up and transporting us to smart prisons where we’ll wear orange jumpsuits!! No, that won’t happen. I don’t things are going the way THEY say they are going. People are not going to put up with it. I live on a large organic dairy farm and the farmer has woken up to the lies of climate change thank god! No one is going to start bossing our farmers about!

JeremyP99
2 years ago
Reply to  Farmer Charlie

You livestock farmers need to get together to deal with what is coming down the line. We’ll be on the barricades (see my post above) with you, with our pitchforks. We’re fortunate carnivores as we have grass fed beef from local farms easily available, and are indeed, friends with one of the farmers. It’s a joy to hear what she has to say about Vegans 🤣🤣 Worth pointing out. We are the most ecologically friendly people in the country. Our food miles are minimal; the only things we buy that do not come from our butcher or the farm shop run by the farm noted above (they have been farming the same patch of land in Somerset for over 300 years, have always practised what is now called “regenerative” farming (rotating livestock and arable and feeding the land with shit), and if that sort of thing worries you, have been assessed as carbon neutral) are goat milk, tea and coffee. Food waste? None – any fat too gristly for us to eat (and animal fat is as important to good health as animal protein) the dog gets (boy is he a fit dog – mince and offal his base diet),… Read more »

MTF
MTF
2 years ago
Reply to  JeremyP99

I suspect that your diet and lifestyle is in line with the EAT-Lancet proposal just not with Morrison’s depiction of it.

Tyrbiter
Tyrbiter
2 years ago
Reply to  MTF

Mean Time to Failure returns again.

I think you’re wrong about so many things.

MTF
MTF
2 years ago
Reply to  Tyrbiter

Obviously most people on this forum disagree with me on most issues. Some of them find it valuable to hear an opposing opinion. You presumably don’t.

Tyrbiter
Tyrbiter
2 years ago
Reply to  MTF

I wasn’t being insulting, you seem to have chosen an apposite handle for your posts which chimes with how my old engineer’s brain works.

Debate is all very well except that much of it is from entrenched positions and thus more like ships that pass in the night.

MTF
MTF
2 years ago
Reply to  Tyrbiter

You replied so quickly you got my original version of the comment. Surely debate from entrenched positions is better than no debate?

varmint
2 years ago
Reply to  MTF

You might find that most people disagree with you because you want to use exaggerated claims of a climate crisis which is not supported by any science to support your eco socialist world view that our standard of living in the west is too high based on the Maurice Strong way of looking at things. ——Basically that we have used up more than our fair share of the worlds resources and that Industrial Society must be brought down by removing the use of fossil fuels. But that is a political argument not a scientific one. If you want to be an eco socialist then that is fine, but don’t try to pretend it is all just about the climate because it clearly is not.

JeremyP99
2 years ago
Reply to  MTF

Never heard of it. If you want to know why we ended up Carnivore, go check out Dr. Jordan Peterson’s daughter Mikhaila, on YouTube and her tale. Nothing to do with Lancet. Or Morrison, whoever he is (not Jim, I guess?)

Pembroke
Pembroke
2 years ago
Reply to  JeremyP99

The Supermarket perhaps?

DevonBlueBoy
DevonBlueBoy
2 years ago
Reply to  JeremyP99

Wot, no fried bread??!!

JeremyP99
2 years ago
Reply to  DevonBlueBoy

Don’t eat carbs! Don’t eat plants! Fit as a ******* fiddle 😂

Pembroke
Pembroke
2 years ago
Reply to  JeremyP99

I remember reading a book a few years ago about a guy who wanted to start a small holding in Wales. He was an idealistic ‘trendy’ vegetarian (no vegans then) he decided he would grow giant (elephant) garlic as his mates in Birmingham had told him what a great crop it was. Needless to say he failed, the crop failed and he discovered fairly quickly that people in rural areas weren’t interested in ‘trendy’ foods.

Soon after that he got a cow as his next project couldn’t survive without animal dung fertiliser. He eventually came to realise that vegetarian doesn’t work as his cow needed to get pregnant to produce milk for his family, 50% of the calves born to the cow were male and they would have to be slaughtered as they couldn’t remain on the farm, and there was so much milk produced from even one cow that he needed other animals (pigs) to consume it to just get rid of it all.

so eventually he came round to the idea that he had to eat meat, drink milk and grow mainstream vegetables to survive.

MTF
MTF
2 years ago
Reply to  Farmer Charlie

Read the plan rather what Morrison implies about it. It does not propose a ban on meat only a reduction. With 7 billion people on the planet I think you will find there is plenty of demand for your beef even under this plan.

godknowsimgood
godknowsimgood
2 years ago
Reply to  MTF

Chris Morrison said “meat rationed to just 44 grams a day”, not “a ban on meat”.

ebygum
2 years ago
Reply to  godknowsimgood

Apparently 40g is about two very small meatballs! Just for visualisation! LOL!

MTF
MTF
2 years ago
Reply to  ebygum

I think I may have tracked down the source of confusion. It appears to be common medical advice to consume no more than 44 gms of protein a day. This corresponds to a lot more than 44 gms of meat (apparently a 70g steak has about 20 gsm of protein). However, it is also common medical advice to eat no more than about 70 gms of red meat – the rest of your protein is better obtained from other sources. Somehow this got mangled into no more than 44 gms of meat a day.

JeremyP99
2 years ago
Reply to  MTF

It’s common medical advice to keep having Covid boosters.

Me? I avoid “common medical advice” as it is almost always bad for you. I’m old enough to know what’s good for me.

Anyone here cook in seed oils?

Hands up?

You do realised you are cooking with industrial waste don’t you? Highly inflammatory. Not to mention that as well as sugar, seed oils are in almost ALL processed food, in all plant milk filth as well.

SeedOilProduction.jpg
Pembroke
Pembroke
2 years ago
Reply to  JeremyP99

Olive, avocado oil and ghee for me. the oil is made from the flesh of the plants not the seed and ghee is clarified butter.

ebygum
2 years ago
Reply to  MTF

The 44 grams of meat is mentioned in the article….and as for medical advice..sheesh…I take that with a pinch of salt….if I’m allowed salt?! LOL!

Pembroke
Pembroke
2 years ago
Reply to  ebygum

Yes, your body needs salt. Once again the daily recommended intake is poppycock, just a figure gleaned from thin air by those that seek to control your diet.

But don’t take my word for it, please research the subject your self. Many electrolyte drinks that athletes use are chock full of salt.

Pembroke
Pembroke
2 years ago
Reply to  ebygum

I’ve just eaten one fairly small grass fed steak and it was 235gr approx the size of the palm of my hand.

MTF
MTF
2 years ago
Reply to  godknowsimgood

He also wrote:

did I tell you that my globalist friends inform me that banning your burgers and meat pies will help save 11 million lives each year?

There are no bans of any kind that I can see in the proposal. This is key paragraph:

“While meat is an important source of key nutrients including protein, iron and vitamin B12, excess meat consumption can harm our health and the planet. Aim to consume no more than 98 grams of red meat (pork, beef or lamb), 203 grams of poultry and 196 grams of fish per week.”

Note that this is just advice and obviously a broad guideline for an “average” person. Similar to the advice to drink no more than 2 units of alcohol a day. It is not that controversial – I would think many doctors would agree. Curiously it works out as 70 gms a day not 44. I can’t find the 44 anywhere.

(Given that the population of the globe is 7 billion I would have thought a healthier diet would save far more than 11 million premature deaths per year)

JeremyP99
2 years ago
Reply to  MTF

did I tell you that my globalist friends inform me that banning your burgers and meat pies will help save 11 million lives each year?”

And provided links and citations to this? No, of course not…

MTF
MTF
2 years ago
Reply to  JeremyP99

It is in the bleeding article!

Pembroke
Pembroke
2 years ago
Reply to  JeremyP99

I’m guessing the 11 million is the cows, pigs, sheep etc. after all the article doesn’t say ‘human’ lives does it?

JeremyP99
2 years ago
Reply to  MTF

“While meat is an important source of key nutrients including protein, iron and vitamin B12, excess meat consumption can harm our health and the planet. “

Eating only beef and water for a year saved my wife’s life and halted her “terminal” bone cancer in its tracks.

And yes, even her Oncologist is amazed.

And if you think medicine progresses all the time, think again.

Victorian doctors treated Diabetes mellitus with a diet of beef and water.

Worked.

Now they don’t tell you to stop eating crap, stop eating so much, and get OFF your arse – rather they just make you insulin dependent. Way to go.

JeremyP99
2 years ago
Reply to  JeremyP99

https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/all-meat-diet

“The Arctic Explorer Who Pushed an All-Meat DietVilhjalmur Stefansson wanted to prove a point.”
While doctors condemned the diet as dangerous, Stefansson was defiant, attributing his increased vigor and “ambition” to his all-meat diet. Newspapers and magazines across the country ran stories on his experiment, contrasting it with the vegetable-heavy diets most doctors recommended. Soon, Stefansson left the hospital, having lost a few pounds, and continued his meat-eating endeavor from his New York apartment. Doctors examining the two men during the year-long trial reported that neither had heightened blood pressure or kidney trouble, the expected result of a carnivorous diet. The one thing lacking in their diet, Stefansson noted, was enough calcium.”



ebygum
2 years ago
Reply to  MTF

It’s all connected…the planetary health diet is actually part of the C40 Smart Cities goals…towards a “fossil free future”….and details how to ‘implement solutions that make it easier for people to eat more plant based options’ LOL!
All of which is part of the UN Sustainable Development Goals…

…..they are bloody trying to force everyone into it, and we are way down the road…..

Nicholas Britton
2 years ago
Reply to  MTF

Isn’t the point that we don’t need any politician, especially an unhinged climatic like Khan, telling us what we can and can’t eat. Frankly, it’s none of their bl00dy business.

JeremyP99
2 years ago

You got it.
And by the way, chitin, which the bugs they want is to eat is a) indigestible by human beings & b) causes inflammation.

There are days when one thinks they really are trying to kill off us serfs…

ebygum
2 years ago
Reply to  JeremyP99

…if it was natural for human beings to eat insects and bugs..we would have been doing it for thousands of years….
I’ll follow the ways of my ancient ancestors thank you very much…LOL!

JeremyP99
2 years ago
Reply to  ebygum

Us too.

Think about it. Homo sapiens (never mind our precursors) has been around c250,000 years.

Until c 8000 years ago, we had no agriculture. Ergo, meat was our staple; and when starving and waiting for the next mammoth, berries and roots.

Meat is our species-adapted diet.

ELH
ELH
2 years ago
Reply to  JeremyP99

Have a look at Elaine Morgan’s Elaine Morgan and “The Descent of Woman” — Lady Science – she points out that our ancestors likely spent a lot of time in or near water and that fish and shellfish were also an important part of our diet. Shellfish are very nutrient dense. A most enjoyable read with much to make one think about.

Pembroke
Pembroke
2 years ago
Reply to  JeremyP99

So how do the wealthy get wealthy if there are no serfs to produce goods for them to sell. Or indeed service their possessions, will they fix their own houses, cars and aircraft?

JeremyP99
2 years ago
Reply to  MTF

People are eating more meat. And a meat free diet stunts kids (way to go, VEGANS – nothing to beat deliberately harming your chidren eh? !)

ps – the stunting is cognitive as well as physical.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3918945/

“Meat consumption is associated with less stunting among toddlers in four diverse low-income settings”
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6743850/

“A Systematic Review Investigating the Relation Between Animal-Source Food Consumption and Stunting in Children Aged 6–60 Months in Low and Middle-Income Countries”

MTF
MTF
2 years ago
Reply to  JeremyP99

People are eating more meat

Maybe globally as more and more countries come out of poverty. Not in the UK:

Daily meat consumption in the UK has decreased by approximately 17.4g per person per day – just under a 17% reduction – in the last decade finds new research from the University of Oxford

https://www.phc.ox.ac.uk/news/reduction-in-uk-red-and-processed-meat-intake-but-more-needed-to-meet-our-climate-targets

Sure people in low to middle income countries might well benefit from more meat. But that doesn’t mean it is healthy to eat more than 70 gm a day.

JeremyP99
2 years ago
Reply to  MTF

Yeah. We’re getting more stupid by the day. And eating a lot more than you state stopped wife’s terminal bone cancer in its tracks.

I’d say that’s healthy. And we are now sure that the chemo she had for breast cancer in 2017, and the appalling mess the NHS made of treating it, caused the bone cancer.

She’s had no chemo this time round. Just stuck to beef.

varmint
2 years ago
Reply to  MTF

Keep up——–We passed the 8 billion mark a few months ago.

Freddy Boy
2 years ago
Reply to  varmint

8 billion ! I thought we had a Pandemic 😵‍💫

iconoclast
2 years ago
Reply to  Freddy Boy

We were supposed to but it did not go to plan.

Don’t worry though, planning for the next one will fix it.

Keep your eyes on 2025.

RW
RW
2 years ago
Reply to  Farmer Charlie

These people don’t do workable proposals.

porgycorgy
porgycorgy
2 years ago

Greengrocer’s apostrophe at the end of paragraph 6.

ebygum
2 years ago
Reply to  porgycorgy

“Nitpicker in aisle 3”. LOL!

AethelredTheReadier
AethelredTheReadier
2 years ago
Reply to  ebygum

Nutpicker, perhaps?

stewart
2 years ago

Whether any of this will actually survive a direct democratic vote is of course the key question.

Is there any intention whatsoever to subject this to a democratic vote? And even if there is, is that what democracy is for? So that a majority can tell a minority what to eat?

If that’s democracy, no thanks.

JaneDoeNL
JaneDoeNL
2 years ago
Reply to  stewart

None of these things get put to democratic votes, but people’s education on politics and law are so abysmal, that they think politicians can just do what they want and that laws have been handed down by god and must be obeyed no matter what.

Just look at the US, where the criminality and corruption of the current WH administration knows no bounds and gets supported by courts at every turn. I think we’re going to have to wait for society to collapse around our ears before people realise we have to do and decide for ourselves.

stewart
2 years ago
Reply to  JaneDoeNL

I think it’s rather worse than that.

People chose a political team and then convince themselves that their team is looking out for them and has their interests in mind. And in addition, the other teams are bad people with bad ideas and their own team is there to fight against and protect them from the other teams. Their own team might not be perfect but it’s better than the other teams and when their own team does bad or stupid things, it’s a mistake or the odd bad apple to be accepted from time to time.

People don’t think their political leaders have to be obeyed, they are deluded in thinking that the political leaders they like care about them and are somehow working to get the best for them.

Fools.

jsampson45
jsampson45
2 years ago
Reply to  stewart

Democracy is analogous to being mugged by a rape gang. You are given the choice which member of the gang does the deed and if you refuse the choice is made for you.

JaneDoeNL
JaneDoeNL
2 years ago

Much as I’d like to think the Dutch government is hanging by a thread due to the farmer’s political movement, it has in fact already collapsed and is only in place until the elections in November. Of the current 4 coalition parties, only one, PM Rutte’s VVD is likely to be part of the next coalition, sans Rutte, fortunately. Rutte brought the government down (supposedly) over an asylum-related issue. I would have expected the farmer’s party to win big, but a very popular politician, Pieter Omtzigt, formerly of the CDA, has set up his own party and is expected to have the biggest party and take votes from the farmer’s party. I think he’s sympathetic to the farmers, but I don’t think he will fight the EU particularly hard and I think he is to some extent on board with the ludicrous idea that the earth is boiling. Most of his fights have been related to other issues, so it’s not that clear, but he is old-school big tax nanny state, so I’m not holding out much hopes, even though I have a lot of respect for him. Although he will hopefully keep former EU green commissioner Timmersmans out as… Read more »

varmint
2 years ago
Reply to  JaneDoeNL

I now see what the NL in your name means. You and the lovely Eva would get along fine. ———Thanks for all your very thoughtful comments.

RTSC
RTSC
2 years ago

I doubt if this was in Khan’s Manifesto, so he has no democratic legitimacy for it.

But then he isn’t a democrat and this isn’t about climate or health: it’s about control and Khan getting a new, lucrative, role in a WEF-approved organisation when he’s kicked out of Office.

Pembroke
Pembroke
2 years ago
Reply to  RTSC

Unless he screws up and his fellow travellers declare a fatwa on him (does the ULEZ rob all his compatriots of their cheapo taxi cars).

Freddy Boy
2 years ago

I pointed out a while back that Khant is in place to test the water & wind us up , backed by all political groups ! They all know whats going on , apart from a few Mayoral grillings that he gets where he gets to revel in showing his smug arrogant & actually un civilised self with bells on he does as he pleases ! HOW long has he been there ? How long has his extension been due to Covid & HOW can he be running again with predictions saying he will win again ! HOW ????

Nearhorburian
Nearhorburian
2 years ago

As I understand it, in WW2 rationing didn’t apply to restaurants,which is why in the famous episode of Dad’s Army Mainwaring was able to send out for fish and chips for the U-boat crewmen :”I vont plaice”. (Whoever suggested occupying the Faeroes and Iceland was a genius.)

Will this be how the wealthier are intended to get round the restrictions?

TheGreenAcres
2 years ago

You can have plant based diets or you can build huge solar farms across vast swathes of arable farmland but you can’t have both.

You can ban non-organic fertilisers or you can hugely reduce manure producing animals but you can’t do both.

Every ecosystem works best when it is in balance. A catastrophe is looming.

Nearhorburian
Nearhorburian
2 years ago

You drink, you smoke, you eat meat and cheese and own pets and, according to the fanatics, have a life expectancy in the low 70s.

You do none of these and have a life expectancy in the low 90s. But you get euthanised at 70.

Lockdown Sceptic
2 years ago

Whatever happened to the ice-free Arctic? latest leaflet

05a Whatever happened to the ice-free Arctic MONOCHROME copy.jpg
varmint
2 years ago

This is what happens when you rely on models full of assumptions and guesses for your truth rather than the real world.

varmint
2 years ago

When are people going to wake up to the pretend to save the planet eco socialist SCAM? Probably never. Here is a little experiment for everyone who comments on this website who does not accept the phony climate crisis emergency nonsense.————-The next time you have a house full of relatives make the following observation “There is nothing unusual about current temperatures or climate and there is no evidence of dangerous changes to the climate” ————-Pay attention to how many will stare at you like are from Mars. This is why the vast majority will never be able to avoid the scam. They have allowed themselves to be manipulated and brainwashed, and it is well known that humans prefer to be with the majority. It has something to do with feeling safer and not wanting to be considered an outsider, or to face ridicule. I would love to be a fly on the wall when Khan and his fellow Mayors get together at one of their globalist junkets discussing how to impoverish their own citizens while pretending it is all about the climate, when infact it has NOTHING whatsoever to do with that.

MTF
MTF
2 years ago

A few points that might not be obvious from Morrison’s polemic:

EAT-lancet does not propose banning anything. The suggested action that is closest to a ban is a tax on unhealthy foods such as sugary drinks (not meat). An idea that has been around for some time.

The objective is less meat not zero meat- something which would be healthier for most people in affluent countries. “Meat and dairy constitute important parts of the diet but in significantly smaller proportions than whole grains, fruits, vegetables, nuts and legumes.”

This is not just about climate change. It is about several things such as better health and protecting biodiversity.

The nation was healthier than it had ever been on the WW2 diet (except for the ones being shot or blown up of course).

CHRIS
CHRIS
2 years ago
Reply to  MTF

I’ll be you can’t wait for the WW3 diet.

transmissionofflame
2 years ago
Reply to  MTF

What I eat is none of your business, none of the state’s business and none of anyone else’s business either. Define “unhealthy” and “healthier”. You won’t be able to. And in any case, who cares what people eat? If you like you can spend your time and money persuading other people to eat the things you think they should eat. Knock yourself out, just don’t ask the state to get involved using my money. Taxes should be raised for providing the essential functions of the state like protecting our borders and preventing crime and locking up criminals, based on income or land use or across the board consumption, not for the purposes of behaviour modification.

Nearhorburian
Nearhorburian
2 years ago

We are each entitled to trade quantity of life for quality.

Who said that nothing is worth giving up for an extra couple of years in a home?

transmissionofflame
2 years ago
Reply to  Nearhorburian

Indeed, though sadly the world is full of people like MTF who seem happy not only for themselves to have their choices micromanaged by others, but for that micromanagement to be forced on everyone. Exactly the attitude that led to the covid tyranny, “vaccine” carnage, nut zero etc.

JeremyP99
2 years ago

My wife, diagnosed with terminal bone cancer two years ago, with 6 to 9 months to live, is still very much alive and kicking.

How? We went Carnivore a year or so before the diagnosis. She’d already had breast cancer, and the RUH in Bath so messed her treatment we are convinced that the chemo she had caused the bone cancer.

Going carnivore stops feeding cancer cells. She is by NO means alone in staving off terminal illness with this diet.

So restricting her to 44 gms of meat a day will kill her.

You really are a fucking Khant, Khan.

Fyi.

https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/all-meat-diet

“The Arctic Explorer Who Pushed an All-Meat Diet”
At 72, I wish I had known that this was the way to eat when I was 22.

BurlingtonBertie
2 years ago
Reply to  JeremyP99

Putting one’s body into an alkaline state is how it can successfully deal with the rogue cancer cells. Another successful nutrition based intervention is B17.
I wish your wife continued good health.

JeremyP99
2 years ago

Thanks. This worked for her, and we are now finding many other, also with other chronic conditions, especially autoimmune ones.

iconoclast
2 years ago

It is not quite correct to put one’s body into an alkaline state. Our cells have a very tight narrow range of pH for normal healthy function of between 7.35 to 7.45. pH 7 is neutral so a slightly alkaline level is the normal level for healthy cellular function. Cancers thrive in an acidic environment so if your pH is below 7 you should think about doing things to correct that. You can buy professional quality test strips which indicate the pH of saliva and urine. To restore normal pH a diet rich in cruciferous vegetable is important. One can also take alkaline drops or as an alternative drinking during the course of the day from glasses of water with 10 drops of fresh [ideally organic] lemon juice will provoke your body to produce an alkaline rush. You can use the test strips to tell that it works. A word of warning about juicing cruciferous vegetables – too much can deny essential iodine to the thyroid and cause serious harm if allowed to continue. Dizzyness and loss of balance in the morning when you try to stand up after sleep is a sign of this. Iodine supplementation is a good… Read more »

BurlingtonBertie
2 years ago
Reply to  iconoclast

I concur entirely with you. A good diet of freshly cooked foods rich in vegetables, quality proteins & not too much of any one thing is the way to set one’s body into it’s optimum pH range, which is ever so slightly alkaline. Processed, artificial foods tip the body pH into the opposite direction with sugar being a prime culprit.
Like everything in life, balance is key. Dr Robert Young has done a lot of work on this, my criticism of him is that to access a lot of the information one has to pay a lot. Recompense oneself, yes. Charge the earth? No.

ELH
ELH
2 years ago

I collected haws yesterday and then read what to do with them Apparently the seeds contain B17. I tried hawthorn leaf tea yesterday, a bit bitter. Will try a few berries in hot water today. Good for circulation apparently.

iconoclast
2 years ago
Reply to  JeremyP99

“Going carnivore stops feeding cancer cells.” Whilst it is good to hear this has worked for your wife JeremyP99 there is much journal published science [which BTW your average NHS doctor never looks at and did not learn in med school] which explains which foods to avoid to: 1) reduce cancer risk and 2) to reduce what cancer cells need to thrive. It has been established science for decades that sugars feed cancer: Glucose Metabolism in Cancer: The Warburg Effect and Beyond So cut out sugars and precursors to sugars like quickly digested carbohydrates. Slow energy carbs like ancient grain breads and whole rolled oats for porridge are apparently OK. That is in effect what your wife has done – it is not the meat eating which is the factor and it can be a harmful factor. Cancers are complex and there are many different varieties so professional guidance is important – but the average NHS doctor will turn to chemo and cutting and not give any advice on diet which happens to be a crucial factor. There is for example an effective US FDA approved and licensed product for two kinds of skin cancer including the most common but… Read more »

BurlingtonBertie
2 years ago
Reply to  iconoclast

The Gerson method of treating cancer follows those principles. I know someone who treated her breast cancer using this method, no chemo, was told she’d be dead if she didn’t follow the conventional chemo route, yet 12 years & counting later is healthy & cancer free.

Jon Mors
Jon Mors
2 years ago

I don’t think Khan has as many supporters as one might think. Participation in the Mayoral election is dismal; well under 50%. If enough anti-Khanites turn up to vote then I don’t think he could survive on the Corbynite and ethnic vote alone.

It’s a good microcosm of what is wrong with the UK and why direct democracy should be strongly preferred – even if the majority isn’t always right they are unlikely to directly vote against their immediate economic interests.

NeilParkin
2 years ago

Where does Khans authority and mandate come from to sign and commit London to wide ranging societal change like this..?

JeremyP99
2 years ago
Reply to  NeilParkin

Hehe. Little did the people of London think that when electing the Mayor, they were actually electing a tinpot dictator…

CircusSpot
CircusSpot
2 years ago
Reply to  NeilParkin

Seems to come from Labour & Tory being too scared to stop him! Starmer could kick him out of the Party and force him to stand as an independent. Sunak could put London into special measures.
The wide ranging societal change is coming to us all.

Pembroke
Pembroke
2 years ago
Reply to  CircusSpot

Some really aggrieved citizen could test out whether his Range Rover is really as bullet / bomb proof as he thinks it is, but they won’t.

iconoclast
2 years ago
Reply to  Pembroke

My car mechanic is under the impression Citizen Khan got the motor because there is a contract out on him.

Sounds a bit far-fetched but MPs don’t get cars like that provided out of tax or rate-payers’ money.

Next we’ll hear he has a similar adapted London bus and an underground carriage so he can prove his green credentials and use his Oyster card to get around.

JayBee
2 years ago

Just in from X:New Study blows ‘greenhouse theory out of the water’‘All observed climatic changes have natural causes completely outside of human control’“This climate controversy is costing billions, making the wrong folks rich, and keep us from solving real environmental problems.”
https://www.wnd.com/2017/07/study-blows-greenhouse-theory-out-of-the-water/

thechap
thechap
2 years ago

It strikes me that if the 500 or so most influential/powerful people in the world were imprisoned on an island from which escape was made impossible, the rest of the world would be a lot safer, peaceful, more prosperous and fairer.

That’s only a (granted arbitrary) small number of people ruining it for the rest of humanity.

Elizabeth Hart
2 years ago

While we were sleeping…the World Economic Forum took over the world… “…so we penetrate ze cabinets…” They’ve blatantly colonised ‘our’ governments. Consider for example in Australia – the former Health Minister, Greg Hunt, was the strategy director for the World Economic Forum from 2000 to 2001, before he entered the Australian Parliament in 2001. Note also he was Engagement Manager at McKinsey and Co from 1999 to 2001. See his bio on the Parliament of Australia website. After presiding over the Covid debacle in Australia, along with former Prime Minister Scott Morrison, Hunt is now ‘Honorary Enterprise Professor in the Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Health Services and the Faculty of Business and Economics at the University of Melbourne’ “He advises a wide range of businesses and not for profits in the areas of innovation, leadership, strategic planning, health and the environment.” Hunt’s current bio also includes reference to his time at the World Economic Forum, noting he was “responsible for the development of global strategy for the WEF, working directly to the CEO”. I don’t think the electorate knew what they were getting when Hunt was elected to the Parliament in 2001… So much has been and is being done… Read more »

iconoclast
2 years ago

Life imitating art.

Comedy
Citizen Khan “Larger than life, self-appointed leader Mr Khan is the voice of Muslim Birmingham – whether the community likes it or not.”
Series 1: Episode 1 (28 mins)

iconoclast
2 years ago
Reply to  iconoclast

Democracy does not exist between Citizen Khan’s ears.

Who TF voted for this? I certainly did not. Where is the democratic mandate?

It’s just like the move to hand WHO powers to make decisions regarding national health security.

I didn’t vote for that either.

Believe me if and when Sur Kurr Stammer becomes our Supreme leader next year he will be weak and forced to do what the left demand.

He has the same frightened eyes that Margaret Thatcher’s Sir Keith Joseph had. Sadly Sir Keith suffered mental health problems and I fear Sur Kurr Stammer will go the same way under the pressure of office.

Corky Ringspot
2 years ago

Someone has to get to this guy…

Pilla
Pilla
2 years ago

It’s all very well to say we can vote him out (and let’s hope and pray we do at the next mayoral election). But should he succeed in getting in again next time, then we’re stuck with him for another four years. And surely his fellow Muslims are just as affected by his crazy anti-motorist, anti-human rules as anyone else. BTW, just escaping London isn’t necessarily going to help since the grass very often proves to be less green on the other side than hoped. Eventually these things (if they succeed with their Great Reset) will catch up with people wherever they are; it’s just a question of time. And, BTW again, pride often/usually comes before a fall (a good biblical saying), and maybe it will with Khan too. (We can’t escape our quite unsmart, very racially – and everything else – mixed area of London, because we are in our mid-70s and want to remain close to our children and grandchildren – and our son, for one, won’t leave, as he says he’ll go down with the sinking ship (he is one of the elders of our little church and most members don’t have the easy option of upping… Read more »

Epi
Epi
2 years ago

Er excuse me Mr Morrison you’re not turning into a conspiracy theorist are you? 🤣😉

Covid-1984
Covid-1984
2 years ago

Why is there so nuch aqueasence on these posts. Khan, won’t even be Mayor next time around and don’t forget when they tried to ban alcohol in the USA. Supplies popped up everywhere and based on the performance of the UK Keystone Cops, it’ll be a crime heaven

JohnnyDollar
JohnnyDollar
2 years ago

Another Psychotic Gifts to Londoners.

Peter W
Peter W
2 years ago

I wish these guys would just mind their own f*ing business. Oh yes, it is their businesses and profits they’re looking after plus a nice bit of control & power.

marebobowl
marebobowl
2 years ago

Gratefully sadiq will be out of office by 2030, just like old Boris and a few others promising a draconian future. Thank god.