Explore a controversial historical perspective on depopulation, suggesting that catastrophic famines have often been deliberately engineered. The discussion draws parallels between past events like the Holodomor and current global stability concerns, arguing that such efforts could be larger than ever before.
Learn how historical powers, from Stalin to Mao and the British, allegedly used starvation as a tool for control and depopulation. The speaker issues stark warnings, claiming that even food-exporting nations like the US, Thailand, and Japan could be vulnerable to intentionally created famines.
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Transcript
Never before in history though has the population been this large, which means that that you know, this effort will be a larger depopulation effort than anything in history. Although there there are many examples like you said like uh Ukraine 1930s the Holodomor, how many tens of millions of people were starved to death on purpose and you know, history of China, you know, history of Cambodia, etc. But in this case, there's going to be a lot of social upheaval as people are being slowly starved to death, isn't there? I mean what talk to us about the the upheaval side of this, what's going to happen to the civil stability of our world. Right, you know, during the 1840s when the Irish Famine really kicked off, there was actually a lot of famines around Europe in the 1840s that's why they call it the the Hungry 40s. And you know, and in every case, you're going to get upheaval, right? Often it's the government, let's say in in the in the different famine period with Mao. I mean he's using that to control the population. He was killing off people he didn't want, right? And uh, and ...