
A farm in the Netherlands
In late November, the Dutch government set aside approximately $25 billion to begin buying farmland,
whether the owners want to sell or not. "There is no better offer coming," Dutch Nitrogen Minister Christianne van der Waal
told farmers. The government expects to purchase between 2000 and 3000 farms.
Government leaders claim that the radical restructuring of Dutch farming is necessary for the good of the environment. However, facts suggest that this has little to do with the environment and much to do with centralizing power.
Arguments over farming regulations in the Netherlands have been raging for some time now.In October 2019, the Raad von State (the Netherlands' equivalent of the Supreme Court) ruled that the country's previous system for regulating nitrogen emissions did not comply with EU regulations. Dutch politicians
stated that the nation should withdraw permission for farmers to emit nitrogen, suggesting that Dutch farmers reduce their livestock numbers by half.
Of course, this was not popular. Farmers have
bills to pay just like the rest of us, and telling a business owner that they have to cut production in half usually means the end of the business. Not surprisingly, Dutch farmers started protesting, causing more than
600 miles of traffic jams by clogging highways with their tractors.
Comment: Its a sure sign that you live under an oppressive Orwellian regime when you can be persecuted and imprisoned for stating objective biological facts: