Activist warns global push to add creepy crawlers to the menu is part of alarming trend: 'A compliance test'
Fox News
Tucker Carlson investigates the concerning push from celebrities and influencers to include bugs in your diet on Fox Nation's 'Tucker Carlson Originals.'
Previewing a new season of "Tucker Carlson Originals" on Fox Nation, Vlaardingerbroek provided insight into the bug food industry which she argued will "influence the food supply worldwide." "I think that the push for insect eating is just a compliance test because our politicians know that when they control the food, they control the people." - Eva Vlaardingerbroek Farmers gather with their vehicles next to a Germany/Netherlands border sign during a protest on the A1 highway, near Rijssen, on June 29, against the Dutch government's nitrogen plans. (Vincent Jannink/ANP/AFP via Getty Images) Farmers block the arrival and departure halls at Groningen Airport Eelde in Eelde, the Netherlands, to protest against the government's far-reaching plans to cut nitrogen emissions on July 6, 2022. (Photo by Kees van de Veen / ANP / AFP) / Netherlands OUT (Photo by KEES VAN DE VEEN/ANP/AFP via Getty Images) (KEES VAN DE VEEN/ANP/AFP via Getty Images) Farmers gather with their vehicles next to a Germany/Netherlands border sign during a protest on the A1 highway, near Rijssen, on June 29, 2022, against the Dutch Government's nitrogen plans. - Netherlands OUT (Photo by Vincent Jannink / ANP / AFP) / Netherlands OUT (Photo by VINCENT JANNINK/ANP/AFP via Getty Images) (VINCENT JANNINK/ANP/AFP via Getty Images) Madeline Coggins is a Digital Production Assistant on the Fox News flash team with Fox News Digital.
"The fact that we, the second-largest exporter of agricultural products in the world, our nation with such a rich farming history, is now cracking down on its farms and opening insect factories should be of no surprise to you. This is not something that is just going to affect the food supply of the Netherlands. Like I said, we're the second-largest exporter of agricultural products in the world after America. So this will influence the food supply worldwide. And we've spoken to farmers who said, well, this could lead to actual starvation if we're not careful," she said.