Breaking News

UK government is regulating farmers off their land and will destroy centuries-old farming traditions

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...
Please share our story!


The UK government’s new policies, particularly the removal of the Agricultural Inheritance Tax exception, will lead to the demise of traditional family farms and the transfer of land ownership to large corporations, oligarchs or the state.

This will result in the loss of centuries-old farming traditions, the decline of rural communities and possibly the destruction of fertile agricultural land for solar panels and wind turbines.

In the following, Nanumaga argues that the Labour government’s policies are driven by an ideology that despises traditional farming practices and seeks to impose a socialist, conformist ethos on the countryside.

Let’s not lose touch…Your Government and Big Tech are actively trying to censor the information reported by The Exposé to serve their own needs. Subscribe now to make sure you receive the latest uncensored news in your inbox…

Stay Updated!

Stay connected with News updates by Email

Loading


The Green Version of ‘The Law Of Unintended Consequences’

By Nanumaga as published by Free Speech Backlash

I strenuously doubt that there are any MPs in Westminster currently drawing pay and lavish expenses who have the remotest idea about farming in this country, including the idiot who was caught viewing porn in The House of Commons whilst, allegedly, looking for second-hand tractors.

The hill farmers I’ve met, and known over the years, don’t drive Range Rovers. They usually have an ancient Land Rover, or an old Toyota Land Cruiser, along with a second-hand Ford Focus or Vauxhall Astra used for visits to the nearest town. On paper, they’re worth a few quid – hypothetically – given a notional valuation of several hundred acres of land. In reality, they’re lucky to see incomes of £30-40,000 a year, which is quite often supporting two families of the father and son, or daughter, of the tenanted farm.

There are many dairy farmers who are a few grades up from the hill farmers in terms of income, but they’re stuck with longer hours, commonly well over 100 hour working weeks, which pro rata, puts them up on the average total annual income scale with hill farmers, but not much up on the rate per hour which isn’t usually over £7.00 in a good year vs £11.44, the minimum legal rate of pay in the UK.

Farming is a very tough business. If you don’t love rearing cattle, sheep and pigs, you’d be completely bonkers to even consider this as a career. The new and insidious, politically motivated, attack on farmers needs to be challenged by a broader constituency than the National Farmers’ Union (“NFU”). More people, voters, need to get behind this.

To legislate for the demise of these long-standing custodians of large parts of our countryside in favour of a transferred ownership to oligarchic/City funds or State-controlled land is an egregious abnegation of a centuries-old functional and valuable national tradition.

Looking at my last sentence pretty well explains why this Labour government is attacking farmers, just in case we’d missed this … it’s a “valuable national tradition,” ergo, to be despised and eradicated as soon as possible as required in the Marxist/Labour urban “tradition.” The idea that the forfeiture of farmland, through the new Agricultural Inheritance Tax exception removal, might result in many more thousands of acres of solar panels and wind turbines merely confirms my prejudices on the matter.

Fertile agricultural land can’t thrive in perpetual shade, not least when large parts of this are concreted over for access. Hundreds of thousands of acres of productive farmland given over to solar panel arrays in this country is an insane exercise in expensive futility unless our lords and masters manage to alter the Earth’s current pattern of rotation around the Sun. Investing in solar arrays in the Sahara and sub-Sahel makes more sense, although there’s a huge loss through transmission via interconnectors. Unlike our legislators, electricity isn’t a dense form of energy. Much like them, the energy dissipates significantly over any distance.

Solar doesn’t work in our latitudes beyond offsetting the bills for people who can afford to put solar panels on their rooves and be able to afford to wait 15 years to see their capital investment being paid off. It’s not unlike the unresolvable dilemma presented to 65% of householders who don’t have offroad parking with which they can charge their electric vehicles to get the “bargain basement” low-cost home consumer rates, instead of the commercial rates which cost more per mile than petrol and diesel cars.

It’s a peculiar form of discrimination against poorer people than one would normally expect from a Labour government, until one realises that Labour dropped that constituency some 30 years ago and confirmed that they were dropped in 2016 when the “Red Wall” largely voted to leave the EU.

The result of the destruction of many hundreds of thousands of acres will be considerable and will not be easy to recover once a future government realises that the whole Net Zero CO2 premise of anthropogenic global warming (“AGW”) has been a monumental mistake. It’s already happening in the USA, in case anybody here has missed this … unlikely, I know.

My guess is that we shall soon see the logical conclusion that AGW and Net Zero have absolutely no basis in actual “proper” science as so many of us have worked it out already. It’s a confidence trick which has promoted the absurd, grandiose and egocentric concept that mankind can control the climate of the Earth. In olden times, they would burn people at the stake for espousing such mendacious and arrogant nonsense.

I’m rather hoping for less drastic measures being inflicted on the perpetrators of this mythology in the not-too-distant future, once the penny has dropped with a wider, less gullible, audience. I’m not a vindictive sort of bloke. I’d settle for seeing them all deprived of any public/state-funded pensions.

I’d like to repeat the scientific knowledge which we’ve acquired through the efforts of “proper” scientists over the last 50 years or so: “Rises in atmospheric levels of CO2 have tended to follow rises in global temperatures, not the other way around.”  This is from scientists who have analysed the many deep core samples through earth and ice over many years. It’s not at all related to the dubious hypotheses exclusively premised on computer modelling by people with an unscientific “green” political agenda, some of whom have been exposed as charlatans but are still deemed worthy of support by our delusional lords and masters.

Consider this: The once mighty German automotive industry in the European “Economic Power House” has been brought to its knees by the Green political movement in Germany which has colonised the entirety of the established political parties across Europe over the last 30 years.

Germany is now dependent on scraping up high-sulphur content lignite and knocking down villages and wind turbines to do so, just to keep the lights on. The irony of knocking down wind turbines in Germany is exquisite. It’s an absurd scenario which would have been regarded as a satirical comedy less than 10 years ago.

Mercedes and VW are closing major plants in Germany and shifting more parts of their declining production offshore. The biggest German chemical industrial firm, BASF, once known for cassettes in my day, has already decided to move large parts of its manufacturing capacity to the US because, in the words of its spokesman, “Gas prices are 50% of those in Germany and electricity is 20% of the cost.”  That’s “20% of the cost,” not a mere 20% lower cost.

I mention this as an extreme position which has been forced on another European country. The remnants of what’s left of UK car manufacturing are being penalised into oblivion by an arbitrary fine, per vehicle of £15,000, if they sell less than 25% electric vehicles (“EV”). To describe this as an incentive is tantamount to justifying some of the excesses to incentivise production in the old USSR which included shipping failing managers off to the gulags in Siberia.

The incontrovertible fact in the UK is that most consumers don’t want to buy an EV. They’re not even wholly persuaded by hybrids, with good reason. A friend of mine was forced to trade her new Seat Hybrid back after it kept stopping. She lost 48% on the trade-in after less than two years and was simply glad to get rid. No wonder the second-hand market is awash with EVs and hybrids. All that the government is achieving is raising the prices of second-hand internal combustion engine (“ICE”) cars, which is bonkers and makes life more difficult for people on lower incomes. How does this work under a Labour government? People on lower incomes are much less likely to have off-road parking and the chance to charge EVs at lower domestic power rates.

Back to the subject: I’ve enjoyed observing British farming and agricultural development for most of my life. I’ve had the opportunity to look at other countries and different systems of agriculture which suit in their particular way.

I would suggest that British farming has produced some of the most efficient and sustainable methods in both livestock and arable farming over some 200 years. A look at the history of the improved Hereford beef breed in the US offers a clue which goes back to the 19th century. By the same token, the Charolais and Limousin adoptions and improvements in the UK tell a similar story. Our farmers have been innovating and improving for many years. They’re very good at this. They deserve our respect.

We’ll lose all of this if “mega-farms” become the new norm as traditional small to medium-sized family holdings, owned or tenanted, are effectively bankrupted if Rachel from Accounts’ socialist imposition of inheritance tax isn’t reversed.

The wealth of knowledge and experience, science and innovation, at the heart of our farming industry will be diminished and marked for extinction. Our many and varied breed societies, whether in cattle, sheep or pigs, will become even less viable than they are today. And we’ll lose that remarkable excellence of curated and managed diversity of livestock breeds which has taken some two centuries to develop and maintain.

This will impact quite soon, and it will damage this successful and resilient industry beyond measure. There’s absolutely no valid positive financial return to HMG’s HMRC from this spiteful new rule that could justify the damage which will result.

Lots of lawyers and accountants will make some money from this. The farmers will be the most obvious losers, although I suspect that we’ll all lose from the planned extinction of small to medium-sized family farmers.

Sadly, I don’t think that very many voters will actually notice this, much less give a damn about it. We’ve pretty much lost any, and all, of our roots in the rural parts of our country. The countryside is just a big place to go and enjoy with our cars, bikes, motorbikes, campervans, caravans and the odd day trip. It’s our “right” to enjoy this whenever we feel like doing so, and our “right to roam” over any field trumps farmers’ rights to keep bulls or cows with calves within fences which we’ll happily climb over and then complain vociferously if it goes wrong.

Over about 100 years or so we’ve almost completely lost touch with farmers and the land, our distant origins and proximity to rural life. This was, for obvious reasons, perfectly understandable and inevitable. There did, however, remain a sense of fond reminiscence and respect for our bucolic origins which many of us still cherish because so much of it is utterly gorgeous.

Within my memory, certainly, workers in factories in cities and coal miners would make an effort to get some time in the nearest bits of the countryside, when possible, when they had some time to spare. It used to be almost a human imperative once the Industrial Revolution had got underway and people hadn’t become so detached from their not-too-removed rural origins.

Sir Turnalot Starmer, Rachel from Accounts and Ed Miliband won’t be happy until this countryside of ours is entirely sequestered and put under large corporations, and/or some state agency, with a large part of it obliterated by solar panels and wind turbine arrays as far as the eye can see.

They loath farmers and they loath those of us who love our countryside. The countryside is largely immune from regulatory diktat. It blooms and flourishes regardless of political regulation. It isn’t there simply for our pleasure although it offers so much pleasure freely.

We may see the obliteration of large parts of this because our idiotic politicians have determined that this be done. Our descendants will, one day, lament this crass despoliation and they will attempt to redress this. They won’t think kindly of us, and they’ll be right to do so.

If my observations appear to be less than convincing, let me try to encapsulate my thesis.

There’s an independent, traditional and rugged determination which describes British farmers. And this is utterly detestable to the socialist and conformist ethos which characterises the Labour Party and this government. No dissension is tolerated unless it’s coming from the next winning leader who used to sit next to the previous incumbent and called him “my friend.”

If the Conservative Party’s leadership rituals resemble a ghastly weekend house party with the Cluedo theme – lots of suspects and weapons – the Labour Party is much more similar to the Good Old Politburo Game of the USSR from the last days of Stalin.

In remarkably appropriate style, they really want to break those 107,000 individual farmers (Kulaks) who run 209,000 holdings over some 17.0 million hectares and see their properties in the hands of fewer, bigger owners and their contract managers because it’ll be easier to legislate for fewer numbers of owners and force them into compliance with the forthcoming State edicts. 

I’m loath to go further with the analogy, but if we see local councils, or Government agencies, intervening in sales of farms resulting from bankruptcy in the second term of Sir Turnalot’s administration by 2031, remember where you first read about this. I don’t have a dream … but I do have a nightmare.

Featured image: Solar farm. Source: Ecology by Design

Your Government & Big Tech organisations
try to silence & shut down The Expose.

So we need your help to ensure
we can continue to bring you the
facts the mainstream refuses to.

The government does not fund us
to publish lies and propaganda on their
behalf like the Mainstream Media.

Instead, we rely solely on your support. So
please support us in our efforts to bring
you honest, reliable, investigative journalism
today. It’s secure, quick and easy.

Please choose your preferred method below to show your support.

Stay Updated!

Stay connected with News updates by Email

Loading


Please share our story!
author avatar
Rhoda Wilson
While previously it was a hobby culminating in writing articles for Wikipedia (until things made a drastic and undeniable turn in 2020) and a few books for private consumption, since March 2020 I have become a full-time researcher and writer in reaction to the global takeover that came into full view with the introduction of covid-19. For most of my life, I have tried to raise awareness that a small group of people planned to take over the world for their own benefit. There was no way I was going to sit back quietly and simply let them do it once they made their final move.

Categories: Breaking News

Tagged as:

5 3 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
24 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Wendy
Wendy
6 months ago

This can not go ahead! It is a crime against the people of the UK.
A vote of No Confidence from the people- not the parliament should be set in motion NOW !

Michael John Mather
Michael John Mather
6 months ago

How to ruin a country. It is almost unbelievable that we have politicians who are hell bent on destroying this beautiful countryside. As a nation who was once proud to be British, it is sad to see the disinterest of the populace. The politicians require to be shown, that it is us, the populace that are in charge, not them.

Paul Watson
Paul Watson
Reply to  Michael John Mather
6 months ago

They are puppets just following orders

coronistan.blogspot.com
coronistan.blogspot.com
6 months ago

“UK government is regulating farmers off their land and will destroy centuries-old farming traditions””[UK] is not going to be the … societies they once were in the last century. [Redacted] are going to be at the center of that. It’s a huge transformation for [UK] to make. They are now going into a [non-farming] mode and [Redacted] will be resented because of our leading role. But without that leading role and without that transformation, [UK] will not survive.”

Meaning: Due to the transformation UK will not survive.

Always the same behind all shit in the world.

Tony
Tony
6 months ago

Protect yourself and YOUR land by joining the lawful civilian government that’s owed to us all. End these corporations acting as government. End the ridiculous policies that harm us all go here

https://theenglishcountiesassembly.co.uk

https://annavonreitz.com

https://www.paulstramer.net

https://tasa.americanstatenationals.org

https://linktr.ee/theglobalfamilygroup_528hertz

https://thesouthafricanassembly.org

https://terraaustralisstatesassembly.com

chem
chem
6 months ago

“UK government is regulating farmers off their land and will destroy centuries-old farming traditions”
1. It’s not their land. It “belongs” to everyone.
2. They’ve been ordering everyone else off that land for centuries.
3. The farmers couldn’t care less about you or anyone else.

If you think the above is untrue, you’re either a farmer or you’ve never met one.

Islander
Islander
Reply to  chem
6 months ago

Correct, what is a farmer, but one who farms the land/earth???

We need them more than we know!

Red Sheep
Red Sheep
Reply to  chem
6 months ago

Such nonsense you speak. It doesn’t belong to everyone. Does everyone take care of it? How would you like strangers running all over your property if you have any? Do you eat? Family farming is special calling, most modern people would die doing the job of a farmer with the hours and risks. The only farmers you ever met were the ones you angered by invading their home and business. You are just an example of a clueless buffoon who will be the first to die in a food crisis.

Dave Owen
Dave Owen
6 months ago

Hi Rhoda,
Another instructive article.
The Farmers are the latest target.
The Coal industry has gone.
The Steel industry has gone.
The Electricity industry has gone.
The Royal Mail industry has gone.
The Gas industry has gone.
The UK has been sold down the river by the Traitors in the parliament, our MP’s.

Islander
Islander
Reply to  Dave Owen
6 months ago

We’ve still got the Entertainment and Sports industries!!!

iwick
iwick
Reply to  Islander
6 months ago

Controlled – you only see what they want you to see.

Islander
Islander
Reply to  iwick
6 months ago

I was using irony. I don’t have a tv, but yes I’m sure you’re correct.

trackback
6 months ago

[…] Go to Source Follow altnews.org on Telegram […]

Greeboz6
Greeboz6
6 months ago

This is exactly what the Communists did when they took over Russia. They transformed the “Breadbasket of Europe” into a famine. The individual farmers know how to get the best from the microecology of their particular area and the centuries old knowledge was destroyed by ignorant, and arrogant, Communist bureaucrats who knew nothing about what they had power over. This is happening in the US as the huge agro conglomerates do the same thing by different means. The government will take charge of the huge conglomerates and control the food which will control the population like a proper dictatorship.

Lisa Franklin
Lisa Franklin
6 months ago

Problem is governments are just lackeys who do as they’re told . Those directing them are insane. Too much inbreeding probably addled their swedes years ago. If you dug them out of their holes they’re probably deformed too lol

trackback
6 months ago

[…] UK government is regulating farmers off their land and will destroy centuries-old farming traditions…The UK government’s new policies, particularly the removal of the Agricultural Inheritance Tax exception, will lead to the demise of traditional family farms and the transfer of land ownership to large corporations, oligarchs, or the state. […]

iwick
iwick
6 months ago

Wind and solar is the ultimate destruction as without consistently supplied and affordable power society will collapse.

LOL
LOL
6 months ago

Some people claim to worship a god, of which there are many to chose from. Some claim to worship none. The truth is, you all worship one god – the system – and the farmers are a part of that, so you worship them too.

trainman6
trainman6
6 months ago

The UK government has gone insane and will end up killing millions and millions of people with this insane policy,!! maybe this is their aim to do just that, wake the hell up people!!!!! A revolution is needed NOW before its to late.

Joy N.
Joy N.
6 months ago

Thanks for the information..
🙏🙏
The Bible prophesied 7-year Tribulation is at humanity’s doorstep & the time to escape is very short. To read more, pls visit https://bibleprophecyinaction.blogspot.com/

Julie Pratt
Julie Pratt
6 months ago

Tell the Bristish farmers to place their land in a private non-registered trust, like the rich do, and avoid it being controlled by the government.
They won’t be able to tax it then. Spread the word!

trackback
5 months ago

[…] UK government is regulating farmers off their land and will destroy centuries-old farming traditions…The UK government’s new policies, particularly the removal of the Agricultural Inheritance Tax exception, will lead to the demise of traditional family farms and the transfer of land ownership to large corporations, oligarchs, or the state. […]