A farmer, describing a farm attack in Rhodesia: "I didn't expect it for the reason that I do such an awful lot for these people"
— Will Tanner (@Will_Tanner_1) January 26, 2026
Goodwill offers no guarantee of safety. Only strength does. Only those who fear the consequences of attacking will refuse to attack
.@DonShift3 has a… pic.twitter.com/MAexryohnx
Food Remedies
Traditional cultures prioritised fat above protein for a reason. --Sama Hoole
Monday, January 26, 2026
WILL TANNER: Goodwill offers no guarantee of safety. Only strength does. Only those who fear the consequences of attacking will refuse to attack
JUST ANOTHER POD GUY: Canada is about to get crushed. Mexico will be brought to heel. Cuba will collapse.
ARC is coming. This was so obvious. They moved Carney into Canada to triangulate against Trump. He made his move at Davos while Trump was laying down the new law.
— Tom Luongo (@TFL1728) January 26, 2026
The London wing of the CCP made their move against Xi at the same time to secure Chiba and it failed.
Now Japan…
SUNLIGHT--BEST DISINFECTANT: “When you’re fleeing a war, you take your family with you. When you’re going to war, you leave them behind”
Reminder clips https://t.co/hCEcTzpscT
— Sunlight—Best Disinfectant (@1TxStar) January 26, 2026
Sunday, January 25, 2026
So, how do the birds stay warm??
So, how do the birds stay warm?? pic.twitter.com/wPGVYLsmuQ
— sแฅแฅฑแฅฑ๐ ๐าปัแฅg❤️๐ฅ(๐ฐ๐๐๐) (@55SweetThing) January 25, 2026
SAMA HOOLE: Monasteries preaching fasting and vegetarianism to peasants: The monks' kitchens were full of meat, cheese, and butter. Fasting was for laypeople. The monastery ate well.
Victorian dietary reformers promoting vegetable-based diets: They ate roasts at private clubs. The working classes got lectures about lentils. --Sama Hoole
Throughout history, the pattern is identical: Those in power eat animal products. Those they govern are told to eat plants.
— Sama Hoole (@SamaHoole) January 25, 2026
Monasteries preaching fasting and vegetarianism to peasants: The monks' kitchens were full of meat, cheese, and butter. Fasting was for laypeople. The… pic.twitter.com/9v8ufzqVcp
Throughout history, the pattern is identical: Those in power eat animal products. Those they govern are told to eat plants. Monasteries preaching fasting and vegetarianism to peasants: The monks' kitchens were full of meat, cheese, and butter. Fasting was for laypeople. The monastery ate well. Medieval courts issuing grain subsidies: The nobility's tables featured multiple meat courses. Venison, boar, fowl. The peasants got bread. Victorian dietary reformers promoting vegetable-based diets: They ate roasts at private clubs. The working classes got lectures about lentils. 20th-century government nutritional guidelines: The food pyramid was created by committee, but the politicians writing the policy didn't follow it. They ate steaks at expense dinners while telling Americans to eat 6-11 servings of grains daily. Modern climate activists campaigning against meat: They're photographed at galas eating beef. Their private jets use more carbon than a herd of cattle. But you should eat bugs. Modern health influencers promoting plant-based diets: Secretly supplementing with B12, iron, creatine, omega-3s: all the nutrients they can't get from plants. Some are secretly eating eggs or fish. They just don't film it. The World Economic Forum discussing sustainable protein alternatives: Their catered events serve grass-fed beef, wild-caught fish, and artisanal cheeses. Bugs are for everyone else. The wealthy understanding what nutrition actually requires has never changed. They eat animal products because outcomes matter more than ideology. But they can't say that publicly. Admitting meat is necessary while promoting plant-based diets for others would expose the game. So they eat privately what they campaign against publicly. Strategy. Not hypocrisy. If the masses ate like the elites, they'd be as healthy, strong, and energetic as the elites. Hard to maintain hierarchy when everyone's thriving. Better to promote "sustainable" diets of grains and plants while quietly eating the food that actually works. The advice has always flowed one direction: Down. Nobility to peasants: "Grain is your sustenance. Meat is for special occasions." Priests to laypeople: "Fasting purifies. Meat is indulgence." Politicians to citizens: "Whole grains are heart-healthy. Red meat is dangerous." Elites to working class: "Plant-based is the future. Meat is unsustainable." Meanwhile, every single group giving this advice continues eating animal products themselves. They know. They've always known. The question is when everyone else figures it out.