Vatic Note:  The blog we put up a few days ago about the GMO foods and the potential for crop failure brought to mind the insane ones desire to depopulate and here was a memory of something I read years ago and forgot until I read about the GMO fiasco.  I now realize the problems with GMO were intentional and here below is the reason why.  THEY NEED TO STARVE US INTO DEPOPULATING and that GMO problem was how they intended to do so.
Get heritage seeds, and stock up on them.  Hold and keep them until after these sicko's have been "Iceland".... into jail.  I think its time for Kissinger to just go away for ever.  The senile insane animal is over 90 years old now and all he can do is get worse, so as Ezekial Emmanual would say "He is a useless feeder, do not give him medical care".   LOL  
Henry Kissinger's 1974 Plan for Food Control Genocide 
 http://forum.prisonplanet.com/index.php?topic=121508.0
This
 article appeared as part of a feature in the December 8, 1995 issue of 
Executive Intelligence Review, and was circuclated extensively by the 
Schiller Insitute Food for Peace Movement. It is reprinted here as part 
of the package: “Who Is Responsible for the World Food Shortage?” 
Kissinger’s 1974 Plan for Food Control Genocide
by Joseph Brewda
Dec. 8, 1995
On
 Dec. 10, 1974, the U.S. National Security Council under Henry Kissinger
 completed a classified 200-page study, “National Security Study 
Memorandum 200: Implications of Worldwide Population Growth for U.S. 
Security and Overseas Interests.” The study falsely claimed that 
population growth in the so-called Lesser Developed Countries (LDCs) was
 a grave threat to U.S. national security. Adopted as official policy in
 November 1975 by President Gerald Ford, NSSM 200 outlined a covert plan
 to reduce population growth in those countries through birth control, 
and also, implicitly, war and famine. Brent Scowcroft, who had by then 
replaced Kissinger as national security adviser (the same post Scowcroft
 was to hold in the Bush administration), was put in charge of 
implementing the plan. CIA Director George Bush was ordered to assist 
Scowcroft, as were the secretaries of state, treasury, defense, and 
agriculture.
The bogus arguments that Kissinger advanced were not
 original. One of his major sources was the Royal Commission on 
Population, which King George VI had created in 1944 “to consider what 
measures should be taken in the national interest to influence the 
future trend of population.” The commission found that Britain was 
gravely threatened by population growth in its colonies, since “a 
populous country has decided advantages over a sparsely-populated one 
for industrial production.” The combined effects of increasing 
population and industrialization in its colonies, it warned, “might be 
decisive in its effects on the prestige and influence of the West,” 
especially effecting “military strength and security.”
NSSM 200 
similarly concluded that the United States was threatened by population 
growth in the former colonial sector. It paid special attention to 13 
“key countries” in which the United States had a “special political and 
strategic interest”: India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Indonesia, Thailand, 
the Philippines, Turkey, Nigeria, Egypt, Ethiopia, Mexico, Brazil, and 
Colombia. It claimed that population growth in those states was 
especially worrisome, since it would quickly increase their relative 
political, economic, and military strength.
For example, Nigeria:
 “Already the most populous country on the continent, with an estimated 
55 million people in 1970, Nigeria's population by the end of this 
century is projected to number 135 million. This suggests a growing 
political and strategic role for Nigeria, at least in Africa.” Or 
Brazil: “Brazil clearly dominated the continent demographically.” The 
study warned of a “growing power status for Brazil in Latin America and 
on the world scene over the next 25 years.”
Food as a weapon
There
 were several measures that Kissinger advocated to deal with this 
alleged threat, most prominently, birth control and related 
population-reduction programs. He also warned that “population growth 
rates are likely to increase appreciably before they begin to decline,” 
even if such measures were adopted.
A second measure was 
curtailing food supplies to targetted states, in part to force 
compliance with birth control policies: “There is also some established 
precedent for taking account of family planning performance in appraisal
 of assistance requirements by AID [U.S. Agency for International 
Development] and consultative groups. Since population growth is a major
 determinant of increases in food demand, allocation of scarce PL 480 
resources should take account of what steps a country is taking in 
population control as well as food production. In these sensitive 
relations, however, it is important in style as well as substance to 
avoid the appearance of coercion.”
“Mandatory programs may be 
needed and we should be considering these possibilities now,” the 
document continued, adding, “Would food be considered an instrument of 
national power? ... Is the U.S. prepared to accept food rationing to 
help people who can't/won't control their population growth?”
Kissinger
 also predicted a return of famines that could make exclusive reliance 
on birth control programs unnecessary. “Rapid population growth and 
lagging food production in developing countries, together with the sharp
 deterioration in the global food situation in 1972 and 1973, have 
raised serious concerns about the ability of the world to feed itself 
adequately over the next quarter of century and beyond,” he reported.
The
 cause of that coming food deficit was not natural, however, but was a 
result of western financial policy: “Capital investments for irrigation 
and infrastucture and the organization requirements for continuous 
improvements in agricultural yields may be beyond the financial and 
administrative capacity of many LDCs. For some of the areas under 
heaviest population pressure, there is little or no prospect for foreign
 exchange earnings to cover constantly increasingly imports of food.”
“It
 is questionable,” Kissinger gloated, “whether aid donor countries will 
be prepared to provide the sort of massive food aid called for by the 
import projections on a long-term continuing basis.” Consequently, 
“large-scale famine of a kind not experienced for several decades—a kind
 the world thought had been permanently banished,” was 
foreseeable—famine, which has indeed come to pass.
To read the entire NSSM 200 document, click here: http://wlym.com/text/NSSM200.htm 
The article is reproduced in accordance with  Section 107 of title 17 of the Copyright Law of the United States relating to fair-use and is for the purposes of criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. 
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