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By Alistair Vance | London | March 02, 2022 Conservative

LONDON – For decades, the proponents of 'The Great Integration' have sung from a single hymn sheet: that a world without borders is a world without want. This morning’s announcement from the Caspian Sea Union has silenced that choir. With the stroke of a pen in Moscow and Nur-Sultan, the flow of Eurasian wheat has been halted, leaving those nations most wedded to the globalist dream to face a bitter, breadless reality.

The "Great Wheat Shortage" is not an act of God; it is a strategic maneuver in a very modern resource war. By severing the export arteries that feed the West and its satellites, the CSU has demonstrated the terrifying leverage held by those who still value sovereignty over digital platitudes. While our leaders in the Atlantic-Pacific Union were obsessed with Aether-Link connectivity and green subsidies, our adversaries were quietly securing the silos.

In the City of London, the atmosphere is one of grim vindication for those of us who have long cautioned against over-reliance on foreign staples. "We have traded our national security for the convenience of cheap imports," remarked Sir Geoffrey Thorne, a veteran of the Board of Trade, during a briefing at the Reform Club. "A nation that cannot feed itself is not a nation; it is a client state waiting for its lease to expire."

The Vane Administration in Washington has already signalled a retreat behind its 'Sovereign Dome,' pivoting toward Heritage Tariffs to protect what remains of the American heartland's output. Yet here in Britain, caught between the bimetallic pressures of the GBP/EUR system and our lingering dependence on the Black Sea trade, the options are narrowing. The government’s talk of 'Strategic Reserves' rings hollow when one considers the decay of our domestic agricultural infrastructure over the last thirty years.

There is a lesson here, written in the rising price of a standard loaf. Stability is not found in the 'Aether,' but in the soil. The CSU understands this. They have used their 'Splinternet' to shield their economic data while they weaponise their harvests. If we are to survive this decade of disruption, we must return to the foundational principles of fiscal responsibility and national resilience. The era of the global supermarket is over; the era of the strategic granary has begun. We would do well to pick up our fountain pens and draft a new policy of self-sufficiency before the ink on our bread vouchers is dry.

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