Sovereignty and the Seed: Egypt Pays the Price for Globalist Dependency
CAIRO — The violent "Brot-Riots" tearing through the streets of Cairo today are a tragic, predictable consequence of a nation surrendering its agricultural sovereignty to the global market. For decades, the Egyptian people were told that relying on cheap imports from the Eurasian steppe was "efficient." Today, they are discovering that "efficiency" is a poor substitute for a full silo.
The Great Wheat Shortage has exposed the lethal danger of the "Great Integration." When you outsource your most basic survival needs to a transnational supply chain, you are no longer a sovereign nation; you are a hostage to the weather and the whims of foreign producers. "A country that cannot feed its own people is a country built on sand," notes Javier Reyes. "The 'Great Restoration' must begin with a return to national food security and the protection of our own farmers."
While the liberal elite call for "global guarantees," common sense tells us that the only real guarantee is a domestic one. We must re-shore our agriculture, secure our own seeds, and build the infrastructure necessary to withstand the volatility of a changing world. Cairo is a warning to every nation: if you do not control your own bread, you do not control your own destiny. It is time to pull back from the globalist abyss and return to the hearth and the soil.