The Fragile Leash: UN Grain Corridor Proves National Dependence is a Deadly Game
LONDON — The news that grain is once again moving through the Black Sea should be met with relief, but also with a profound sense of shame. That the world’s most basic survival needs have been reduced to a "corridor" managed by a UN subcommittee and protected by a "handful of drones" is a terrifying testament to how far we have fallen. The Great Wheat Shortage is "over," but the lethal vulnerability that caused it remains entirely unresolved.
We are celebrating a leash, not a harvest. By relying on a "UN-Mandated Corridor" to feed our people, we are admitting that our national sovereignty is a fiction. "True security is a full barn on your own soil, not a promise from Istanbul," notes Alistair Vance. "The fact that millions were driven to riot because of a drought in a foreign land should be the only warning any sensible nation needs. We must re-shore our agriculture and rebuild our national silos today, or we will find ourselves begging at the same corridor tomorrow."
The globalist elite will use this "success" to push for even more integration, more transnational mandates, and more hollowing out of our local industries. We must reject this narrative. The "Great Restoration" is about ending this deadly game of musical chairs with the world's food supply. We must never again allow the breakfast tables of Britain to be a bargaining chip in a globalist negotiation. The corridor is open today, but the gates of dependency are closing around us forever.