High-tech farming may look impressive, but it’s a costly, unnecessary solution to a problem we’ve manufactured. Nature already provides all we need — if we’re willing to rethink our habits, reconnect with the land, and stop buying into artificial scarcity and climate-driven control narratives.
James Dyson reveals the future of farming.
Nonsense. Unlike the 99% of comments on these videos — clearly written by bots and AI — it would be refreshing to see more real people saying true things. But it’s an easy way to propagandize the masses, especially those who seem allergic to critical thinking.
The reality is: this simply isn’t necessary. Enormous expenses, resource use, and energy costs — for what? Anyone who wants strawberries (as in this example) can grow a few planters at home. Add a small greenhouse, and you’ve got them year-round. Nature already provides everything we need — if we’d just shift our perspective a little and make proper use of green spaces. And let’s be clear: there’s nothing wrong with importing food and supporting neighboring countries. That’s how trade works.
We’ve been conditioned to rely on shops for everything, so of course these supposed “tech solutions” fit neatly into that model — because that is the model. It’s what we grew up with, so we assume it’s the only way. But if even a small percentage of society returned to the land and grew their own food, that model would crumble. We’d have better food, more food, healthier soil, and a more sustainable future — all without the need for sensors, algorithms, or robotic harvesters. We don’t need fertilizers, either. How does this soulless, lifeless machinery support bees and other pollinators? It doesn’t. How does it improve soil health, water retention, or the trillions of microbes that sustain life? It doesn’t.
Stop being so easily programmed into believing in scarcity and lack. Instead, pay attention to the aggressive, predatory legislation being pushed under the fraudulent green/climate agenda — an agenda that’s actively destroying the livelihoods of farmers across the Western world. The whole “this is how we’ll feed the world” narrative? Propaganda. We still throw out, what, over 50% of the food we produce? They created the problem, you reacted, and now they’re offering their pre-planned solution. All that’s left is convincing more people to pack up and move to the city.
There’s more than enough land. More than enough farmers. More than enough infrastructure. This is an artificial scarcity, manufacturing an artificial need for artificial and synthetic solutions.
Look for the truth. Stand for something real.