Demystifying The Cargill-Macmillian Clan – LN24

As far as the history of diabolical corporations or conglomerates that have sponsored and orchestrated the satanic and globalist agenda against food are concerned, Monsanto is far from being the only company with a reputation for being diabolical. In fact, today, we look at the Cargill company, which has not only been notorious for poor animal keeping practices, a war on farmers, but even a dangerous consolidation of food companies in a manner that has enabled it to quality control food supply and quality.
This brings us to the second question, being: What is the story behind the Cargill MacMillian clan? This question is especially important to address in this discussion because, firstly, from the origins of the Cargill company, you understand that the family dynamics feature greatly in how the company was created, consolidated and even how it is secretly run today. Secondly, it is important to address because you understand that the secrecy is actually a means of hiding the abuses, land grabs and human rights violations that are committed by the company.
THE DIABOLICAL OPERATIONS OF THE CARGILL COMPANY
And now onto the final question, being: What have been the diabolical operations of the Cargill company? Well, in essence, Cargill is almost like Monsanto’s evil, more secretive and better financed twin. With annual revenues of over $119 billion, Cargill is the world’s largest trader of grains, the world’s largest privately held corporation and one of a handful of agribusiness giants that are shaping the increasingly globalised food system to their advantage. Operating in more than 66 countries, Cargill produces, trades, manufactures, and markets all manner of agricultural commodities touching almost every aspect of our food supply.
Furthermore, from Cargill’s shameful Confined Animal Feeding Operations (CAFOs) that are not only inhumane but undermine food safety, to the fact that along with Tyson and JBS it is responsible for processing more than 70 percent of all US beef, Cargill is the mafia operation stomping on family farmers to consolidate our food system in the name of profit. Furthermore, without proper supply chain safeguards in place, Cargill continues to purchase, trade and profit from palm oil grown on lands stolen from local communities and palm plantation areas with active ongoing social conflict and human rights violations, including slave labor.
As far as diabolical operations were concerned, Cargill was also quite ambitious. More specifically, in 1924 they acquired the Taylor and Bornqiue company, a competitor, who has a unique technology: a private wire system. Back then, this was the equivalent of having your own internet, and allowed Cargill to communicate quickly and easily among themselves. The technology was so good it remained in operation til 1996, well into the internet age. Getting good information quickly was important, because Cargill was beginning to work in commodities futures trading: that’s gambling on the future prices of necessities like wheat, corn, and meat.
A lot of this business is done at the Chicago Board of Trade. Novelist Frank Norris wrote in his The Epic of the Wheat, “Think of it, the food of hundreds and hundreds of thousands of people just at the mercy of a few men down there on the Board of Trade. They make the price. They say just how much the peasant shall pay for his loaf of bread. If he can’t pay the price, he simply starves.”
Ultimately, Cargill established something akin to information superiority: if they got information about something that could affect wheat prices at one location, they could instantly blast that information to other locations and change how they invest. This is one of the ways consolidation helped their operations: because Cargill had so many business arms, they got all the best information all of the time. Sounds a lot like insider trading right? Well, unfortunately, in commodities trading that’s basically legal. Not only did Cargill know this, but they went on to establish an intelligence network that rivalled the CIA!
If a food producing company goes to great lengths to keep its operations secret, while acquiring more power and influence in the industry, there certainly is much to question about its operations and the quality of the food it produces – that is certainly the case with the Cargill company.