British people are boycotting over a dozen Arla dairy products, a toxic additive given to cows to reduce 30% less methane gas pushed by the globalists and Bill Gates as part of the carbon mandates to fight “climate change.”
The new chemical disrupts the natural processes in the cow’s gut and reduces the methane emissions when the cows fart.
Earlier this year, Bill Gates invested millions of dollars in Rumin8, a company that develops additives to cow’s feed to reduce methane gases.
More recently, Gates rolled out yet another dairy cow feed additive, Bovaer, which supposedly reduces cow methane emissions by 27%.
“So one is to vaccinate the cows in a way that their gut bacteria that emit the methane, which is also called natural gas or CH4, which is the second most important greenhouse gas, you can vaccinate them and that species of bacteria isn’t there,” Gates said.
“Their [cows’] stomachs are very special because they can eat grass. It’s a three-stage fermentation process, basically. There’s another way you can change what they eat, and you could either put that in their water or their feed. There is a drug to change the microbiome, not a vaccine, but a drug. That looks very promising.”
However, the news is not being received well by consumers in the UK, who are now beginning to boycott Arla milk products and other associated companies that use 3-NOP in their dairy cows.
Brits say the products are “contaminated” by 3-NOP, which has been linked to infertility and cancer.
The boycott includes Arla’s milk and butter products, including Lurpak and Anchor butter, Castello, and other companies that partner with Arla Foods, including Yeo Valley, Starbucks, McDonald’s, and Ecomilk.
Subordinate brands are also being boycotted, including Arla Cravendale, a filtered milk; Arla B.O.B., a fat-free milk; Arla Protein, a high-protein yoghurt and drink brand; and Arla Lactofree, a dairy product that is free of lactose.
One British TikTok user posted a video showing them pouring Arla milk down the sink while saying, “Arla is not in my house.”
The Good Food Project called for a full boycott of “soulless supermarkets and fake food corporations” such as Arla.
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Another video, which has already garnered 1.6 million views, shows a man pointing to a bottle of Asda semi-skimmed milk from Arla farms and saying, “This will be going straight down the drain, and I won’t be buying Asda milk again.”
Others on X/Twitter supported the boycott:
Dont care what they say still boycotting ARLA.
— Dave (@DaveCCopper) December 9, 2024
I don't want Bill Gates chemicals being put in my foods thanks but no thanks.
Please stick them back up Bill's arse.
What are Arla playing at? Looks like a Craven attempt to interfere with milk.
— A National Scandal 🇬🇧🏴 (@TheHutchPlay) December 9, 2024
Go home Bill and close the farm Gates behind you.
Dear Arla
— Dr Bruce Macaulay (@G4ABX) December 9, 2024
We do not want our food contaminated with ANY fake fart reducing compounds at the behest of Bill Gates who is already responsible for the deaths of millions.
Climate change is a scam.
We will continue to boycott your products until you confirm they have been removed.
Besides the mass rejections of Arla dairy products, the company attempted to reassure the public that the feed additive has been declared safe by both European and UK regulators, claiming that the supplement breaks down into natural byproducts and doesn’t transfer into the cow’s milk.
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However, consumers highlighted a warning from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) that 3-NOP is not to be used in humans.
Consumers also point out that the FDA cautions consumers about handling the product:
“3-nitrooxypropanol may damage male fertility and reproductive organs, is potentially harmful when inhaled, and is a skin and eye irritant.”
Farmers are also required to wear protective gear for the eyes, mouth, and hands when working with the supplement.
Worse, the Food Standards Agency in the UK also placed a warning label on the product, linking it to cancer.
The study came from the chemical’s effect on rodent populations, where it found that high doses initially increased cancer risk in female rats.
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