All great religions intermingle food and holiness, but it's usually in the form of prohibition. Kosher, Halal, Hindu sacred cows are all rooted in religions' original function as sticky civilizational infrastructure. Beyond the health benefits, these rules offered acceptance of the condition of scarcity via courageous reverse psychology. “You can’t starve me, demon! I’ll starve myself.”
Rarer are holy rules about what you should eat in order to connect to God. As global Progressivism has become the religion of the masses, you see it adopting food-related rules like its precursors. These new rules are uniformly rooted in the core function of globalism: to open up access to decreasingly lower cost bioresources, particularly labor, in order to maximize the capital of its hidden controllers.
These began as devotional prohibitions like veganism. However, global Progressivism (as religion) is less interested in expressions of faith via self-deprivation because they don't make money. Rather,…
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