Humans are omnivorous creatures. And perfectly eat everything edible. Snails, shrimps, crabs, even china grasshopers. Everything that could be grown/caught and cooked is in our menu for the millenias.
The thing with "ze bugz", they force, is that they are not edible. Humanity survived multiple starvations, and nowhere nobody could make worms and bugs edible even facing death from starvation. You can't make worms and bugs edible at home. You need a complex factory process to separate edible proteins from poisons and harmful stuff in worms and bugs.
And, obviously, only corporations could build a factory for worms and bugs processing. You are not able to grow that perfectly breeding worms for your own food. That is the catch.
So, corporations force "eat ze bugz", prohibit everything you could grow by yourself, and then sell the cheapest possible for them proteins for all your money.
So, don't "eat ze bugz", fuck all legislations and grow your own food.
Dont they eat bugs in China?
Yes, they do, But it is a few edible bugs species and they are not very easy to breed. It is mostly delicacy and not a regular food. Pork, chicken and seafood consumed many orders more than that china bugs.
French eat frogs and snails, it is also not the main source of proteines.
Americans eat turkey, while in other world it is not even the third option for meat.
So, as you see, everything that could be food already is food. Unlike those bugs and worms they want you to accept as food.
Seasoned crickets are served as a snack at bars all across Mexico. Stop talking out of your ass, you fearmongering retard.
So, it is not worms, fly larvas or other bugs of NWO narrative.
It is edible grasshopers, that are not so easy to breed. And just like with chineese grasshopers, you can't grow them anywhere.
You could also recall srimps, lobsters and other creatures covered with chitin. They are all edible, and you could cook them by yourself.
But if you take a closer look to NWO bugs, you will find that all that bugs need a complex processing to become edible.