All Episodes
March 12, 2025 - The David Knight Show
15:25
“UnReal Milk”: Lab-Grown Dairy for the Climate Con Game
| Copy link to current segment

Time Text
lab-grown milk is coming to a supermarket near you Now, interestingly enough, you know, there's this really weird, I don't really know where they draw the lines on the food stuff, but, you know, USDA is kind of focused on the agricultural side, you know, so if it's something that's on the farm,
the USDA's got jurisdiction over it.
But then when it goes retail, it goes to the grocery store, that's where the FDA is supposed to get involved.
You know, the FDA says, well, we've got a recall, or your labeling is wrong, or this or that, you know, that type of thing.
And so, now when we're talking about lab-grown milk, what are we talking about here?
Is it a farm?
I mean, where is the jurisdictional thing for this?
Should they be under the people who do medicines?
Yeah, that'd be the FDA. Or the people who do retail food, that would be the FDA. But no, they're under the USDA. Even though there's no agriculture involved.
Even though the whole rationale for doing lab milk is to make sure you don't do agriculture.
That's what they're boasting about.
Oh, we're going to save the planet, you know, from all this stuff.
Forbes just published an article on lab-grown milk.
The title of it was...
First lab-grown whole cow's milk to debut in the U.S. Based on a brand called Unreal Milk.
Just call it fake milk.
But Unreal Milk.
Unreal Milk.
Can you imagine somebody from the past coming into the future and you go to the grocery store and it's like, oh, there's that Unreal Milk.
And it's like, I don't think I want that.
I don't.
So, the purpose of this is, of course, to fight climate change.
Because the cows fart greenhouse gases known as methane gas.
The United Nations has claimed that a cow can release more than 500 liters of methane per day.
So what?
So what?
It's still way, way, way less than CO2, which is way, way, way, way, way, way less than water vapor.
So why don't you focus on water vapor?
According to Forbes, they said, Dairy farming is under increasing pressure for its environmental impact, consuming vast resources and emitting methane, a greenhouse gas that is far more potent than CO2. Oh, really?
Yeah.
No.
It's more potent.
Give me a break.
None of this stuff is real.
All of it is gas lighting.
As the food industry searches for lower carbon alternatives.
I'm so sick of this carbon this and carbon that.
It's a Boston-based startup called Brown Foods.
That sounds appetizing, doesn't it?
Brown Foods is going to make unreal milk.
And so the company is a startup that was founded by Sohail Gupta, Bhavana Tandon, and Avjik Kapoor.
Hey, maybe you guys could sell this in India.
There's an idea.
Why don't you go back to India and sell this stuff, okay?
We don't want it.
We don't want your brown milk.
Brown Foods claims its production method slashes carbon emissions by 82%, water use by 90%, and land use by 95% without relying on livestock.
It's all unreal.
And so is, you know, unreal milk.
For an unreal crisis.
Don't you call it MacGuffin milk?
It's got this alliteration there that they could use, right?
The first version of unreal milk is already undergoing lab validation with MIT. They confirmed the presence of all essential dairy proteins and said that it is structurally identical to traditional milk.
Ha, ha, ha.
I don't think so.
It's got all the things in there that you know are in milk, as far as you think, right?
They expect lab-grown milk to gain a third of the dairy market.
I'll tell you what it doesn't have.
I'm sure it won't have the probiotics that are in raw milk.
They're not going to reproduce that, right?
They said, rising, here we are again, back to the climate MacGuffin, rising greenhouse gas emissions, fear, fear, fear.
Deforestation, fear, fear, fear.
And water scarcity, fear, fear, fear.
Linked to traditional animal agriculture.
Are they really?
No.
Have spurred innovation in plant-based fermentation-derived lab-grown proteins.
Ugh, gag.
They have secured...
$2 billion in investments in 2022, and they got USDA approval in 2023. See what I said?
The FDA? No.
No.
Not going to cover this as a pharmaceutical.
Not going to cover it as a retail food.
They're going to cover it as if it were agriculture.
One of these people just said, well, we're not about agriculture.
We hate agriculture.
Traditional agriculture, we don't like.
You know, what is RFK Jr. going to do about it?
I guarantee you that this Brooke chick, that Brooke, was it Brooke Rollins or whatever?
Yeah.
You know, she's just a political apparatchik out of Texas.
And I guarantee that she's going to rubber stamp anything that any corporation wants to do anywhere without any concerns.
She's already rubber stamping the mRNA animal vaccines.
So, there's a lot of these, though.
Bill Gates is involved in it.
Israel is involved in it.
Bill Gates and Israel have been involved in lab-grown milk business through global corporate venturing.
Since 2018, global corporate venturing has reported about 20 corporate investments in various lab-grown meat and milk startups, such as Israel-based milk developer Imagine Dairy.
Imagine Dairy.
They raised $15 million.
Israel-based Strauss Group.
Their corporate investor, Motif Foodworks, a food technology company developing alternative milks, also raised $226 million in a Series B round, with Bill Gates' Breakthrough Energy Ventures participating in it.
By the way, this article is from lewrockwell.com.
Israel, in particular, has been a hotspot for various lab-grown milk startups, And global food shortage crisis.
This is the PR from these people.
This is not Lou Rockwell writing this.
So, Forbes is doing this PR. Forbes says, efforts to produce milk without cows are taking various forms.
Sonara, a German startup, is growing cell-cultured mammary cells.
Also known as breast tumors.
It's not a tumor.
It's not a tumor.
Yeah.
How would you like to have some?
Why don't you just call this?
Here's an idea.
Tumor milk.
How about that?
Can do tumor milk?
How about, you got these eternal cells that are going to keep going?
How about this?
Cancer milk.
You're going to milk your tumor and have some cancer milk.
Cell-cultured mammary cells in partnership with dairy farmers, blending biotech with traditional milk production.
Another Israeli venture called Wilk.
It's like milk, but you turn the M upside down.
We've inverted just one little key thing there, which makes it all bad, you know?
We go from milk to wilk.
It is focused on producing cultured milk fats to be used in making cheese and yogurt.
I'll tell you what, when I was talking to Brian yesterday about his book, Land Rich and Cash Poor, And he was talking about how, you know, one of the things that could help local farmers get going is the kind of specialty programs he set up there in Wisconsin where he was.
They said, well, let's focus on cheese.
You know, let's do craftsmanship programs, teach people how to make really good cheeses.
Special ones.
Well, I think this is going to be a real opportunity for them.
This company, Wilk, is going to start making milk fats to be used in cheese.
You might want to invest in some of these Wisconsin craft dairies making craft cheese.
Well, not craft cheese.
It's not craft with a K, with a C. Craft cheese, I don't think it's even cheese.
I think it's cheese-like.
These approaches contrast with unreal milk, which is taking a fully lab-based route, aiming to replace whole cow's milk without relying on livestock.
There you go.
So these people are just going to...
They want to keep these cells going.
They want some tumors that you can...
Perpetual cancer tumors that you can get milk from.
Brown foods, the goal is not...
To mimic dairy, but to recreate it at a molecular level.
There we go.
GMO milk.
How about that?
You go from farmers in blue genes to farmer genes and genetics.
How about that?
Pharmaceutical genes.
Lab-grown breast milk is now being engineered for newborn babies and infants because they've got to go to the babies.
Got to get these kids at the earliest possible age.
Into this frankenfood stuff, right?
By the way, there was a thing out, and I did not cover it, but I saw it.
They were saying that infant formula, the FDA doesn't require them to list sugar, but especially the high fructose corn syrup.
They don't have to list that, evidently, on the ingredients.
Because, you know, we're talking about babies, and babies can't read, so, you know, put whatever we want to in there.
We don't have to tell anybody, right?
That's kind of the attitude these people have.
They call it a cell-cultured human milk for newborn babies and infants.
The U.S. company is called BioMilk.
Milk with a Q. It was founded in 2019. Isn't that nice?
Their names are just like their products.
Just a little bit of a tweak here.
We'll take milk and we'll take the M and we'll invert it into a W and we'll call it Wilk.
Here we have BioMilk and we'll just...
Take that K away and replace it with a Q. Founded in 2019, the CEO of the company said, our product will shift demand away from the dairy industry, benefiting the planet.
I don't care about the planet.
It's not under threat.
My child is under threat.
While nourishing babies with a 100% human alternative.
A 100%...
Think about that.
Just hold that phrase in your mind here.
It's kind of like continuing resolution, right?
A 100% human alternative.
A human alternative.
It's a 100% alternative.
Human alternative.
Without feeling the need to make a trade-off between their child's health and the environment.
I've never felt the need to do that because none of this stuff is a threat to the environment.
All of this stuff is always being tied back to climate alarmism.
Every one of these things.
And just remember, C40, you know, the 40 cities, and it was started by Sadiq Khan in London and Mayor Bloomberg in New York, and they put out their thing.
They had a goal of getting to 40 cities.
Now they're over 100. And part of their thing is no meat, no milk.
No dairy, actually.
All dairy products, but, you know, no meat, no milk.
That's where they want to go.
That's what's really about this.
Well, we're going to take a quick break.
When we come back, we're going to talk about the efforts to abort the elderly.
It's not just the beginning of life.
It's going to be at the end of life.
And how you've got governments openly talking about vaccine programs for focusing on the elderly and focusing on adults to make sure that they don't have the kind of retirement liability.
Good evening.
Tonight's tale is a story of paranoia and a most unexpected perpetrator, the common cow.
Or, more specifically, what comes out the other end.
Yes, the air is thick with intrigue, as it seems that in our modern age of propaganda...
Even a humble bovine's backside can be branded a national security threat.
The menace is invisible, silent, yet deadly.
Carefully contrive to panic the masses into accepting the government stepping in, jackboots and all, with their solutions.
Because who better to stop a gaseous threat than a bunch of political windbags?
But one must wonder, is this truly about saving the planet, or are we simply being led to pasture?
Is it merely a MacGuffin?
The David Knight show serves as a breath of fresh air for those who still believe that truth can stand up to scrutiny.
And he's found that the government narrative smells suspiciously like a load of bull.
So if you want to help others catch wind of the BS being shoveled out of Washington, please consider supporting the show.
And now back to our regularly scheduled program.
You're listening to The David Knight Show.
Hello, it's me, Volodymyr Zelensky.
I'm so tired of wearing these same t-shirts everywhere for years.
You'd think with all the billions I've skimmed off America, I could dress better.
And I could, if only David Knight would send me one of his beautiful grey MacGuffin hoodies or a new black t-shirt with the MacGuffin logo in blue.
But he told me to get lost.
Maybe one of you American suckers can buy me some at thedavidknightshow.com.
And David is giving a 10% discount to listeners from now until 2025. At that price, you should be able to buy me several hundred.
Those amazing sand-colored microphone hoodies are so beautiful.
I'd wear something other than green military cosplay to my various galas and social events.
Export Selection