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Ireland in 2025: When the Green Isn’t Organic – It’s A Soylent Wake-Up Call

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By Tyler Durden

As Ireland in 2025 grapples with its own food security & recalls, rising immigration pressures, and public legitimate distrust in institutions, Soylent Green’s dark satire feels less like science fiction and more like a timely reflection.

In 1973, Soylent Green shocked audiences with a dystopian vision of 2022 that today in 2025 we are now living in: overcrowded cities, rampant inequality, food scarcity, and a corrupt government feeding the public processed lies, literally.

Food Recalls: Transparency or Just PR Damage Control?

In the past three months, Ireland has seen a disturbing spike in food recalls. From Listeria-contaminated spinach and herbs sold across Dunnes, SuperValu, and Aldi, to pork sausages pulled from shelves over Salmonella fears, Irish consumers are being told, again, to check their fridges for the state’s mistakes.

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The government’s response? Carefully worded statements from the Food Safety Authority, vague reassurances, and a steady handwave of “precautionary measures.” But with over 140 prepared meals pulled from the market in connection with a deadly Listeria outbreak linked to Ballymaguire Foods, resulting in at least one death, one wonders: how deep does the problem go?

In Soylent Green, the truth about the food supply was deliberately hidden to protect corporate and state interests. In Ireland, it may not be corpses in the crackers, but the public’s appetite for trust is just as compromised.

Population Pressure and the Quiet Talk of Control

Ireland’s population hit a record 5.4 million this year, fuelled by natural growth and continued immigration, much of it from economically-torn or “climate”-affected regions. While some diversity can enriches culture and economy, however, infrastructure cracks are widening: hospitals bursting, housing lists frozen, classrooms overcrowded. supply lines and resources running short.

Yet any mention of “limits” or “strategic planning” is quickly stamped with the one hit wonder of racist, anti-Semitic, bigot or “xenophobia” labels. Politicians avoid nuance, fearing backlash or campaign ruin. Instead of an honest national conversation, we get press releases and targeted ad campaigns about inclusion, while rents in Dublin reach €2,300/month for a one-bed, and waiting times in A&Es climb to 12+ hours.

In Soylent Green, population is not just a backdrop, it’s the crisis. The state solves it through quiet euthanasia programs. While that’s not Ireland in 2025 we quickly getting there as just this year the State decided that your internal organs are not your own , there’s a disturbing rise in proposals for assisted dying, discussed alongside health spending shortfalls and elder care costs, not to mention the systematic abuse in care homes. We should be wary of how efficiency is sold as compassion.

Immigration, Labour, and the Illusion of Sustainability

Ireland’s immigration policy, both humanitarian and labour-focused, has filled vital workforce opportunities the government claim we Irish don’t want, especially in agriculture, hospitality, and healthcare.

But with over 100,000 asylum applications and economic migrants expected by the end of the year, the question becomes: can we feed, house, and support everyone?

Our food system, paradoxically, apparently relies on importing seasonal workers while recalling contaminated local produce. Mega-traders dominate the landscape, biodiversity suffers, and the soil itself is dying. In a country once known for green fields and family farms, more and more of our “fresh” food comes from corporate-controlled, industrial sources. What’s sustainable about that?

In Soylent Green , the State outsourced survival to a private corporation. In Ireland, we’ve outsourced so much, health care, Communications, Transport, labour, farming, food distribution, ect… that we don’t even know what local “food security” looks like anymore.

Political Corruption: Soft Lies and Hard Consequences

There’s no shortage of scandals in Irish politics: crony contracts during the pandemic in general, Licencing & housing deals benefiting insiders, data leaks, lobbying loopholes. But the real corruption is more subtle, it’s systemic silence.

Where is the national food sovereignty strategy? Where are the meaningful debates on demographic pressure? Where is the climate-resilient housing plan?

Instead, we get photo-ops, committees, and half-measures. Corruption isn’t just about bribes, it’s about abandoning responsibility while pretending otherwise. It’s about using public confusion as policy cover.

Much like the government in Soylent Green, Ireland’s leadership today appears more concerned with managing perception than confronting the root causes of crisis. When your spinach is poisoned, your rent is extortionate, and your vote feels like theatre, the public doesn’t just lose faith, they disconnect.

And in that vacuum of disillusionment, anything can be sold, even the quiet imposition of a foreign, imperial model of governance dressed up as progress.

Conclusion: Are We Already Eating Soylent?

A new study from US-based food testing company Clear Labs has discovered, from a sample of 258 burgers, two cases of meat in vegetarian products, three burgers with rat DNA and one case of human DNA.

Soylent Green ends with a scream: “Soylent Green is people!” It’s not just a twist, it’s a metaphor for a society that cannibalizes itself in the name of progress. Ireland is on that fast track. We are quickly approaching the population levels of famine time and we are starting to see to very issues that cause that… Global Imperialism.

Food recalls are just the surface. Behind them lie deeper rot: Incompetent leadership, Corrupted Managers, unsustainable systems, neglected public concerns, and political theatre passing as governance. The Irish people deserve better, before what’s on the plate becomes the least of our worries.

WakeUpéiiRe has received unconfirmed (yet credible) reports from trusted civil service insiders that government officials in the department of agriculture were aware of widespread contamination in the national food supply as early as January 2025.

Despite this knowledge, no public warnings were issued, no recalls initiated, and no transparent action taken for months. It wasn’t until members of our most vulnerable generations, our parents and grandparents, began falling gravely ill, with some tragically dying from foodborne infections, that authorities were forced to respond.

If these allegations are true, we are not simply facing a food safety scandal. We are staring into the face of institutional negligence on every level of government from health & education to food and job security, one that chose silence over safeguarding.

This is not just a bureaucratic failure. It is a betrayal of public trust at the highest level. And it demands urgent action from the “Taxpayers”.

Our elders, our children, and our culture are not collateral damage.
They are the living heart of our communities, the roots, the future, and the soul of this republic.

If our government is knowingly encouraging us to eat, inject, or consume toxins under the guise of safety, progress, or public good, then this is not mismanagement, it is betrayal. And betrayal demands consequences, real, visible, and grave.

We must now ask the unthinkable:

Are the Irish people being quietly culled?
Not just with violence in the streets, but through a clean, clinical, systematic erasure, masked by Gaslighting PR campaigns, data manipulation, and carefully staged “concern.” like Dublin Riots or Attacks on non-nationals…

Are we witnessing the slow, silent dismantling of We the People of this Republic, not with guns and open violence, but through miseducation, engineered scarcity, and the calculated use of policy, Lawfare and poisons?

If so, then history is not just repeating, it is rhyming with a darker, more deceptive tune.

Once again, we are facing the quiet hand of imperialism, not in red coats this time, but in navy suits and sanitized language, seeking to infiltrate, weaken, and erase the spirit of éiRe from within.

People like Baby Papa-don are not representatives of India, or its people nor are they representatives of the People of éiRe, they are imperial agents, heirs of a far-flung colony still tethered to the interests of the Crown and its legacy of domination today, the WEF and other private originations.

Written By Tyler Durden

Suggested Movies:

Soylent Green ( 1973)

 Loosely based on the 1966 science fiction novel Make Room! Make Room! by Harry Harrison, it combines both police procedural and science fiction genres: the investigation into the murder of a wealthy businessman; and a dystopian future of dying oceans and year-round humidity due to the greenhouse effect, resulting in suffering from pollution, poverty, overpopulation, euthanasia and depleted resources.

Metropolis (1927)

Metropolis, 1927, Silent Movie,

In a futuristic city sharply divided between the working class and the city planners, the son of the city’s mastermind falls in love with a working class prophet who predicts the coming of a saviours to mediate their differences.

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Ireland in 2025: When the Green Isn’t Organic – It’s A Soylent Wake-Up Call

Ireland in 2025: When the Green Isn’t Organic – It’s A Soylent Wake-Up Call

In the past three months, Ireland has seen a disturbing spike in food recalls. From Listeria-contaminated spinach and herbs sold across Dunnes, SuperValu, and Aldi, to pork sausages pulled from shelves over Salmonella fears, Irish consumers are being told, again, to check their fridges for the state’s mistakes.

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