The big food security question... Where are we headed?!

The following website copy ties both tiles together into a broader narrative around cost of living, food security and the future of regional Australia while keeping Bob’s trademark tone and urgency.
For decades, Bob Katter has warned that Australia is becoming dangerously disconnected from the industries and communities that once made this country strong.
While Australians are now paying some of the highest food prices in the world, farmers continue to battle rising costs, supermarket monopolies and government policies that make it harder to produce food locally. At the same time, regional industrial centres like Mount Isa — once considered the backbone of Queensland’s economy, are facing uncertainty despite sitting on some of the world’s most valuable mineral deposits.
Bob Katter says these issues are deeply connected.
“A country that cannot feed itself affordably and cannot protect its industrial base is a country walking into very dangerous territory,” Mr Katter said.
For years, Mr Katter has advocated for stronger protections for Australian farmers, regional manufacturing, food processing, mining and energy production — arguing that Australia must return to backing the industries that built the nation.
The Mount Isa region alone contains hundreds of billions of dollars worth of strategic minerals critical to Australia and its allies, yet communities across the North continue to fight for infrastructure, affordable energy and long-term investment certainty.
At the same time, Australian families are feeling the pressure at the checkout like never before.
“We are one of the most resource-rich nations on Earth, yet ordinary Australians are paying extraordinary prices for basic necessities,” Mr Katter said.
“These are not isolated problems. When you weaken agriculture, mining, manufacturing and regional towns, you weaken Australia itself.”
Mr Katter said the future of Australia depended on rebuilding confidence in regional communities and ensuring national policy once again prioritised production, self-sufficiency and economic independence.
“Country Australia built this nation. If we allow these communities and industries to collapse, then we are tearing out the foundations of the country itself.”








