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Flushing the Dead: Globalists Distain for Human Dignity Deepens as Industrial Funerals Become Reality

Dissolving the dead: Britain inches closer to approving water cremation as globalist disdain for human dignity deepens.


The proposed legalisation of 'water cremation' in Britain – a process that liquefies human remains and sends them down the drain – marks yet another chilling step by globalist institutions toward a future where even death is stripped of meaning and respect.


The UK’s Law Commission has launched a consultation that could legalise so-called "boil in a bag" funerals, officially termed alkaline hydrolysis or 'water cremation' the process involves liquifying dead bodies in huge vats and flushing them down the public drain.


This is being promoted as a more sustainable alternative to traditional burial methods, and involves dissolving corpses in a heated alkaline solution and flushing the resulting liquid into the public sewage system. Up until now it has been illegal in the UK but is soon to get governmental approval as part of the race towards Net Zero. The process has already been rolled out in parts of the US, Canada, South Africa, and even Ireland.


The mechanics of water cremation sound more like a scene from a dystopian novel than a compassionate farewell to a loved one. The body is placed into an industrial steel vat that fills with water and alkaline chemicals, then heated to around 160°C for approximately 90 minutes. The process dissolves the body into a 'sterile brown fluid', described by some as resembling "tea" and by others, more disturbingly, as smelling like "steamed clams". The remains of your loved-one is termed "effluent" and is unceremoniously drained into the sewage system.

The method has been described as 'industrial' and other than the globalist nobody has called for it. Its backers claim environmental benefits, such as reduced carbon emissions and soil impact, and industry players like Co-op Funeralcare hail it as an “affordable, sustainable” choice. But critics argue the practice is ghoulish, undignified, and deeply anti-human – reducing what was once a sacred rite into a mechanised disposal process indistinguishable from waste management. They look upon humans as a commodity, that can be disposed of by industrial means.

Religious leaders, cultural groups, and many ordinary poeple see it as a desecration of the dead, with one UK wastewater specialist noting that the biggest obstacle to adoption is simply public disgust saying “People don’t like the idea of their loved ones being mixed in with poo.”


Nevertheless, the method continues to spread under the guise of “choice” and “sustainability” – buzzwords used time and again to mask the erosion of fundamental values. Water cremation, first patented in 1888, was originally reserved for disposing of animal carcasses and medical cadavers. Its rebranding as a “respectful alternative” for the public is both cynical and telling.


Supporters estimate water cremation will cost the same as traditional methods – ranging from £1,200 to £4,000 – depending on location and provider. But the price is not what’s at stake. The real cost is cultural and spiritual. By normalising the literal liquefaction of the dead, globalists are sending an ominous message: that human life, and death, are nothing more than chemical processes to be streamlined and minimised.


In an era when globalist technocrats increasingly rewrite the rules of life – from birth to death – the push for water cremation in the UK is less about ecology and more about ideology. It is a utilitarian worldview that views people as units to be processed, rather than souls to be mourned. And in this view, the ultimate efficiency is achieved when even death itself can be drained away without a trace.


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