Posted on 10/04/2020 3:50:36 PM PDT by Roman_War_Criminal
The head of the UN World Food Program repeatedly warned us that we would soon be facing famines of biblical proportions, and his predictions are now starting to become a reality. We have already seen food riots in some parts of Africa, and it isnt too much of a surprise that certain portions of Asia are really hurting right now. But I have to admit that I was kind of shocked when I came across an article about the hunger crisis that has erupted in Latin America.
According to Bloomberg, a resurgence of poverty is bringing a vicious wave of hunger in a region that was supposed to have mostly eradicated that kind of malnutrition decades ago. We are being told that food shortages are becoming acute from Mexico City all the way down to the southern tip of South America, and those that are the poorest are being hit the hardest.
Let me ask you a question.
What would you do if you didnt have any food to feed your family?
Fortunately, for the vast majority of my readers that is just a hypothetical question. But for many families in Latin America, the unthinkable is now actually happening
He couldnt feed his family. Matilde Alonso knew it was true but couldnt believe it. The pandemic had just hit Guatemala in full force and Alonso, a 34-year-old construction worker, was suddenly jobless.
He sat up all alone till late that night, his mind racing, and fought back tears. He had six mouths to feed, no income and no hope of receiving anything beyond the most meager of crisis-support checks some $130 from the cash-strapped government.
I once had a friend that is a hardcore prepper tell me that his worst nightmare would be for his daughter to tell him that she was hungry and he didnt have anything to give her.
Many of us cant even imagine being in Matilde Alonsos shoes. Sadly, this is going to be happening to even more families soon, because the UN World Food Program is projecting that the number of people facing severe food insecurity in Latin American and Caribbean nations will rise by a whopping 270 percent in the months ahead.
Thankfully, for the moment the United States is in far better shape. But there have been serious shortages of certain items throughout this pandemic, and many grocery stores have had a very difficult time trying to keep their shelves full.
For example, during my most recent trip to my local grocery store I noticed more empty shelves than I had ever seen before, and that greatly alarmed me.
And now we are being told that grocery stores all over the country are attempting to stockpile goods in an attempt to avoid shortages during a second wave of coronavirus
Grocery stores across the United States are stocking up on products to avoid shortages during a second wave of coronavirus.
Household products including paper towels and Clorox wipes have been difficult to find at times during the pandemic, and if grocery stores arent stocked up and prepared for second wave this winter, runs on products and shortages could happen again.
hen even CNN starts admitting that more shortages are coming, that is a sign that it is very late in the game.
And the Wall Street Journal is reporting that some chains are actually putting together pandemic pallets in anticipation of more shortages
According to the Wall Street Journal, Associated Food Stores has recently started building pandemic pallets to ensure cleaning and sanitizing products are readily available in its warehouses to prepare for high demand through the end of the year.
We will never again operate our business as unprepared for something like this, Darin Peirce, vice president of retail operations for the cooperative of more than 400 stores told the outlet. If grocery stores sense something is coming and are preparing for another wave of this scamdemic, it may be something worth taking note of.
Most of these grocery chains believe that another wave of COVID-19 is the worst case scenario that they could possibly be facing. Sadly, that isnt even close to the truth.
We have entered a time when global food supplies are going to become increasingly stressed, and it is going to be absolutely critical to keep U.S. food production at the highest levels possible.
Unfortunately, U.S. farmers have been going bankrupt in staggering numbers during this downturn, and the federal assistance that was supposed to help them survive has mostly gone to large, industrialized farms
Five months into the pandemic, farmers say the federal payments have done little to keep them afloat, as these favor large, industrialized farms over smaller family farms. In fact, initial payments under the Coronavirus Food Assistance Program which provided $16 billion in direct support and $3 billion in purchases revealed an uneven distribution of financial aid.
An NBC News analysis of the first 700,000 payments showed how corporate farms and foreign-owned operations received over $1.2 billion in coronavirus relief or over 20 percent of the money with average payments of almost $95,000. Smaller farms, meanwhile, had average payments of around $300. The figures did not take into account other struggling farmers who are ineligible for assistance.
Reading those numbers greatly frustrated me, because family farms have always been so critical to our success as a nation.
U.S. farm bankruptcies hit an eight-year high last year, and they are on pace to go even higher this year.
This should deeply alarm all of us, because we are going to need as much food production as possible during the years to come.
In 2020, we have just seen one major disaster after another all over the world, and many of these disasters have directly affected global food production. For example, in my previous articles I havent even mentioned the historic flooding that has been going on in China for months that is wiping out crops on a massive scale
Experts from the global financial services group Nomura said that although the flooding is among the worst that China has experienced since 1998, it could still get worse in the weeks to come, with the nation poised to lose $1.7 billion in agricultural production.
However, since the start of the monsoon season, the area of flooded croplands have almost doubled. Nomuras estimates also do not include the potential loss of wheat, corn and other major crops. Therefore, China could be facing a far greater economic loss than current projections.
On my news headlines website, I am going to start posting stories like this on a daily basis so that people can keep up with what is really going on out there.
We really are facing a very serious global food crisis, and the number of people without sufficient food is only going to grow as the months roll along.
For now, most Americans still have plenty of food, and we should be very thankful for that.
But everyone should be able to see that global conditions are rapidly changing, and we should all be using this window of opportunity to prepare, because very, very challenging times are ahead of us.
The price paid for recycling aluminum cans does not indicate any shortage. I am ready to start throwing them in the regular garbage.
I’ve seen the same thing at my local Shop Rite. Certain items available and others aren’t. Happily though there’s seems to be no shortage of Mallomars.
Probably came from China. I don’t buy chicken unless it’s labeled, “hatched, raised and processed in USA”.
Make no mistakes. While Obama couldn’t fundamentally transform America like he wanted to do, the modern day Democrats have gotten election fraud down to a science and if they take the House, Senate and White House next month, goodbye Republic and hello civil war.
You been to Chile lately? Have you?
They’re having riots regularly the likes of Portland and Seattle right now and they are on the verge of a real civil war.
My SHTF home is there and all you have to do is google some news to see the violence.
Perhaps, but if the pro-communist, anti-American Democrats succeed in turning the USA into Venezuela, it's going to be a lot more than hypothetical.
You can believe whatever you want.
The food problem is not going to go away.
That is a very good point.
Seems like sometime in the past couple of decades that inventory became the devil and some accountants decided it was costing their businesses too much to store up products and food.
I live near two major poultry processing plants. I don’t think they can keep up with demand.
The price of chicken has gone up slightly since this “pandemic” started in my area.
The rotisserie went up over $2/chicken.
It's possible. So much does come from China and we sell them rice thanks to Trump's deals with them.
Most chicken, regardless of where it's from, is fast raised for maximum profit and fast chick to chicken to market time.
Normalcy bias is pretty high with this one..
Normalcy bias
Global means nothing. Not going to happen across the entire globe. The US, alone, can produce enough food to feed the planet.
here’s the actual link, and it’s complete clickbait garbage which pretty much just rips off a cnn article (https://www.cnn.com/2020/09/27/business/grocery-stores-stockpiling-pandemic/index.html) about stocking up on paper products and cleaning supplies in case of a panic hoarding during a “second wave” (nothing about food shortages or stores “stocking up” on food):
Marxist socialism and “state capitalism” are one and the same, JFTR.
The junk food aisles are full, there aint no potato shortage
President Camacho : S..t. I know s..t’s bad right now, with all that starving bulls..t, and the dust storms, and we are running out of french fries and burrito coverings. But I got a solution.
South Carolina Representative # 1 : That’s what you said last time, dips..t!
South Carolina Representative # 2 : Yeah, I got a solution, you’re a d.ck! South Carolina, what’s up!
Ive seen the stuff in Chile and its bad. I spend 6 months a yr in Colombia...till now anyway.
We also had problems with milk containers. Sort of silly since they were short of one size but had plenty of other sized containers. Then there’s the ice cream, cheese, yogurt, dry milk, butter, etc. markets that could take up the difference.
I’m still having a hard time getting powdered milk. Haven’t been able to get Clorox wipes or anything Lysol since the first of Feb. No yeast, either. This is commuting distance to Austin where they aren’t lacking in anything.
Agree. Common sense. No money, no kids.
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