Posted on 05/23/2022 3:45:46 PM PDT by Roman_War_Criminal
We’re seeing some strange things in modern society and all signs point to the fact that famine is coming. Within the US, drought on the plains is making is so that winter wheat can’t grow while up in North Dakota there’s so much water that farmers’ fields are too waterlogged for anybody to do any planting. I have my suspicions.
American farmers that are able to get out into the field are having a hard time finding critical components they need to their machinery.
Two children were just hospitalized due to a lack of infant formula within America. When have you ever heard of that happening before?
We’ve witnessed a lot of talk about smallpox pandemics over the course of the past two years, Germany is now gearing up for another wonderful “simulation” wargaming a pox pandemic originating from leopards, and now, monkeypox is popping up throughout the world. As of this writing, there are 9 cases in the UK, possibly 21 in Portugal, 23 suspected in Spain, 13 suspected in Canada, and 1 in the United States. The initial reports all stated that this was from an infected man flying back from Nigeria on a commercial plane.
Monkeypox isn’t something I’m terribly concerned about as of yet. I am having a hard time finding the R0 of monkeypox (the number of new people infected on average from a single case) It’s just something I’m keeping my eyes on. What I am concerned about is the public health response.
(Excerpt) Read more at theorganicprepper.com ...
I’ve changed out the rotors and calipers once. It’s a stake bed and the bolts are hard to get off even with pneumatic tools. I think the mechanics over tighten the tire and caliper bolts with heavy hammers. You can’t even get a breaker bar into the wheel well . It ain’t no two hours for me unless everything comes off and too often they don’t.
Completely. How do you think the food gets to the slums in Philly? The only stores in Philly’s bad neighborhoods are bodegas.
Another trend I’ve noticed is fresh immigrants in the supermarkets. You can tell them because there is usually a man and a kid, wondering around without a cart, but they have backpacks on. The backpacks are heavy, and they are only buying a couple things they carry in their hands. The suburban markets are not set up for “loss”, so the checkout kid just lets them go through without a word. I’ll bet they have an enabler out in the parking lot taking them on a circuit.
The canned chicken from walmart went from 1.66 for a 12.5oz can oz can to 2.94 a can!
Glad I got in at 1.66. This chicken has done better than silver...lol
I stockpiled seeds earlier in the month just as a precaution.
... in WW2 the federales confiscated food stores from rural people...
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I once asked my mother how people could allow Roosevelt to force farmers to destroy food. She said: “At least they had food.”
Ds always push the divide between urban and rural (or any 2 groups) The small successful farmers in the USSR were called kulak and anything they put aside for themselves was labeled *hoarding*.
SSDD
...not sure about the ghee...
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It should be like oil: unopened, cool, dark storage and it should be good for 10 years or more.
I’ve tested canned Red Feather butter after 10 years and it had the faintest tang of cultured (not spoiled) butter. Even a bit more pronounced, it would have been acceptable.
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