Posted on 01/28/2023 12:38:04 PM PST by Roman_War_Criminal
The United States has had a strange run of bad luck when it comes to dozens of food processing plants suspiciously catching fire over the past few years. In 2022, we had several meat packing plants suffer fires that brought production to a halt.
Remarkably, no one was present at the time of most of the fires. The Eco Health Alliance whistleblower, a bioterrorism expert, military veteran, and scientist Dr. Andrew Huff has a possible explanation for the food supply fires.
Huff has access to government information about simulating a food supply attack. The information comes from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s Food and Agriculture Sector Criticality Assessment Tool (FASCAT). This also includes which places are particularly at risk.
According to Huff, who authorities have harassed due to the nature of his work since 2019, the U.S. government coordinated the attacks on the food facilities. But, in addition, something remarkable happened: the hard disk with the FASCAT data disappeared.
Since then, there have been about 200 food factory attacks around the world, most of them in the U.S., he explained. There is no major interest in why supplies are being hampered because the media shows little interest in the problem.
The baby formula shortage of last year gained national attention because it was a life-and-death issue. Abbott Nutrition recalled its popular Similac powder and two lines of specialized formula, shutting down one of its plants due to bacterial contamination. This key event triggered a cascade of shortages as people scrambled to buy similar baby formula products.
Parents could only buy two to four containers of formula at a time, depending on the store and those rules. That lasts a family about a week, a week and a half. Some parents were not able to substitute certain brands, namely those in need of hypoallergenic formulas.
When we had to import a large quantity of baby formula from Europe, I wondered what has happened to our nation. America has long been the source of basic consumer goods. We have been a net exporter of gains for nearly 200 years.
During most of last year, my local Kroger’s had a difficult time stacking the shelves with canned cat food. I was never able to find out why cat food was in low supply. It’s made of low-grade meat, so there should be no supply issues.
We don’t even have proper management of items that would be considered essential for daily life. Most of the fillers for drugs are made in other nations. The basic transistors that go into cars, computers, and smartphones are made in Asia. With 90% of all high-end chips being made in Taiwan, we would be in a huge pickle if China invaded the island.
I’ve been on this earth for 57 years. I recall more times that there was an overabundance of food rather than there were times of shortage. In the 1980s, we had such a huge surplus of corn, we didn’t know what to do with it. Because we didn’t have enough room in silos, farmers had massive piles of corn on the ground.
During the past decade, we have not had any years of surplus. The years have been either too wet or too dry. If the U.S. has a good year for corn production, China or Brazil will have a bad year.
I think the reason why our supply chains are breaking down is because of the moral decline of America. We have turned our back on God, and he has lifted his hand of protection from our nation. Since most supply chains will suffer a complete meltdown during the tribulation, the current problems may be an indication of what is headed our way.
“And when he had opened the third seal, I heard the third beast say, Come and see. And I beheld, and lo a black horse; and he that sat on him had a pair of balances in his hand. And I heard a voice in the midst of the four beasts say, A measure of wheat for a penny, and three measures of barley for a penny; and see thou hurt not the oil and the wine” (Rev 6:5-6).
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Maranatha!
And now a fire at an egg farm in Connecticut. 🤔
The “problem” is that we switched over the JIT (just in time). The entire supply chain went from “make as much as possible, store it strategically in multiple layers, to eventually get it on the shelves” to “guess what will be needed, make as needed, and get it there 5 minutes before the buyer shows up”. Which is wonderful for the bottom line, way less warehousing, way less spoilage, way less wasted space. But it kills all elasticity. We used to have these warehouses full of just in case supplies so when the supply chain got messed with consumers mostly didn’t notice. JIT got rid of all that. And then we started shutting things down in 2020, and the supply chain is a mess ever since. Slowly but surely it’s getting back to normal as we’re finally not doing “focused shipping” (the TP run really messed everything up). But we won’t be fully over it for at least another year.
Bkmk
don’t forget they destroyed the USDA commodity supply that helped many poor people, butter, honey, peanut butter, sugar, flour etc. by giving it to anybody but citizens in the US.
And there was the Freeport LNG terminal explosion in Texas last summer before the NORDSTREAM pipeline explosion in Europe. Coincidence?
" Remarkably, no one was present at the time of most of the fires.
The Eco Health Alliance whistleblower, a bioterrorism expert, military veteran, and scientist Dr. Andrew Huff has a possible explanation for the food supply fires."
"Huff has access to government information about simulating a food supply attack.
The information comes from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s Food and Agriculture Sector Criticality Assessment Tool (FASCAT).
This also includes which places are particularly at risk."
"According to Huff, who authorities have harassed due to the nature of his work since 2019, the U.S. government coordinated the attacks on the food facilities.
But, in addition, something remarkable happened: the hard disk with the FASCAT data disappeared."
"Since then, there have been about 200 food factory attacks around the world, most of them in the U.S., he explained.
There is no major interest in why supplies are being hampered because the media shows little interest in the problem."
The democrats stole the last presidential election and have getting away with stealing senate and house elections for years. They are getting away with mass murder with the chinese virus illegal shutdown too.
Many of us old timer “gloom and doomer” and “conspiracy theory” types have been complaining about JIT for decades.
The key is for each household to have its own large inventory—at least of non-perishable goods—as long as corporate America refuses to do so.
From a business perspective JIT makes a ton of sense. No more warehouses, no more backroom, reduced spoilage, it’s completely awesome. All the way up until it isn’t.
Of course the reality is all these supply chain problems of the last 3 years have at most mildly inconvenienced me. Couple mild issues, but really nothing serious.
I have a MBA background and JIT has always been controversial—weighing short term gain against long term risk.
The problem is that there is no “insurance” you can get that will miraculously resupply inventory if the supply chain has issues.
What corporations did was they rewarded senior managers (with bonuses and stock options) who used short term decision-making.
They did not have to do that—there are many ways to give executives incentives for long term planning.
We've lost the strategic value of being able to make things here. There is an incalculable value in that.
When I worked for Motorola in the 80s and 90s, we did JIT. Unbelievably stressful when 1 shipment is missed.
I CANNOT IMAGINE anything in the food supply being JIT operated. Foolish.
Been prepping, especially since 2008
I said 10 years ago, wait until they figure out how cheap and effective fire is, guess they figured it out.
It’s gonna get worse, much worse.
I think this charge has to be a little more specific - certain Communist fellow travelers who came in with the Clinton and Obama Administrations and can’t be pried out of their positions with crowbars believe they are advancing the Revolution by encouraging eco-terrorists to attack these facilities. These enemy agents should be identified, prosecuted, convicted, and hanged as traitors to the Republic.
Correct.
The savings from reducing non performing inventory ie stuff lying in the warehouse or in store longer than 3 months is huge.
But i saw Proctor and gamble, reckitt benckiser etc move away from that, partially, way back in 2016. They moved further into warehousing due to the covid disruption
I never heard of it being controversial. I know it’s one of the keys to WalMart’s low prices. I think it actually took a lot of long term planning to switch over to JIT. There’s a lot of redesign of stores, changing your entire supply chain.
To me all things have positives and negatives. JIT has the positives of more of the store being actual store, less storage overhead, and less shrinkage. But it has the negative of lack of elasticity. Warehouse style is great for elasticity, but you’ve got all that over head. Like so many business decisions, pick your poison.
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