Most Americans Have No Idea How Close They are to Poverty, Starvation, and Death – Vaccine Impact

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by Brian Shilhavy

Editor, Health Impact News

There are few people left alive today that remember the last time a severe drought that destroyed crops combined with a collapse of the financial system left millions of Americans hungry and homeless, back in the 1930s.

Most of us alive today were taught in school that in the 1930s the nation suffered during “The Great Depression” as well as “The Dust Bowl.”

And whether or not these were natural or man-made catastrophes back then is really not all that important when we consider that we are facing such potential dire circumstances for the immediate future, or even worse, here in 2021.

Corn and wheat crops in the U.S. are in big trouble right now as we approach the end of July.

The Bismark Tribune reported today:

Drought is withering crops on both sides of the U.S.-Canadian border, prompting farmers to take the rare measure of baling up their wheat and barley stems to sell as hay.

The bales are providing much-needed forage for livestock operators struggling against a lack of pasture and soaring feed costs, and also signal smaller grain harvests that could keep crop prices high in the months to come. Temperatures are expected to soar this week in the Great Plains, further threatening parched farm fields.

The dry conditions highlight how extreme weather is affecting agriculture and stoking higher prices that have fueled food-inflation concerns. Desperate farmers in both countries have requested emergency help from their governments, and some ranchers are selling off portions of their herds because of the dearth of feed.

In North Dakota, where the entire state is in a drought, hay crops are only 10% to 25% of normal while cattle ranchers are already reducing herds by boosting animal sales at auction, Jeff Schafer, president of the North Dakota Stockmen’s Association, said during a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration webinar.

“Producers have chosen to cut small grain fields for hay versus harvesting them for grain as there just isn’t enough forage to bale,” Schafer said. Grains that should be “armpit high” are “boot-high at best and typically you can see a gopher run in front of your cutter bar,” he said. Many fields didn’t turn green, so cows were on brown grass in June. (Source.)

Prices of corn, soy and canola are all going up right now, due to the fear that this year’s harvest will be greatly affected by drought conditions across the U.S.

(Bloomberg) — Corn in Chicago touched the highest price in more than two weeks as hot and dry fields in the northern U.S. dims harvest prospects for the growing crops.

Soybeans and both soft and hard red winter wheat also gained while spring wheat in Minneapolis snapped a seven-session rally after the futures neared the highest level since 2012.

This week’s largely arid conditions in the Upper Midwest are stoking concerns about crop health. At the same time, Brazil is seeing slow corn harvests due to weather-related planting delays.

Corn gained as much as 3.4% to reach $5.7075, the highest since July 2. The futures have fallen 23% since early May, when prices reached an eight-year high amid robust demand and supply worries. Soft red winter wheat touched the priciest level in two months.

Most-active futures for spring wheat fell as much as 1.6% to $9.09 a bushel. Prices have climbed 53% this year through the close on Tuesday.

“Contracts bucked the overall trend, sliding nearly 1% lower on some technical selling and profit-taking,” Jacqueline Holland, an analyst at Farm Futures, wrote in a note.

Spring wheat ratings further collapsed last week amid drought, according to U.S. Department of Agriculture data released on Monday. While the variety used to make pizza dough and bagels only accounts for a fraction of world grain output, the deterioration highlights weather worries across the globe that are driving a rebound in crop prices.

Soybeans, soy oil, soy meal and canola all gained on Tuesday. (Source.)

Gloomy outlooks on this year’s harvest are not the main reason for concern, however, as we have seen poor weather patterns like this in the past, and few starved or went homeless.

The larger area of concern is that our entire agricultural system rests in the hands of just a few international companies, and the Globalists who brought us the COVID-19 Plandemic last year that is making a repeat performance this year, could decide to add global hunger and starvation to this show, and few Americans are prepared for empty grocery store shelves for any length of time.

They will look to their government representatives for help, and that government “help” could very well be their next plan to get 70% of the population injected with the COVID-19 shots, making it a requirement to receive any government food aid.

This is not a topic you want to be ignorant about, and if you have not read our previous article on this topic earlier this month that exposed just who these Globalists are that now control the world’s food supplies, please read that first before reading the rest of this article.

The Move Towards More Consolidation of the World Food System – Control the Food, Control the Masses…

Read full story here: Most Americans Have No Idea How Close They are to Poverty, Starvation, and Death – Vaccine Impact


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