Tuesday, July 19, 2022

'A Harbinger Of Things To Come'

'A Harbinger Of Larger Things To Come': The Hits Against The Food Supply Chain Are Coming From Every Direction - When The Food Is Gone Rioting Begins


 Susan Duclos



While the national media is busy playing politics, protecting Joe Biden, screaming the world is ending because of climate change, and basically performing activism and the hell with actual journalism, America is heading in a direction that leads to hunger and fighting for survival. 

Before moving on to the multitude of issues affecting the supply chain here in the U.S., I would like to point to what is described by Forbes as a "harbinger of larger things to come around the rest of the world in the months and years ahead."

Sri Lanka: The first paragraph in a piece from July 10, 2022, titled "Rising Social Unrest Over Energy, Food Shortages Threatens Global Stability," pretty much says it all.


The nation of Sri Lanka has an almost perfect ESG rating of 98.1 on a scale of 100, according to WorldEconomics.com. But the government which had forced the nation to achieve that virtue-signaling target in recent years collapsed over the weekend because it led the country into self-declared bankruptcy, leaving it unable to purchase adequate supplies of fuel and feed its population. Thousands of angry Sri Lankans stormed the presidential residence on Saturday, forcing President Gotabaya Rajapaksa to step down and reportedly flee the country.

Next I point readers to the portions put in bold and underlined above. 

Collapsed over the weekend. That ladies and gentlemen is how fast a nation, even one with such a high sustainability rating, can fall. 

When the food is gone, the rioting begins. 

Many Americans still believe that "it can't happen to or in America," and that is arrogance, hubris, and a massive failure on the part of the MSM to "inform" the public of how fast it can happen and to give them adequate warnings to prepare for the possibility, which is looking more likely with each new report of events that affect the food supply in America


Gas prices, a lack of fertilizer, food prices, and increasingly empty shelves, are the result of many factors, including trucker shortages, war, mysterious fires and explosions of food plants across America, and as Stefan Stanford recently pointed out, an upcoming strike by those that run our trains, but when a family is hungry, they truly aren't thinking of "why, just "how" are they going to feed themselves and their families.




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