Saturday, November 5, 2022

Shortages Coming: Food rations, Diesel Shortage, Fuel Shortages, Damaged Supply Chain

Fighting Over Food Rations: Diesel Fuel Shortage Will Decimate An Already Damaged Supply Chain - Expert Warns 'Next Lines Not At Gas Stations, Next Lines At Grocery Stores'
Susan Duclos



With politics dominating the news due to the fact that the stakes of the midterm elections on November 8th are quite high, and just three days until tens of millions of Americans head to the polls to vote, there are other stories being buried under the flurry of last minute pitches as to who should be in control of congress for the Biden regime's next two years occupying the White House.

One of these heartbreaking stories are the amount of Americans about to become homeless, as NBC News reports that evictions are piling up all across the U.S. as government assistance has come to an end, and the eviction moratorium ended some time ago. 

The heartbreak of this is not just how massive inflation, along with millions put out of work during the lockdowns as state leaders deemed some businesses essential and others "non-essential" forcing them to close, has drained bank accounts, but also the fact that the U.S.is in a recession (although the media, on behalf of the Biden regime, continues to claim it isn't) and literally cannot afford to continue to rental assistance this long after the end of the "pandemic."


Another major news story being buried beneath politics and the midterm elections, one that will effect every single person in America in one way or another, is America is suffering a diesel fuel shortage.

The equation is simple. Semi-Trucks keeps the supply chain moving. Semi-Trucks run off of diesel fuel. Run out of diesel fuel and your grocery stores can no longer restock, your retail stores as well. 

We have all seen the infographic showing America stops running if the trucks stop running, but as a reminder, it is shown below.


Now, about that shortage.

Mansfield Energy issued the alert Friday stating there was a developing diesel fuel shortage in the southeastern region of the United States. The company speculated that the shortage could be generated from "poor pipeline shipping economies" and a historically low supply of diesel reserves.

"Poor pipeline shipping economics and historically low diesel inventories are combining to cause shortages in various markets throughout the Southeast," the company said. "These have been occurring sporadically, with areas like Tennessee seeing particularly acute challenges."










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