The coronavirus is disrupting food supply chains because farmers and laborers cannot work or travel without being vaccinated, transportation delays are causing shortages, and in the United States, for example, many meat processing plants have been forced to close.
Basically, everyone should give into the vaccine mandate or face the consequences. They are masking authoritarianism as utilitarianism. The vaccine has not been mandated at the federal level in the US, yet, but it is apparent that the government plans to make life as difficult as possible for those who do not obey.
Not only are these breaks in the supply chain affecting the availability of food, but also its affordability. Millions who already struggled to support themselves and their families have been struck by economic hardship caused by lockdowns around the globe.
Millions of people had been pushed into extreme poverty this year owing to the pandemic, but the long-term effects will be even worse, as poor nutrition in childhood causes lifelong suffering. Already, one in five children around the world are stunted in their growth by the age of five, and millions more are likely to suffer the same fate if poverty rates soar.
Throughout history, mankind has waged a constant war with starvation. From the time of the first hunter-gatherers, through the early cultivation of crops and all the way to our modern, industrialized farming techniques, we humans have been working to ensure that we can survive the next winter when no crops are growing and animals hide in their burrows. To our ancestors, this was a great challenge, unlike today. For that reason, the idea of being a “prepper” would seem strange, as they all lived a prepping lifestyle.
Most Americans don’t even think about having enough food in a crisis… until it’s too late.
Yet somehow, modern western culture has distanced itself from the reality of needing to grow food. As the number of farmers in our midst keeps dwindling and industrialized farming takes over, fewer and fewer people have any idea of where their food comes from. The idea that the grocery store produces meat and vegetables rather than farmers and ranchers growing it, might make for a good joke, but the ignorance behind it is outright frightening.
The United States is the number one food-producing nation in the world, yet we do it with a very small percentage of our overall population. Farming, fishing, forestry, and related activities account for only 1.8% of the overall workforce. Those people not only produce the food that we eat here at home but much that is exported overseas.
We depend on this small portion of our population, plus the others who work in the foodservice industry, to keep the rest of us fed. The rest of us don’t even bother thinking about it. After all, there’s always food in the grocery store… lots of food. There always has been and there always will be, right?
But what if they can’t? Since coronavirus lockdowns have started, the farmers in this country can’t produce the food needed to feed our population, let alone all the other countries in the world that buy $159 billion in American food products. What will we do Next?
Main drivers of acute food insecurity found all over the continent include:
- Conflict/Insecurity
Examples: Interstate conflicts, internal violence, regional/global instability, or political crises. In many instances, these result in people being displaced as refugees. - Weather extremes
Examples: Droughts and floods - Economic shocks
Macroeconomic examples: Hyperinflation and currency depreciation
Microeconomic examples: Rising food prices, reduced purchasing power - Pests
Examples: Desert locusts, armyworms - Health shocks
Examples: Manufactured disease outbreaks (as COVID-19), which can be worsened by poor quality of water, sanitation, or air - Displacement
A major side-effect of conflict, food insecurity, and weather shocks.
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We’re Not Hearing About It
Should there be actual shortages of food, there would be a need for some sort of food rationing. That would be a function of the USDA (US Department of Agriculture), who would be responsible for putting some sorts of controls in place, ensuring that the food which our farmers are producing would be properly allocated so that everyone’s needs would be met.
What’s scarier than the potential of food shortages in the near future, is that we’re not hearing about it. Nor does it seem that the USDA is hearing anything about it. Nothing is being done to prepare for potential shortages because the people who should be dealing with them don’t have any idea of what is going on. They seem to be kept in the dark and nobody seems to know who is hiding that news.
This means that when food shortages begin to manifest, nobody is going to be ready for it. Government bureaucrats and major producers up and down the line will be caught with a sudden need to do something, but without the time to plan out what should be done, and, as I started to believe lately, without the willingness to do anything.

Can The Food Run Short?
There are places in the world today where food shortages are the norm. I’ve had church pastors from other countries in my home, who have told me about the people they bury, even children because they’ve starved to death. This is a very real problem in a number of different countries. It’s not something made up by non-profit organizations, to try and get your money.
Are we going to run into that problem here in the USA? We could, but we probably won’t. As a country, we produce something like 180 billion tons of food per year. Of that, about a third actually goes to waste, not ending up on anyone’s dining room table.
The reason for this waste is that, as a country, we are very focused on the appearance of our food. That began just after the time of World War II, coinciding with electric refrigerators becoming commonplace. Even with their faults, those early electric refrigerators were so much more efficient than iceboxes, that it made a difference in how our food looked, especially produce. No longer did homemakers have to concern themselves with brown spots on produce; it would be consumed before that happened.
With that being the case, homemakers became more selective in their purchases, passing over imperfect produce, in favor of better-looking specimens. Noticing this, grocers stopped putting less than perfect produce on the shelves, opting to throw it away and make their selection look better. This then worked its way back to the farm, so that now there’s a lot of food which goes from the farm right to the landfill, rather than trucking it to the store.
Please note that there is nothing wrong with all this food that gets thrown away. In most cases, the flaws are superficial, mere cosmetic blemishes. I’m not talking about food that has spoiled, just food that doesn’t look so good.
The quarantines have shown just how many more vegetables Americans eat when meals are prepared for them in restaurants than when they have to cook for themselves.
With so much food that doesn’t ever get eaten, our farms would have to suffer severe shortages, before it became a shortage in the grocery store. The ones who would most likely be affected by such shortages would be our overseas customers, who buy some $160 billion worth of American food per year.
When Food Runs Short
This isn’t to say that it would be impossible for there to be serious food shortages in our country. The amount of food our farmers produce annually is dependent on a lot of separate factors. Should just one of those factors fall short, we might suddenly find ourselves in the position where productivity on the farms is drastically reduced.
There are a number of things I can think of, offhand, which could bring that about, ranging from severe weather to government regulation. Some of these regulations are being pushed for in Washington, without anyone taking into account the ultimate effect of those regulations.
As the food supply begins to run short, we already see it as a rise in prices at the store. The only effect that would have on most of us is a more costly grocery bill. We pay it and complain, tightening our belts elsewhere in our budgets, so that we could buy the same as we’ve always done.
But there would be those who couldn’t afford to spend more on their grocery bills; those people would suffer. Oh, they wouldn’t starve, but they would need to change their eating habits so that they didn’t. More than anything, rather than buying fresh, they would have to settle for less favorable choices, perhaps even eating the food that is currently being thrown away.
It Could All Stop Tomorrow
While it would take a lot to completely shut down our farms or lower the amount they produce to levels where we would see shortages, there is one thing that could shut down food supplies in a day. That’s any sort of damage to our nation’s trucking industry.
The food production and foodservice industries depend on trucking, more so than many other industries. Without our nation’s trucking industry taking food from the farm to the various processing facilities and then from those to the stores, the supermarket shelves would empty in a day.
In only a few days, with only one component of our economy missing, we could be without medication, food, gasoline, and sanitation. We would be unable to travel great distances easily, as airports would close.
That happened last year in Wyoming. Severe winter weather has made the roads all but impassible, with over 200 miles of Interstate 80 closed down. That made it difficult for truckers to make their deliveries, which in turn has led to empty shelves in the stores. Should this situation last for more than a few days, things could get serious for the inhabitants of that state.
The same could happen nationwide, should the electrical grid go down or some sort of nationwide quarantine be put in place due to pandemics. It wouldn’t matter what farmers could produce then, as it would only be available to people living locally. Those who lived in states where there wasn’t any food grown or even in cities that were far from the farms and processing plants, had better have their pantries stocked, or they’ll find themselves on very short rations.
As horrible as death by COVID-19 must be, it is surely far worse to starve to death slowly over a period of many weeks and months. Yet, in our desire to prevent millions of COVID-19 deaths, we may have sentenced tens of millions of people to starve to death. Perhaps more than 100 million. That is almost impossible to grasp. And those that won’t die because of the COVID jabs or the disease itself, will most likely die of starvation. That’s the plan anyway…this is an ongoing tragedy that will become much more tragic.
Also, I highly recommend this book to everyone. 300 pages, color, paperback. The Lost Book of Remedies is helping Americans achieve medical self-sufficiency even in the darkest times using the time-tested methods of our grandparents without spending lots of money on toxic drugs and without side effects. A great asset when doctors and hospitals won’t be available anymore. You may not be Claude Davis, but you can make use of his procedures and techniques to increase your chances of survival!

A breakthrough experiment from Colorado, USA with 45 volunteers has proven that by eating this prickly flower you can completely kill food cravings! It is 5x more effective than exercise….and 6x more effective than any diet! And guess what? They found its 3x MORE effective than gastric bypass surgery at eliminating cravings for sugar and starchy foods!==> Prickly Flower Eliminates Food Cravings & Burns Away Fat

As we enter the Fourth Turning it has become clear, America has fallen. We weren’t conquered by a foreign country; we were hoisted on our own petard. We now live inside the matrix that Corporate America has created. We eat the poisoned food they grow; we watch the propaganda they produce, use their fake currency and pharmaceuticals and send our children to the indoctrination centers they call schools. The billionaire “captains of industry” own our elected officials and our judges and will dictate the direction and final conclusion of this experiment known as the American Republic. The American Holodomor is just getting started, the Globalist/Communist Bankers and corrupt elected officials are responsible. There is no freedom and there is no justice, we are now spectators at our own funeral.
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The government media machine is constantly blaming the empty shelves/supply chain problems on the “un-vaccinated” as they call them. Those that have not gotten theses shots will be the scape goats for all the problems we see.
My formerly very nice neighbors have already threatened to kill me because I have not gotten the shots.
As the situation with the supply chain gets worse I expect the ones that have not gotten the shots will be targeted by those that have.
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Suddenly, after a grand scamdemic ends, a supply chain break occurs. Why? and Why NOW?? https://www.rt.com/usa/537637-supply-chain-covid-unvaccinated-biden/
Part 2 of multiphasic depopulation plan: https://www.rt.com/op-ed/537664-supply-chains-shortage-crisis/
THERE ARE NO REAL SHORTAGES. End the Madness, end the Rothschild Masonic Plan for DEPOPULATION! Before it ends YOU!
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