Food Shortages Guaranteed Under Biden Regime

Shit is getting real, folks.

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In the United States, the local farmers, it seems, are being squeezed out of business, or paid not to grow food, while Big Agriculture is more concerned with exporting its supplies than keeping domestic food stocks safe and affordable.

In an effort to fight two wars at the same time – against a pandemic as well as purported climate change – the Biden administration risks putting the United States on a crash course with food shortages and soaring prices as early as this year.

Sealed up inside of his White House fortress, surrounded by a ring of steel and thousands of National Guardsmen, U.S. President Joe Biden has been busy signing off on a raft of executive orders without the nuisance of democratic debate and congressional prattling.

One of those presidential actions envisions the conservation of 30 percent of the nation’s lands and waters over the next decade. Where will all of that protected land come from? Perhaps from Bill Gates, who now owns the deed to most of the farmland in the nation? Doubtful.

The answer is from small, independent farmers, whose agricultural activities, the Democrats say, are responsible for 10 percent of the manmade greenhouse emissions purportedly frying up the planet.

While occupying the previously unknown ‘Office of the President-Elect’, the Democratic leader said he would pay U.S. farmers to “put their land in conservation” and live without their ‘cash crops.’ How much the tillers of the soil will receive has not been disclosed, nor if this program will be enforced upon farmers against their will.

Another reason that the future does not bode well for American farming is that Biden’s nominee for Agricultural Secretary is none other than Tom Vilsack, who also served as the USDA chief in the Obama administration. Biden said Vilsack will help American agriculture become “the first in the world to achieve net-zero [greenhouse] emissions.”

But is anyone considering what will happen if or when America achieves net-zero food production at a time when the rest of the world is hoarding limited supplies? Equally concerning will be the quality of the food being produced.

Under Obama, Vilsack happily rammed through a number of delectable Dr. Frankenstein technologies, like cloned-farm animals, lab-grown meat and more new genetically modified organisms (GMOs), many from Monsanto. So while there will probably be something to eat in Biden’s new America, it might be a stretch to actually call it ‘food.’ Indeed, for those Americans who prefer a bounty of farm-fresh, organic produce as opposed to some artificial, 3D meat knockoff, the nightmare has just begun.

A Brave New Foodless Future?

Paradoxically, at a time when the United States finds itself smack in the middle of a pandemic, which has caused supply chains to be stretched to the breaking point, it is not saving for a ‘rainy day,’ but rather exporting its farm products like there’s no tomorrow. Consider the corn exports just to China alone, below.

 

And when it is not buying regular corn supplies, China is buying up massive amounts of U.S. ethanol, the corn-based biofuel. The Asian economic powerhouse has bought “roughly 200 million gallons” of ethanol for the first half of 2021, matching its previous record for annual imports of the corn-based biofuel, Archer Daniels Midland Co Chief Financial Officer Ray Young told Reuters.

At the same time, America’s second leading cash crop, soybean, which is used in many products as well as for livestock, has also experienced something of a rout that looks set to become increasingly worse as the year progresses.

“The scramble for beans comes as record U.S. soybean exports and an historically large domestic crush whittled down supplies and sent prices to the highest since 2014,” the Reuters article continued. “Crop concerns in South America due to dry weather have further stoked worries over supplies and global food security during the coronavirus pandemic.”

The National Oilseed Processors Association (NOPA), which represents 95 percent of the U.S.-based industry, said the 2020 crush was the largest ever, “helped by demand for diesel biofuel and unusually weak production in top soymeal producer Argentina.” Such a rapid pace could continue for only a few more months, analysts were quoting by NOPA as saying, after which soybean supplies “are uncertain.”

The question demands repeating: if the United States understands that it is dealing with a potentially critical situation with regards to food security in the middle of a pandemic, why does it continue to export at breakneck speed? While the major agricultural powerhouses, like Argentina, Brazil, Ukraine, Russia and China are taking steps to protect their domestic food supplies, keeping prices in check, the U.S. seems to be bucking the trend.

 

Perhaps the closest thing to a siren warning of danger came from a recent report by Bloomberg that carried the headline, ‘China Is So Thirsty for Soy That America Could Soon Be Importing.’ The question, however, that the article never dares to ask is: ‘importing from where?’ Buy New $34.99 (as of 05:10 EST – Details)

“China’s appetite for U.S. soy is draining silos to the point that American processors may need to import the most beans in years this summer,” the article began. “The boom in U.S. shipments to China comes after Brazil and other countries effectively ran out of exportable supplies – prospects traders in North America are now facing.”

Christian Westbrook, the host of Ice Age Farmer who has been warning about a potential “engineered famine” for some time, summed up the situation as “game over.”

“That’s why, to see the Biden administration roll forward these terrible executive orders, it’s insane,” Westbrook commented. “Other countries are frantically taking steps…to protect their domestic food supplies, keep prices low and be able to feed their animals, and then, in turn, be able to feed their people. Not here.”

Indeed, what seems to be happening in the United States is that the local farmers are being squeezed out of business, or paid not to grow food, while Big Agriculture is more concerned with exporting its supplies than keeping domestic food stocks safe and affordable. That seems to be a reckless policy at the best of times; at the peak of a pandemic, however, it is simply a recipe for disaster.

The views of individual contributors do not necessarily represent those of the Strategic Culture Foundation.

THE END

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Author: Stucky

I'm right, you're wrong. Deal with it.

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Ghost

Stucky? A friend who works in school bureaucracy told me I could have a crate of dried cranberries if I want them. Since the schools didn’t use them and had to buy them anyway they now have to throw them away.

As they have to throw away all the other food purchased. There is a lot of food being thrown away or not harvested. That’s just rumor mill type stuff, but I really did get a box of those little packs of cranberries they hand out as “healthy snacks.” They are chock full of sugar, of course.

Anyway, I suspect there will be some shortages. China owns about 40% of the crop (not the land) for their manufacturing of processed food they will sell right back to us. Now, Bill Gates owns the land they can rent and farm with immigrant labor. Win-Win! (Sarcasm tag here.)

Articles of Confederation

A leader with balls is going to have to “reclaim” all of it and decentralize to guys like Joel Salatin. If it gets bad enough it’d be trivial to eminent domain it. Same with Warren’s rail.

Ghost

They can’t seem to claim the sidewalks from homeless immigrants. A leader with balls? We need balls and brains. I await the Deus ex Machina.

Anonymous
Anonymous

Who wants the sidewalks. In San Francisco and many other wonderful placed the walks are covered daily with shit and piss of the human plus animal form.

GNL
GNL

AOC,

Is there any kind of food producing plant that a person could grow in a forested area that will grow unattended? Any kind?

Articles of Confederation

The only shade tolerant stuff I grow is impatiens capensis (jewelweed) to treat poison ivy. 🙁 I think you’re in Zone 7A like me.

I plan on trying my hand at ginseng but that takes years to establish, and it’s a luxury you barter away for real food.

Another idea that is always in demand is shrooms. Like oyster shrooms.

HSF may have some better ideas.

EDIT: Permies is a good site.

https://permies.com/t/39638/Top-ten-crops-Forest-Farming

Black walnut, currants maybe?

https://www.tenthacrefarm.com/how-to-grow-and-use-currants/

brian
brian

Berries… can make pemmican which lasts a very long time.

VEE 3
VEE 3

Pemmican lasts longer without the berries

Llpoh
Llpoh

You got anything to treat brown snake venom?

Articles of Confederation

HAHAHA I thought of you when we were watching Crocodile Dundee with the kids. I believe it was a brown snake he pulled out of the tree above the journalist’s head.

GNL
GNL

Thank you, shall check it out.

gilberts
gilberts

Do your homework. There are tons of things that grow wild, are healthy, safe to eat, tasty, and nobody knows what they are. In Northern VA, for instance, you can walk out of your suburban crapshack, walk down the nearest nature trail, step off into the woods, and make a salad out of mustard greens, dandelions, miners lettuce, chickweed, wood sorrel, sheep sorrel, etc and then add some wild mulberries, blackberries, black and red raspberries for dessert. If you know what to look for, you might be surprised to find wild carrots, day lily tubers, cat briar, and other goodies all right there in front of you and total mysteries to your neighbors. Acorns by the bushel at all those oak trees around town. Berries in the most unexpected places. Sassafras grows right out in the open. Nobody knows what all these useful things are. I’m hardly an expert by any means, but you can learn with a little bit of time online and a few guidebooks. I transplanted wild mint from a fishing creek to my home berry patch and I was surprised how well it did. I brought spice bush back from another trip to the woods and that did well, too.
You could easily plant a variety of things in plain sight and nobody would know what it was.
A good start is Wild Man Steve Brill. So are the permaculture gurus who can have a garden that looks like an unkept wild forest.

gilberts
gilberts

PS- look up the NC Wild Foods Weekend. It’s awesome.

Ken31
Ken31

You sound like prey. Delicious prey.

But seriously, I had to look up sassafras and its quite interesting.

Ghost

Talk about coiky dinks? My very savvy neighbor came up to check on us (we got about a foot of snow on top of ice.) He offered to show me how to find sassafras in the early spring when the sap starts running.

He has a whole woodworking shop behind his little nondescript cabin.

GNL
GNL

That sounds like my best bet. Yes, I’m on northern va.

Anonymous
Anonymous

Anyone mention mushrooms? The question said “in a forested area”-I’ve seen plenty of them in the wetter portions of our western forests.

My favorite: wild asparagus growing along the irrigation canals.

brian
brian

Or after fires like in the Christian valley couple years back now.

Doofus2
Doofus2

FYI, mint is a very invasive plant, make sure you keep it under control

gilberts
gilberts

I love it. I had big bunches hung up to dry this year.

OHMama
OHMama

If you have some open patches, hazelnuts will produce nuts with 4 hours of sun a day. Serviceberry (Amelanchier canadensis) is an understory tree and will produce fruit in semi-shade (just not in really dense, dark shade). The berries are tasty and make delicious jam if you can beat the birds to them. Netting them might help with that. They are loaded with seeds so it helps to mash the berries and deseed them by running them through a Foley food mill if you plan on making jam with them.

Anonymous
Anonymous

GNL
A couple years ago, Ol’ Remus did a test plot of potatoes in the woods. He said it did ok, as I recall.
(Saami Jim)

StackingStock
StackingStock

Alata Yams can be grown unattended. I have these things growing all over in three counties, in the woods, shopping centers, apartment complexes.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dioscorea_alata

Potato Yams

Mushroom Cloud
Mushroom Cloud

Sativa Cannabis grows well outdoors i heard…

Steelydan
Steelydan

Weeds. Research edible plants. Any crops would get wiped out by animals and poachers, but edible plants would go unnoticed and they don’t require tending. For example, you can get 10k dandelion seeds for just a few bucks. Another route is sprouts, which will not require outdoor farming. Mushrooms are another area to research.

Ben Lurken
Ben Lurken

I know I’m just a broken record at this point when I mention to certain friends and family that so and so got banned or suspended from Twitter. As people here know that only means they are over the target.
So I went to Twitter to find @iceagefarmer and, you guessed it, account suspended.

Georges S
Georges S
Anonymous
Anonymous

Interesting. Some of the lost winter wheat acreage could be replanted into corn or beans come spring. We may have enough cushion with stored wheat to carry us-depends on how much is already sold and awaiting export. Wondering which will hit $5 a pop first: a loaf of bread or a gallon of gasoline?

Scary term the guy uses: “energy allocation”. Think about that one. Pretty sure we’ll be hearing that phrase being thrown around soon by the xiden administration.

brian
brian

Relatives in Saskatchewan are growing birdseed as their main crops. No wheat, barley, oats or lentils… Birdseed.

None Ya Biz
None Ya Biz

Well they hope to live off bird! LOL!

brian
brian

And they have no chickens, cows or hogs,,, Just a half dozen pampered horses. go figure. When we do talk I garass them that they are not even farmers anymore. Their response is generally nobody wants to work that hard anymore. All big dollar machinery now, gps and computer monitored.

Anonymous
Anonymous

The smart ones are guided by margins, nothing else matters.

realestatepup
realestatepup

The average person, even on .25 of an acre, can grow enough food for their family if they are so inclined. It takes planning and the right crops. But it can be done.
Pickling, canning, and freezing the excess will get you through the winter.
Only 2 backyard chickens can supply enough eggs for a family of 4-6 people.
A small goat can supply milk and eventually meat.
Chickens forage and eat garden pests anyway, with some supplementation.
Goats eat anything.
A barrel of rainwater can help if the water supply is spotty, but knowing where there are springs is extremely important.
Americans eat too many empty calories. Soy is actually a terrible food, both for human consumption and animal consumption. Unless it’s fermented.
People that live in over-regulated communities with restrictive HOAs will feel the pinch right after urban dwellers.
Good luck to the morons in California and Arizona.

Anonymous
Anonymous

Might have to rethink canning, good luck finding canning jar lids. They are non-existent, and no one has a good reason as to why. I usually can 300-400 jars a year, and thankfully stocked up on lids before the Covid hype hit last year. I was good for the 2020 season, but 2021 will be hard, my stash is seriously depleted.
I need to bite the (very expensive) bullet and stock up on these: https://www.amazon.com/Tattler-Seal-Reusable-Canning-Lids/dp/B073X3VTK1/ref=sr_1_4?dchild=1&keywords=reusable+canning+lid&qid=1613431050&sr=8-4

I did see deep freezes for sale at Rural King this week, they finally actually have some in stock, so we might need to buy one or two more as backups.

Ghost

I bought a case or two of the Tattler lids and they work, but I prefer the old-time metal lids, to be honest. Maybe I’m prejudiced, but I just trust the old ones more.

OHMama
OHMama

I like the metal lids better too (it was me posting above, my computer keeps erasing my user name and I keep forgetting to check before posting). I have used the Tattler lids and they do work, but I like the “ping” sound the metal ones make when cooling to let me know they sealed well. It is hard to store the unused metal lids for any length of time, though. I had some for 3 years and the third year, I had a huge rate of seal failure. It wasn’t obvious at first, they seemed to seal, but when we went to eat the canned goods a few months later, they had mold and were not sealed well. First and only time that has ever happened to me and I’ve been canning for 20 years. Reading up on it, they have cheapened (of course, what HAVEN’T they cheapened and destroyed?) the waxy/rubbery seals on the metal lids so it is thinner now and it doesn’t keep as long. So not only are they hard to source, but they are hard to stockpile too. Arghhhh!!!

I really don’t want to lose canning from my arsenal of food preservation since freezers are not a guarantee with Dear Leader Biden screwing around with our electricity security. So tired of not knowing what exactly to expect other than that it will be ugly.

niebo
niebo

Have had the same issue with my canning this year (sweet and dill pickles, mostly), have never had so many fails. Have never eaten so many pickles, either, cuz I check them every couple of days, so when they popped they were still edible (100 percent vinegar, btw). After six failures, the other jars seem to be OK.

Have lost a couple quarts of chili and canned pork, too, but until now, I thought it was my failure (which never happened on same scale before), so you got me wondering. . . .

Ghost

This is a topic worth exploring, I think.

A couple of years ago I pointed out the Mormons had been shut down from community outreach with the Bishop’s Kitchen by the FDA. They claimed it was unsanitary for outside groups to come in and use their equipment to can dehydrated foods without training. It was just government overreach.

Our group in Oklahoma did it several times in 2009 through 2013. Now, you have to purchase it from the Mormons already packaged. Costs triple the amount for items we canned in bulk as a group.

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2

Don’t do water bath, always do pressure canning. Get a quality canner. I like All American. No rubber gasket, metal to metal seal, never will fail ya. And for sauces, need to add acid like lemon juice, works great.

brian
brian

Our prairie family used paraffin to seal jars but I think only with jams. Its saved on using lids when canning tomatoes, pickles etc…

Plus there is always jerky for meats and dried garden produce. We used to dry carrots, turnips etc Then in winters toss’m into a stew pot for a great stews and soups. We had apple, apricots, walnuts and hazelnuts, dried them all, double bagged and they last a long time in a cool dark pantry.

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2

You can use the lids more than once. The ones that don’t seal, eat that first.

gilberts
gilberts

Last time I went to Wally, I was shocked to see the entire canning section picked bare. I think folks are stocking up, using up their clownbux as fast as they can.

OHMama
OHMama

It’s been like that since April of 2020. I scored 10 boxes of regular mouth bans and lids (don’t need the bands but I bought them anyways to get the lids) from target last week and felt like I’d struck gold, LOL!

Anonymous
Anonymous

Have canning lids gone the way of ammo? Sounds like it-and it sounds like the same guilty party could be behind the lid shortage.

card802
card802

Fuck amazon, you can get them $10.00 cheaper from the manufacturer, made in my home state.

https://reusablecanninglids.com/products/12-dozen-wide-e-z-seal-lids-rings-white

gmpatriot
gmpatriot

THANK YOU Card!!!!!!!

realestatepup
realestatepup

If you keep all your old glass spaghetti sauce jars, or any other jar with a “pop” type screw on metal lid, you can use these for canning. Any size, as long as it’s a glass jar with a metal lid that has the vacuum seal pop lid.

Georges S
Georges S

You’re right and it’s way cheaper than buying the stuff in the store. I don’t buy those kind of goods but I asked my neighbors who to save them for me, no even washing them to make sure they don’t scratch the lid.

Articles of Confederation

My chickens performed an amazing brown marmorated stinkbug genocide this year. And they are soil manufacturing plants. Wonderful birds.

Anonymous
Anonymous

Ours like tobacco hornworms from the tomatoes. They eat ’em like Twinkies.
comment image?fit=2560%2C1706&ssl=1

Ghost

Juicy. The chickens will try to steal them from each other. We like chicken TV too.

OHMama
OHMama

When we get our baby broiler chicks, we love watching them with bugs. One will get a bug, and then all of the others chase that peep around trying to get the bug while it dodges and weaves trying to find a safe place to eat it. My hubby call it chicken football, LOL!

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2

Those are sooooo gross. Stepped on one last year and it squirted all over my leg. Went running into the shower!!

TN Patriot
TN Patriot

They will destroy a parsley plant in no time. Catfish really like them too.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot

Brood X of the 17 year cicada is coming this spring summer, so they might get a lot of food. I well remember the constant humming coming from the woods in ’04. At times it was quite soothing, but sometimes it became unnerving.

Ken31
Ken31

I remember them all as just very very unpleasant audial events. It doesn’t help that they sound similar (but different) to my tinnitus.
First we had the silk worm plagues, then the cicada plagues.

Articles of Confederation

Water security is crucial.

https://www.foxnews.com/us/florida-hacker-fails-to-contaminate-water-supply-with-sodium-hydroxide

Think about what we could have done with even a trillion dollars of the pissed away debt. Our entire infra could have been hardened and modernized.

niebo
niebo

Preach it

Anonymous
Anonymous

Lots of marginal farms in drier parts of the country are selling their water rights to the highest bidder and giving up on crop production. More money in the water rights than growing crops.

realestatepup
realestatepup

I strongly recommend investing in a Berkey system. Gravity fed. I use a smaller one for my drinking/cooking. I live across the street from a lake, and I can pour lake water in and have drinkable water in about 15 minutes.
https://www.berkeywater.com/about/
The initial cost is worth it as these last a LONG time and the tabletop systems are portable.

rhs jr
rhs jr

I say you ain’t actually living on a farm. Two hens won’t lay eggs without a rooster and then only about .75 eggs per day if you feed them well enough. Hens will eat your whole garden in a couple days if they can get into it. About zero streams flow through an acre and going and getting water is back breaking work. The average American couldn’t feed himself on 5 acres. Your heart is in the right place and you are ahead of 150 million useless idiots that will become long pork.

yahright
yahright

Hens lay eggs without a rooster.

brian
brian

You have no idea about what a person can do with acreage. We had a small hobby farm about ten years back, just over two acres. We had a large garden, ten hogs, a cow and about two hundred chickens, 100 meat birds and 100 layers. We not only fed ourselves but we sold seven hogs, 75 meat birds and most of the eggs. We did this for ten years there.

The chickens picked the garden clean of bugs and the only damage they did was uprooting a few plants from scratching around. Not all the birds were in the garden, only those that made it over the fence. And, you do NOT need a rooster to have chickens lay eggs, not sure where you get that from. Plus the birds will lay an egg a day unless they are in molt of to short of a light cycle in the winter. A lamp in the chicken house so they get 1o min. hours of light and they layer year round.

rhs jr
rhs jr

Except when I was in the USAF 13 years, I have lived on land. You did all that on 2 acres so good for you Brian but I know you worked your ass off and had a huge feed bill. Add some rabbits because they are very little trouble, can survive on a lot of hay in the winter, and provide a lot of good meat. Add more acres and fruit and nut trees because once they produce, you get a crop for almost nothing every year. Plant some fields of pumpkins, gourds, spaghetti and acorn squash etc; they grow good and keep 3-5 months. People should listen to you and then get off their asses and do it.

brian
brian

Worked my hiney off with the hogs. Shoveled about a metric ton of culls daily from a local farm over the fence. The two biggest chores was processing the meat birds and the hogs, everything else was just work which if you are farming cannot avoid.

Feed bill… 1 ton of cracked corn, barley and wheat mix, half ton of organic layer pellet and about 50 bales of hay to winter the cow. Everything was free range within the half acre section we had them in, temporary shelters. Never wintered hogs. So no, we had little expenses and what we sold in eggs, hogs and meat birds paid for everything we used. Oh, forgot we had sheep too to keep the lawn mowed, and 21 walnut trees and two hazelnuts.

Never had ANY sick animals in the whole time either, as we rotated fields. Sold the ‘farm’ because past injuries, seriously regretting that now. We should have just scaled back.

Ghost
Ghost

No rooster needed for egg laying. A healthy hen can lay every 17 hours.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran

Sounds like “a woman needs a man like a fish needs a bicycle.”

In the city, you can have hens, but no roosters. Know what I call that? Racism. Pure racism against men. Rooster lives matter.

Ghost

I wouldn’t recommend having a rooster unless you really do intend to try to hatch your own, in which case, I still wouldn’t keep the rooster. I have one now by accident (see below*) and he annoys me mightily, always flogging and trying to hump the poor hens when I’m around. A couple of them look a bit bedraggled. I have seven hens (one froze to death a week ago, bless her little gizzard) and one turkey, which the rooster does try to “do” from time to time, stupid bird. They did grow up together… I purchased them from Larry for $5 for the pair. He’d raised them in his home from an incubator. Birds do better in pairs, I’ve found, so instead of two turkeys, I grabbed what I thought was a little Bantam pullet. It ended up being an enormous Leghorn Rooster, whose best friend is a giant uneaten turkey.

*(I purchased a turkey from my hillbilly farming pal and it came with a little buddy chick, which grew up to be a giant rooster. The turkey and the rooster have a date with destiny in a few weeks. I may have backed off the bunny thumping, but when a turkey and a rooster need killing, they need killing. I may go ahead and can the meat. If I do, I will make a video for Rumble and RiNS to share. How’s that?

brian
brian

yes…

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2

All well and good until your chickens get eaten by a hawk/coon/fox/varmint. what then rep? Takes 6 months to get eggs, I know, am building an enclosure now.

Articles of Confederation

I’m still debating whether or not to cover the run extension that isn’t yet completed. LOL. Only thing I still worry about is raptors. Our Karakachan has chased off everything with hooves/paws.

brian
brian

Might sound funky but we had a fence about five and a half feet tall all around out property. Just poles with hog wire. We have a lot of coyotes around and its not a big deal for them to get by the wire. What I did was in the evening on occasion was to go and ‘mark’ my territory. Never lost birds to coyotes. We did however lose some to owls. About every third or forth night and owl would come in and take a chicken off the railing and you’d hear it squawking fainter as it got further away. Cost of farming. They don’t really take that many so I didn’t worry about it.

Ghost

I have determined — after losing chickens to opossums, raccoons and coyotes and having to buy eggs for longer than it costs to replace the hens — that buying hens about ready to lay from either a good Farm and Ranch store for $15 to $20 each (still better to buy in pairs) or from a decent hillbilly rancher of pigs, rabbits, goats, chickens, turkeys and other assorted animals that flock to the simpleminded son of a simpleminded woman. I’ve purchased several hens from Larry, who is tickled to death that I pay him $25 for a pair!

I don’t know if you have ever checked at local egg producers to see if they sell their older hens, but a well cared for hen can lay a two to three eggs a week for years. They are high producing the first couple years. I had hens for seven years and they didn’t die of old age… they got put into jars.

Edited to clarify… local “free-range natural” egg producers.

Llpoh
Llpoh

Real estate – a really good chicken might lay 250 eggs a year, so that is 500 for two. Or under a dozen a week. For 4-6 people? Nope, unless you are happy for 2 eggs per person per week. I would suggest at least 4, maybe even 6, chickens. They can be harvested for food as well, so a dual purpose bird is good, like a Rhode Island Red or somesuch. Rainwater is a great idea, but I would go big, say a 1000 gallon minimum, and a means of sterilizing it, esp if not used regularly. I have around 40,000 gallons complete with filter and UV steriliser.

Articles of Confederation

Once I get the Crevecoeur/Pavlovskaya breeding operation going, I’d be willing to give them away to TBPers pro bono. It’ll take me a year to get my bearings, get the extension completed, etc. I just need to figure out logistics because I really do not like the idea of shipping them. Kinda defeats the purpose of conservation if you ship them with USPS. 🙁

Spanglin
Spanglin

What is Soylent Green stock going for now a days?

TN Patriot
TN Patriot

Gates bought it took it private.

Anonymous
Anonymous

‘spose he let Buffet in on the deal?

TN Patriot
TN Patriot

Since cows are accused of contributing to CO2 through their farts, I suspect he will go after animals and push us to a diet of veggies pretending to be meat and a new food product called Soylent Green.

KaD
KaD

They just built the largest bug farm in France to use as a food additive. https://eatchirps.com/

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
Anonymous
Anonymous

They will kill off many animals using covid narrative like bird flu. Then make them endangered species. Anyone caught with meat will go to a fema camp indefinitely. Mark my word. It is coming

Hardscrabble Farmer
Hardscrabble Farmer

“It’s ruinous for the soul to be anxious about the future and miserable in advance of misery, engulfed by anxiety that the things it desires might remain it’s own until the very end. For such a soul will never be at rest— by longing for things to come it will lose the ability to enjoy present things.” — Seneca

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2

Glass half full HSF!! Put some bacon on the barbie!

brian
brian

Fear is an emotion of the future unknown. Why be ruled by an unknown?? People need to learn to ‘roll with whatever comes’ adapt and overcome

Anonymous
Anonymous

My ranch girl mother-born in 1908-used to say “roll with the punches”. Little did I know she learned that the hard way growing up on the ranch.

Tilt
Tilt

Right on. Planning is just that…planning. Plans change daily; do what’s in front of you. That’s the challenge of today. Fear will get nothing done, except plant more fear.

KaD
KaD

“the Biden administration risks putting the United States on a crash course with food shortages and soaring prices as early as this year.”
Well yeah, that’s the entire idea. Once people are reduced to penury and near starvation they’ll accept universal basic income and tow the line if they want to eat or have a roof over their heads.

Anonymous
Anonymous

They cannot do this with all the wealth in the usa. This leads me to believe they must first crash the stock mkt now that they corralled everyone into it. Then destroy the bank where savers have money. The only two places of liquid assets. This makes everyone depend on UbI and comply. Then they will foreclose on everything you own but allow you to become the caretaker and hold you accountable with ubi to take care of it. Then in the future they will relocate you if your Place is nice enough and allow a govt crony to move into you McMansion. All it takes is to think like them and you see clearly.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot

Dems have talked about taking over all retirement accounts for years. They would give each person an “annuity” (aka UBI).

gilberts
gilberts

It would be interesting to see what happens when they literally attack every special interest at the same time. Retirees and pensioners, gun owners, conservatives, soldiers, business owners, farmers, property owners, car owners, people who like to eat food and want AC or Central Heating in their homes, etc. Now if they can figure out a way to outlaw sex and breathing, we can all unite together in our outrage.

Anonymous
Anonymous

As Nikita Kruschev used to say: “Two steps forward, one step back”. Kinda interesting that a Communist would speak the truth.

Ghost
Ghost

Masks are anti breathing.

TampaRed

the cia is no longer reporting the amount of cash in different countries–i’d say massive worldwide inflation is on the way–

https://www.blacklistednews.com/article/79279/cia-cancels-money-supply.html

Anonymous
Anonymous

Dirty old Joe and Cocaine Mitch will stand by and watch President Xi destroy what is left of American wealth.

Mary Christine
Mary Christine

When the food shortages begin in earnest, that’s when they are going to require you to get the injection.

That’s also when the metal protectors will come out to play.

By this time next year things will be really ugly.
Maybe even by this summer.

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2

That’s when the deer population will be reduced.

grace country pastor

Got hogs. Lots of hogs.

Anonymous
Anonymous

The CDC is the agency that declared the moratorium on evictions for nonpayment of rent (a simple search will find it in the Federal Register). It is claimed that CDC will then have a lien on renters who cannot pay-doesn’t take a brainiac to figure out how CDC will then be able to obtain higher levels of “voluntary” vaccination throughout the country. Same scheme will apply to student loan forgiveness.

Or, if vaccination is not the game then the same ploys can be used to decide winners and losers.

Really ugly, that’s the plan.

Articles of Confederation

Goat intestines will solve it all.
comment image

Was Trump the Right Person?

Michael Hamblin
Michael Hamblin

And exactly whom would that be?

Incidentally, Strategic Culture is an organ of the Kremlin. It’s good to get another perspective – as long as you know the angle of their bent…

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2

Too funny AOC, follow the science!!

BL
BL

Stucky- Thanks for bringing light to Comrade Party Leader Bidenski’s plan to put us all on a crash diet. This is the kind of abuse of which many of us have warned for years. The failure to have a concrete plan to survive is the fault of each individual here. Lord knows Mark is prepared…. Lord knows Maggie has enough toilet paper for her entire county…. but have our other folks here at TBP really taken this seriously? SHIT IS GETTING REAL for sure Stucky.

I’ll be a reader for a while as I have managed to tear my rotator cuff. I am praying for all of you to make it through these trying times. Flea… take good care.

Ghost

Ah… the rotator cuff tear. Nick has finally begun to feel as if it might start getting better and stop hurting after having the repair surgery last September (turned out to be two of the three muscles torn).

Don’t put it off, Bea. Nick did a lot of damage to his shoulder by pretending it would heal on its own. And we all know he’s already doing my share of the work, don’t we?

comment image

(Just about 6 weeks after surgery. He devised a way to pressure wash and paint without using that shoulder too much. He is one of those people who can’t let a job be halfway finished. We decided to hire someone to finish the job after he finished the bottom prior to his surgery, but he got bored after surgery and decided he could do it. He did. I helped a time or two by bringing him a bucket of paint and brush, but my vertigo and lack of depth perception make me dangerous on a ladder. I help best at the bottom, steadying it and nagging him to be safe.

And, yes, after 6 years of pressure washing and staining the logs, we decided a custom toned and textured paint that would last several years was in order. Nick is too frugal to pay someone to do it for him more than once every five years. That’s kind of how we got retired here so early, though, so I’m not complaining.)

However, he left the front porch and face of the home stained for us to enjoy.

Someone mentioned they thought it a shame we covered up all that lovely oak wood and I reminded them I can see all that lovely oak wood inside my home every single day.

Lots of tomatoes got canned around here last year.
comment image

Do you know I STILL haven’t bought toilet paper except to give out for one reason or another? I did open the last storage box from our move and discovered all those single rolls I used to steal off the maids’ carts in hotels during our trips back and forth between Oklahoma and Missouri. I made it my policy to always leave the hotel with at least two rolls. I cracked up when I realized I still had all those single Scott TP rolls made up for various Hotel chains. I think I have some that say “Marriot.”

gilberts
gilberts

Catcall.
She’s showing leg.

psbindy
psbindy

And Pradas.

BL
BL

Maggie- I’m listening about having it fixed….. I just hate to go in for a surgery. I’m doing some of my own procedures to try and heal this. Who knows, it might work.

Ghost
Ghost

If it isn’t a complete tear it could. Be careful.

mark
mark

Maggie…That’s a great pic!

TP Stackers (like us) are just as wise as PM Stackers (like us).

Soft wiping assets have their time and place…regularly if your regular…just like hard assets…end up…cleaning up fiat messes…if you can see past the daily needs…and go Back to the Future!

(Both in the Outhouse & the Bank – two well-known shit-holes).

Semi-Retired
Semi-Retired

I’m semi-ready for the sh*t to go down. Got my chickens and garden. Spring fed creek runs through my property. Have an orchard (but need to keep adding to it). Neighbor is a cattle rancher and we’ve become good friends.

But I planned for this sh*t to go down. Been following what is happening in the world long enough to know it’s headed our way. I left the “big city” because I knew it was going to get bad. I know way too many people that don’t see or want to see what’s headed our way. I will take care of my family and very local community but I know they will take care of me in return.

I enjoy every day of relative normality and use it to prepare. Next stimulus check buys solar panels to run the well. I’ll keep stocking everything else nice and deep with each paycheck. New neighbor up the dirt road is a PA at the local hospital. She’s friendly and is happy to live up here.

I’d feel good about my future but I’m a pessimist so I’m expecting the worst.

mark
mark

BL,

Heal up buddy. Never had a cuff problem…but I always try natural first too…

I suspect Mike Adams at http://www.naturalnews.com sells some of the purest Turmeric around.

Turmeric can be amazing…

Natural Ways to Heal a Torn Rotator Cuff Injury

Doctor de Vaca
Doctor de Vaca

Time to go rural and grow your own. Here’s another reason to go down to the farm

Anonymous
Anonymous

Every farm kid I knew had no need for sex education; by age 6 they had seen it all.

Gryf
Gryf

I moved back to the country almost 50 years ago after a few years of city life here and in Euroland. That was during the drop out antiwar hippy 70s. Land was cheap in the southern highlands and the locals were friendly. Self sufficiency was the goal, but few if any achieved it. Those who stayed here had marketable skills. Some took jobs and others created their own niche businesses. Some of us kept a garden and maybe a few chickens. Goats were a fad for a few years. The back to the land thing faded out but now is reemerging. Farm markets are thriving. Locally grown meat, vegetables, corn meal, eggs and baked goods are available.
I read some of the doom porn and am glad to be in a place where people are still friendly and life is good.

falconflight
falconflight

Since there is no opposition political party, what to do?

Articles of Confederation

Sanctuary states. Nullification. Strikes. Balkanization. Not necessarily in that order.

Anonymous
Anonymous

You forgot snipers and vigilanties.

Hardscrabble Farmer
Hardscrabble Farmer

I’m not worried about anything the government plans on doing because they can’t do anything properly even when they are right on top of it.

Last week my son and I drove pretty far up into Vermont to trade a young gilt for a new boar, about an eight hour round trip from here and we’re adjoining states. When we got there this giant viking of a guy came out with four kids under 5 years old running around him like puppies. We shook hands, unloaded and then loaded the pigs, took a quick visit to his sugarhouse and then made the trip back home. Real people, raising real families, producing real food on a continent the size of ours is not something they could stop even if they tried. This place is far too big, there’s too much space, too many nooks and crannies and too many people who would wear out any effort at the kind of control it would take to rein everyone in.

Here’s the rub though; you cannot continue to live the way you have in the past, clinging to the old system of specialization, urban/suburban living, completely reliant on a corrupt system to feed, house, provide energy, etc for you unless you are willing to submit to their insane demands.

Walk away, now. Find like-minded people, move far enough away from the power centers to be too much trouble to go after and do everything in your power to influence and aid others who are fellow travelers.

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again, this is the opportunity of a lifetime for those with the right frame of mind and the will to live free. Their system will not be successful and in fact is already doomed, best to be as far away from it’s death throes as possible.

“Think of the life you have lived until now as over and, as a dead man, see what’s left as a bonus and live it according to Nature. Love the hand that fate deals you and play it as your own, for what could be more fitting?” – Marcus Aurelius

Articles of Confederation

HSF, my worry is for the people who are hurting and who DO actually work hard. Or who were forcibly unemployed by the China Virus, the Trump Reaction, and the Harris Double-Down. This site is extremely unique in that it has a plethora of skilled, intelligent individuals. But there are a lot of salt of the Earth folks living hand to mouth.

I hear what you’re saying and agree. For all of us on TBP. But I have a difficult time not worrying about the innocents. And your inevitable response to me is correct. I can only do what I can do. It weighs on me though.

All of this was entirely preventable. We should have had our infra hardened and modernized. Food supply, harvesting, and distro should have been decentralized. We should have 100,000 butchers scattered throughout the country.

Hardscrabble Farmer
Hardscrabble Farmer

I’m not innocent of giving in to despair and anger, I just learned that it was self-defeating. When I gave up trying to change the direction of the culture/nation/zeitgeist and focused on just fixing what my hands and mind could handle, everything changed and for the better. I’m not special and it isn’t anecdotal because I meet people like me almost every day now and the numbers are growing.

I know that most everyone here is exceptional, that’s the point. Exceptional people focused on using their talents and abilities to do what they can is a force multiplier- it influences others, gives them confidence and the will to change for the better.

We have a better option than what the current system is selling, in fact there is no comparison, but the biggest part of that is that we have the joy, the humor, the pure and unadulterated nature of things on our side. Competing against something as big and powerful as the globalist system with all of its institutions using their tactics is a guaranteed loss. Offering an alternative based on truth, natural cycles, good food, simplicity, fellowship and love is a strategy that they cannot combat without losing.

And in the end we all die anyway, why go down in seething hatred and misery when you can do it with a smile on your face for having lived honorably and with a purpose that transcends politics and ideology?

There is another way and it isn’t anywhere near as difficult or burdensome once you give yourself over to it.

Articles of Confederation

You are an inspiration for sure. Thanks.

Doctor de Vaca
Doctor de Vaca

Amen!

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2

Here Here, Christ has already won the war. It is over. Accept the grace. We are all gonna die . Do it with courage.

gilberts
gilberts

A young Mr. Josef Stalin might disagree with you. He squeezed food out of the Ukraine like juice from a lemon.
I won’t pretend our govt is efficient or all-seeing and all-knowing, but where there’s a whip, there’s a way.

Ghost
Ghost

I watched Harvest of Despair recently.

Horror of holomodir.

Hardscrabble Farmer
Hardscrabble Farmer

And yet there are 45 million Ukrainians.

There are no guarantees in life, no promises that you will get through your allotted days without having experienced loss, suffering, and death. No assurances that your needs will be met and your body will be unharmed- in fact almost all of those things are not only likely, but certain.

The choice you must make is how you will face that truth and what you will do with all the moments in between.

Despair, resignation, and defeat are self-imposed hardships that you choose to experience rather than external influences.

brian
brian

In other words its not the road that defines a person but the way you walk it.

Candis in Northern CA

After months of being angry, raging, I’ve had the blessing of feeling more peaceful – Not resigned- but accepting what the Fates have in mind. My great grandmother and the family were forced from their home when the Turks took over that part of Greece last century. She embroidered a beautiful cloth with the words in Greek saying, “We can’t escape your Destiny.” I resisted this idea for a lot of years, and Yes, I feel the choices we make on the journey at the various crossroad has a lot to do with our Destiny. But there is a point where the Destiny is somewhat set and out of our hands. There are evil people and intentions in the world who seem to be in charge but we need to go below the radar as much as possible. As I have mentioned in other posts, we need to have knowledge of our local plants not only for food but medicine. ( I am a medical herbalist for 40 years). We need to not “be seen by the powers that be” but continue to align ourselves with the deeper and perennial Ways of Nature and the Seasons of the year and Seasons of our Lives. None of this is easy! I have a son almost 50 and he and the family are not on board with Any of This. They have bought into the whole narrative and live in the belly of the beast in SF. So, it is hard to see the suffering, but by the Grace of God I have more peace now than over the past many months.

Ghost

And humanity really was captivated. “Perhaps never in human history has the entire world been so united by such a global drama,” Walter Cronkite says in the film, in his famous, rumbling news-anchor voice.

For many reasons, I thought you would enjoy this article, but the teaser got me: Apollo 13’s Surprising Pandemic Wisdom!

The author does a lame job trying to draw a parallel between the two events, but it does make a strong argument about the power of propaganda/media influence

https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2020/04/apollo-13-anniversary-pandemic/609874/

Yes, my response has nothing to do with Ukraine… nothing to add. There always seem to be expendable people. That is what the CIA called (calls) them. “Expendables.”

NickelthroweR
NickelthroweR

Greetings,
This isn’t the 1920’s. They’d have to implement some kind of Mao/Pol Pot kind of scenario whereas they forced millions of people into the countryside to farm by hand with sticks and rocks. History tells us that someone farming by hand can produce little more than enough food for himself.

I live in Amish country and I’ve watched these guys work their farms. Even though they live in the 1850’s, it is highly organized with teams of horses pulling around specialized tilling/harvesting machinery. In a grid down scenario, it would take us decades to reach the level of farm management that the Amish have. By then, it wouldn’t matter much what the trannies in DC want or say.

Georges S
Georges S

Did you know the Celts had invented a harvesting machine which was described by Pliny? comment image

TampaRed

nickel,
your post reminded me of a video i recently saw of a bunch of amish farmers moving a barn–

Ghost

Even the gardens around their homes are planted in a similarly organized manner. The tiny plantlings are put into rows by small children tended by older children. The Amish farm is a well-run plantation.

I need to get up and see Titus and see how many of my bunnies he wants to buy this year! (His mother said she prefers the white rabbits with pink eyes, as it makes it easier to thump them. I sold her daughter a little lionshead doe. 😀 God forgive me.)

niebo
niebo

Great article, Stucky!

Democratic leader said he would pay U.S. farmers to “put their land in conservation” and live without their ‘cash crops.’

Which is to say, “We’ll put a gun to your head and force you into poverty, with your life, or we’ll force your family into poverty without you.”

psbindy
psbindy

Article says:

“Perhaps from Bill Gates, who now owns the deed to most of the farmland in the nation?”

That’s incredibly sloppy research. B Gates IS the largest single owner of farmland in America, but he doesn’t even own one hundredth of one percent of the total farmland in the U.S.

EDIT TO ADD:

Gates owns a little less than 250,000 acres of FARMLAND according to a fast wiki search. That IS more than any other INDIVIDUAL American.

China owns about 1.4 billion acres of farmland according to the same wiki search.

The famous King ranch in Texas is +/- one million acres but most of that is grazing land.

Articles of Confederation

It’s still beautiful that it’s public knowledge, and I’d wager the farmland is top quality. Makes it easier to identify, eminent domain, and divvy up among guys like Salatin who can throw together some quality, emergency production when SHTF.

Gates may get his depopulation but ultimately he and his entire family will end up with nothing.

Ghost
Ghost

China owns 40 % of the food crop.

MartelsHammer
MartelsHammer

These motherfuckers are going to kill us all. The solar/wind idiocy in TX is killing people tonight as a cold snap has shut down the wind farms and the solar is doing nothing. Farmers make food! We need to eat food…..the exact same thing is going to happen to food that is happening right now in energy!

Now even in North Korea the dog-eating dictator is fat….and eats imported steak and other delicacies. Fuck these bastards!

If you aren’t growing your own food….then it is time to start……

Articles of Confederation

Then it’s incumbent upon us to refuse to deliver to the cities. Peaceful strike. I don’t think America’s ready for it yet.

Two more years, methinks. Maybe less.

brian
brian

Couldn’t agree more.

overthecliff
overthecliff

They are practicing the old soviet 1932-33 Ukraine play.

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2

Way more libtards are going to get the first and second jab that conservative rural folk. Those folks are going to start dropping dead and won’t be able to reproduce. They are going to kill their own. So there is that. Who is left standing? Glass half full.

gilberts
gilberts

They already don’t like to breed, so their replacement numbers are dropping as their men simp over internet chix and their angry, bitter women turn into wine aunts and angry cat ladies.

gilberts
gilberts

Actually, I kind of think exporting American food to China is a sweet revenge. They can have the frankenfood and the fertilizers and the roundup and all the other toxic waste in our food.

falconflight
falconflight

Practical Tools

Might be a decent source of info regarding small farming.

Anonymous
Anonymous

In the United States, the local farmers, it seems, are being squeezed out of business, or paid not to grow food, while Big Agriculture is more concerned with exporting its supplies than keeping domestic food stocks safe and affordable.

Food shortages you say? Sounds so familiar to anyone who has studied the Weimar Republic.

Want to know what is coming next? Ask where this entire string of events has occurred before, to an extent that you need merely change the names, locations, and dates – and you have something almost indistinguishable from modern America.

http://www.christiansfortruth.com/how-the-jews-of-weimar-germany-ensured-the-rise-of-national-socialism/

boron
boron

I didn’t notice any mention of how much U.S. agroland China is currently purchasing;
I also didn’t notice any mention of how much agroland the U.S. government is purchasing and putting out of production.

Llpoh
Llpoh

The issue will not be in the growing of enough food. Hunger is usually about the failing to distribute the food. See Ireland famine as exhibit A. It will be that way in the US if it happens. The economic system will fail, the distribution system will collapse. Getting food from where it is grown to where the masses of people are will be the problem, as well as will be the acceptable medium of exchange. After all, who has a gilt these days to exchange for a boar. (Not that I would have known if I have a gilt. Never heard of it before. But looked it up, so now I know).

brian
brian

For a more modern example look at Venezuela as well. Farmers were feeding everyone around them and then plowing the rest of their crops back into the ground. There was no fuel for them to haul the product into the cities.

Anonymous
Anonymous

Look at what the Bolshevik jews did to the Volga Germans.

OHMama
OHMama

Besides planning for food shortages, if you have children, make sure you have clothing, especially shoes and winter gear if needed in your climate, stockpiled in the next few sizes up. If things go haywire, they might be hard to get and no one wants to see their little ones suffer. Back in the Great Depression they often took apart and cut down worn out grownup clothing, like wool winter coats or denim overalls, to make mini kidlet versions, but materials today don’t really allow for that. Our stuff now is usually is much inferior in quality as far as wear and tear goes, especially shoes.

You can pick up winter coats, snow pants, winter boots and clothing of all kinds, good brands in good condition, at well stocked thrift stores, especially if you shop in more upscale areas. By and large that’s what my daughter has worn throughout her childhood, and I keep ahead of her by at least 2 sizes for essentials. For littler children, I’d save up at least 4 sizes since they grow like weeds.

Articles of Confederation

My mother’s heritage used those flour sacks with the floral patterns on them, from what I was told. Probably why they put the dang patterns on them to begin with. LOL. Reuse reuse reuse.

And yup, thrift stores in areas like mine are a godsend.

Southern Sage
Southern Sage

Stucky, there you go again! Food shortage? Pshaw!! Under the benevolent Biden Regime, we will all have all the horseshit we can eat, flavored with chickenshit and bullshit. On special days we will get our fill of roadkill.

very old white guy
very old white guy

The destruction of America will soon be complete.

TheTruthBurns
TheTruthBurns

Once You understand that the Government, Banks, Mega Corporations are NOT Your FRIENDS then You understand that They will do ANYTHING for Unlimited POWER, MONEY & CONTROL up to & including Your DEATH! Pray, Prep & Plan Accordingly. Cheers!

Steelydan
Steelydan

Don’t worry, President Biden has released his new plan to raise American crops on a an irrigation program of Brawndo, because it’s got electrolytes.

Remo
Remo

The federal government already illegally owns about 28% of the land in the country, mostly in western states.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
gilberts
gilberts

You first, douchebag.

Nerogro
Nerogro

STEWPID soldiers facing the WRONG direction. Guarding a dicktator who soon will turn on them and there they stand guarding him like DOPES.

There is no outside siege of the capital. it’s all occuring INSIDE and the soldiers are help guarding that. I mean, how stewpid can this nation, its people, its military get?

Pilot Dave
Pilot Dave

There are four very simple facts these Lefty-Liberals will not acknowledge:

#1 This Earth can only sustain 2 billion people without burning fossil fuel – John Deere does not run on batteries… so, what to do with 5 billion dead bodies?

#2 The “deal” Trump wisely backed us out of would have taxed USA and sent this money to the #1 and #4 producers of CO2 – Chairman Mao’s China, and India…

#3 Every time you as a consumer purchase a product “Made in China” or Vietnam, you are supporting their Communist Government’s decision to move from a self sustaining food system that is mostly carbon neutral to urban factory workers (very high carbon footprint) who then have to buy food grown on commercial farms using millions of gallons of diesel fuel… plus, much of it has to be imported from USA (more heavy crude oil being burned in marine diesels)

#4, a 6th grader knows there is no price for a train ticket to Hawaii…. as AOC wants to replace air travel with trains…..hmmm

jj
jj

“Food Shortages to Reduce the Population Brought to you by the COVID Triumvirate”

Food Shortages to Reduce the Population Brought to you by the COVID Triumvirate


This is a photo of the food line beside the Brooklyn Bridge approach in New York City that prevailed between 1930 and 1935. Never before in history have Americans had to cue in line for food since this orchestrated pandemic by Gates, Fauci, and Klaus Schwab of the World Economic Forum. Food prices are also rising because of this dynamic trio because they have deliberately shut down food production. Farmers have been unable to get their food to market because of the lockdowns and social distancing.
Today, there are food lines once again because of this dynamic trio, the COVID Triumvirate, composed of Gates, Fauci, & Schwab. Food lines have appeared around the country from Miami to New York City. Farmers were already being pushed into bankruptcies in 2019. That is only getting worse because this COVID Triumvirate also wants to end meat production to reduce CO2 (the World Economic Forum is pushing hard to end meat production).

“Reducing our Food Supply – Is it Intentional?” video STARVATION IS COMING FROM A RANCHER

Reducing our Food Supply – Is it Intentional?


While this is 7 months old, the trend is set in motion. The agenda is to reduce our consumption of meat because they believe that cows are the #2 cause of CO2. The EU regulations have led to the wholesale slaughter of even sheep. The EU was moving to reduce cattle because they are creating global warming by passing gas. These people are truly authoritarian.
To this day, many things are not available because of the response to COVID. These people are either the dumbest in history for they cannot see what they are doing, or they are diabolical and know exactly what they are doing – reducing the world population of humans and animals.

“The Threat of this Triumvirate to Everything that is Freedom” video

The Threat of this Triumvirate to Everything that is Freedom


Make no mistake about this, we have the merger of three theories as part of this Great Reset which has merged the old ideas of a one-world government with Schwab’s idea of resurrecting Communism for only the lower classes. Gates wants to reduce CO2 and the population, Soros wants a one-world government headed by the United Nations, and Klaus Schwab wants Communism 3.0. Nevertheless, their grand scheme against the people will peak out by 2022.
As I have mentioned, the former president of France stated bluntly that the design of the EU was not really economic, but rather it was this same theory that to eliminate war you have a one-world government, or in this case, one European government. This has been the pitch coming from Soros and why he was funding the anti-BREXIT camp, so he could fold Britain sovereignty into Brussels. Soros has been using his son to fund the Democrats against Trump to further his open society agenda.
On August 11th, 2020. George Soros did an interview in La Republica where he actually said we needed a revolution against Trump.
“I would describe it as a revolutionary moment when the range of possibilities is much greater than in normal times.”
Soros has been calling for using the Coronavirus as a revolutionary moment. Soros sees Trump as a populist “transitory phenomenon.”
The Polish government wants to stop the distribution of Norwegian money flowing into Poland coming from Soros’ funded Batory Foundation, which manages over 800 million euros with a target of overthrowing the Polish government by 2020. Since 2014, the Batory Foundation has distributed some 130 million zlotys (around 31.7 million euros) to various associations and organizations within Poland to change the government.
Soros has been intent upon overthrowing Trump in order to further his agenda of an open-society to have the United Nations take control of the United States covertly when it would be unconstitutional for such a transfer of power.
Nevertheless, this is part of their Agenda 2030 and to end “populism” which is the foundation of democracy. Like both China and the EU, the people have no right to vote for the head of the government.

TampaRed

what edible plants are safe to eat when grown atop a septic drain field that also have shallow root systems?

Chris Mallory
Chris Mallory

Gates does not “own the deed to most of the farmland in the nation”. Gates owns deed to 269,000 acres of farmland. We have an estimated 900 million acres of farmland in the US. Yes, Gates is an evil troll. But using 2019 numbers, Gates barely cracks the top 50 land owners in the US. Ted Turner and John Malone each own over 2 million acres of land in the US. The whole US covers 2.43 BILLION acres. Gates owns a whopping 0.000111% of that. He owns 0.0003% of US farmland. There are plenty of reasons to hate on Gates, owning 0 .0003% of farmland in the US isn’t one of them. That is just a scare tactic to keep you looking at something insignificant instead of what is important.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/money/2019/11/25/these-people-own-the-most-land-in-america/40649951/

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