Pages


Thursday, May 19, 2022

Vittert: Baby formula shortage is bad; corn crisis would be worse

This is America. This is 2022. Not the Soviet Union in the 1980s or Venezuela in 2015. Who ever thought we would run out of baby formula? But here we are. 

Sadly, we must count on the very people who created the crisis to solve it — hold that thought. 

Less than half of the corn, wheat and soybeans usually planted this time of year is in the ground.

13 comments:

  1. Don't worry: we made sure our future is safe by completely depending on our enemies: Russia and China.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Sweet Cob at Tractor Supply, April 15, 2021, $15.09 a bag.
    Sweet Cob at Tractor Supply, May 19, 2022, $22.49 a bag. An almost 50% rate of inflation in 13 months.
    Thanks, Joe. Thanks, Dems.

    ReplyDelete
  3. None of this is an accident.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Screw Big GOV, Big Pharma,

    Nurse Claire posts on the Infant Formula War.
    The link contains a recipe for homemade formula.

    https://nonvenipacem.com/2022/05/13/urgent-if-you-have-a-baby-right-now-or-you-know-someone-who-does-nurse-claire-has-solutions/

    ReplyDelete
  5. Government Inspectors. They are a joke. Other than allowing rat shit and bugs in your grain, they are incompetent. I worked for Sam Kane Meat Packing. When an incandescent light bulb would burst, we would pick the pieces off of the meat quickly so the inspectors wouldnt see it. Theres no telling how much broken glass we missed. Liver was jammed into D shaped stainless steel sleeves with pop out ends. They were worn out and the ends would pop out and spill liver on the floor of the walk-in freezer. The floor there never thawed, never was cleaned and you could see dirt in the ice. Dirt, Earth, filth from many shoes. Yep we scooped the liver up and put it back in the sleeves. We were told to add crushed ice to the hamburger to add weight.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Sitting down with --popcorn-- watching the Demented Joe show is getting expensive.

    ReplyDelete
  7. I was looking at the various countries that have banned food exports. Then i looked at the amount each of the items banned from export accounted for the global market (not including domestic production) nearly 70% of the corn global market is gone.

    Exile1981

    ReplyDelete
  8. Plan A vaccines Plan No Oil production Plan C Import soldiers also known as illegals Plan D Start War in Europe Plan E Hinder Food production Plan F Monkey Pox vaccines then next at bat will be Plan G halt ammo production followed by Plan H silence all cell phones for 10 minutes which will cause billions to seek safe spaces then finally Plan Fuck'em order given with Martial Law ordered and chips implanted during Plan A activated

    ReplyDelete
  9. According to some articles I've read, Brussels* is using the IPCC as a model for the global food distribution union.

    'Experts', the UN, the EU, will dictate how, why, when, where food is distributed. Too, the serfs may be permitted to raise some pittance of food for personal consumption. Maybe. But more than xx number of days is verboten. Unofficial barter or trade is treason aganist your masters.

    *Of course Brussels because that is where the lords of the planet are located. Beside, this is all their idea.
    National sovereignty is problematic in a global economy.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Time to shut down Brussels and Washington DC

      Delete
  10. I don't think liberals have thought the plan through very well. When all the gas, food, formula, etc. has disappeared, what people do you think the side with all the guns will taking their supplies from?

    ReplyDelete
  11. n the midst of a growing world food crisis, the Dems would rather grow corn for fuel than food. Prices adjust accordingly.

    "Another positive factor for corn prices is ethanol production, which consumes roughly 40% of the U.S. corn crop is refined into ethanol.

    “What shocks me in even though we have $8 corn and $17 soybeans, we have not seen crush margins or ethanol margins really go to the negative,” Basse says.

    Ethanol processors are still looking for bushels to buy, he says, and bidding aggressively in the cash market."

    https://www.agweb,com/markets/market-outlooks/3-reasons-corn-prices-are-staying-high

    ReplyDelete

All comments are moderated due to spam, drunks and trolls.
Keep 'em civil, coherent, short, and on topic.