Shepard Ambellas ~ Times So Tough Some Families Schedule ‘No Food Days’
Posted on October 14, 2012 by Gillian
theintelhub.com | October 13 2012
As men play with god-like powers such as weather modification, parts of the world suffer from drought and famine.
Coincidence or Not?
In some parts of the US and the world crop yields are at all time lows not seen since the 1970′s.
In fact, parts of the country have also sustained record drought levels in 2012.
SouthCoastToday.com reports;
CHICAGO — Drought damage to corn and
soybean fields in the United States, the world’s top grower and
exporter, is eroding supplies of the nation’s two largest crops to below
year-earlier consumption levels for the first time since 1974.
The government is expected to say today
that the U.S. corn harvest and inventories on Sept. 1 will be a combined
11.604 billion bushels, less than the 12.33 billion consumed and
exported last year, according to a Bloomberg survey of 31 analysts.
Soybean supplies will be 2.932 billion bushels, below the 3.157 billion used in 2011.
Supplies failed to top usage from the
previous year only twice since 1960 for corn and five times for
soybeans, U.S. Department of Agriculture data show.
Record heat in June and July sparked the worst drought since 1956, sending corn and soybeans prices to record highs.
Morgan Stanley predicted corn may rally 35 percent in a year, while Barclays Plc sees soybeans gaining 16 percent.
Higher costs for dairies, grain
processors and livestock producers helped send global food prices in
September to the highest since March, United Nations data show.
Our Planet is Being Terraformed
Although technology has allowed men to posses god-like powers, most are not mature or sane enough to use them.
Bilderberg member and globalist adviser Henry Kissinger, in his now
infamous National Security Study Memorandum 200 white paper, detailed
how food shortages, drought, and famine would affect the population
globally in years to come.
Now declassified this study has since unfolded literally right before our eyes.
Was Kissinger a visionary, or was he significant in forming a blueprint for a sinister global depopulation agenda?
Are more food shortages to come?
Kurt Nimmo wrote:
In an article posted on the Hindustan Times website, N. Chandra Mohan cites
Mark Thirwell, Director of the International Economy Program at the
Lowy Institute for International Policy in Sydney, Australia.
“This is not the first time in modern
economic history that the Malthusian spectre of global food shortages
has stalked the world economy,” writes Thirwell.
“Surges in food prices in the
1970s and then again in the mid-1990s both prompted warnings that
agricultural capacity was failing to keep pace with a growing world
population. Each time the prices jumped, it proved to be temporary as
supply responded.”
Mr. Mohan believes, this time around,
there will be no supply ready to respond. He links this dire situation
to “policy neglect of agriculture” and “climate and environmental
degradation.”
Thirwell essentially concurs with Kissinger’s memo.
Now, here in 2012, things have spiraled down to a whole new level as
some families are holding out on eating 1 day a week due to economic and
or food related hardships.
An Independent article excerpt reads:
World grain prices have risen so high
that families in poorer countries are being forced to schedule
“food-free days” each week, according to one of the leading experts on
global agriculture.
The extreme rationing is an “an
unprecedented manifestation of food stress,” according to Lester Brown,
president of the Washington-based Earth Policy Institute, and the most
respected environmental observer of food and agricultural trends.
While regional food shortages are far
from uncommon, the sheer number of people in the developing world who
can no longer afford to eat every day has appalled humanitarian workers.
“We have not seen this before, where a
family systematically schedules days where they do not eat, when they
know they can’t buy enough every day so they decide at the beginning of
the week, this week we won’t eat on Wednesday or we won’t eat on
Saturday,” Mr Brown said yesterday.
Shepard Ambellas is the founder & director of theintelhub.com (a popular alternative news website), researcher, investigative journalist, radio talk show host, and filmmaker.
Related articles
Posted on October 14, 2012 by Gillian
theintelhub.com | October 13 2012
As men play with god-like powers such as weather modification, parts of the world suffer from drought and famine.
Coincidence or Not?
In some parts of the US and the world crop yields are at all time lows not seen since the 1970′s.
In fact, parts of the country have also sustained record drought levels in 2012.
SouthCoastToday.com reports;
CHICAGO — Drought damage to corn and
soybean fields in the United States, the world’s top grower and
exporter, is eroding supplies of the nation’s two largest crops to below
year-earlier consumption levels for the first time since 1974.
The government is expected to say today
that the U.S. corn harvest and inventories on Sept. 1 will be a combined
11.604 billion bushels, less than the 12.33 billion consumed and
exported last year, according to a Bloomberg survey of 31 analysts.
Soybean supplies will be 2.932 billion bushels, below the 3.157 billion used in 2011.
Supplies failed to top usage from the
previous year only twice since 1960 for corn and five times for
soybeans, U.S. Department of Agriculture data show.
Record heat in June and July sparked the worst drought since 1956, sending corn and soybeans prices to record highs.
Morgan Stanley predicted corn may rally 35 percent in a year, while Barclays Plc sees soybeans gaining 16 percent.
Higher costs for dairies, grain
processors and livestock producers helped send global food prices in
September to the highest since March, United Nations data show.
Our Planet is Being Terraformed
Although technology has allowed men to posses god-like powers, most are not mature or sane enough to use them.
Bilderberg member and globalist adviser Henry Kissinger, in his now
infamous National Security Study Memorandum 200 white paper, detailed
how food shortages, drought, and famine would affect the population
globally in years to come.
Now declassified this study has since unfolded literally right before our eyes.
Was Kissinger a visionary, or was he significant in forming a blueprint for a sinister global depopulation agenda?
Are more food shortages to come?
Kurt Nimmo wrote:
In an article posted on the Hindustan Times website, N. Chandra Mohan cites
Mark Thirwell, Director of the International Economy Program at the
Lowy Institute for International Policy in Sydney, Australia.
“This is not the first time in modern
economic history that the Malthusian spectre of global food shortages
has stalked the world economy,” writes Thirwell.
“Surges in food prices in the
1970s and then again in the mid-1990s both prompted warnings that
agricultural capacity was failing to keep pace with a growing world
population. Each time the prices jumped, it proved to be temporary as
supply responded.”
Mr. Mohan believes, this time around,
there will be no supply ready to respond. He links this dire situation
to “policy neglect of agriculture” and “climate and environmental
degradation.”
Thirwell essentially concurs with Kissinger’s memo.
Now, here in 2012, things have spiraled down to a whole new level as
some families are holding out on eating 1 day a week due to economic and
or food related hardships.
An Independent article excerpt reads:
World grain prices have risen so high
that families in poorer countries are being forced to schedule
“food-free days” each week, according to one of the leading experts on
global agriculture.
The extreme rationing is an “an
unprecedented manifestation of food stress,” according to Lester Brown,
president of the Washington-based Earth Policy Institute, and the most
respected environmental observer of food and agricultural trends.
While regional food shortages are far
from uncommon, the sheer number of people in the developing world who
can no longer afford to eat every day has appalled humanitarian workers.
“We have not seen this before, where a
family systematically schedules days where they do not eat, when they
know they can’t buy enough every day so they decide at the beginning of
the week, this week we won’t eat on Wednesday or we won’t eat on
Saturday,” Mr Brown said yesterday.
Shepard Ambellas is the founder & director of theintelhub.com (a popular alternative news website), researcher, investigative journalist, radio talk show host, and filmmaker.
Related articles
- Global wheat and corn stocks to fall in 2013, says US government (guardian.co.uk)
- Worries grow as drought lingers (AUDIO) (nebraskaradionetwork.com)
- Corn, soybean prices soar on USDA production, yield report (thegazette.com)