The worldwide famine accelerates, 2.4 billion do not have enough food supply, and is becoming even more constrained, and the prevalence of hunger worldwide is at a crisis level. As I write this, millions of people on the other side of the world are starving to death, yet most of us in the West do not give a hoot about their plight because it is rarely discussed in the media.
However, the truth is that our country is also suffering because of the world food shortage.
Like I said many times before, the first sign of this crisis in wealthy countries would be a spike in food prices.
A little bag of chips that used to cost me 99 cents on sale is now marked at the full price of $5.99, which I noticed when I went grocery shopping last Friday. There were several items I did not buy because I thought they would go up in price too much to justify the cost, and I am pretty sure they will not be coming back down to their original levels any time soon.
Sadly, food inflation is here to stay, and its effects will be felt worldwide. Unfortunately, most people can not wrap their minds around what is happening on a worldwide scale. The scary part is, worldwide famine accelerates at a rapid pace.
Worldwide Famine Accelerates All Across Major News Outlets
Major British media has reported that “environmental breakdown and food system failure” are imminent threats. Ten years ago, specialists had a hopeful discussion about ending world hunger forever.
However, the global population of hungry people began to rise again in 2015, and the situation has only worsened since then… The United Nations estimates that over 900 million people worldwide are experiencing “severe food insecurity” at present, which accounts for nearly 30 percent of the world’s population.
Put that in your mind for a second.
A staggering 2.4 billion people worldwide are going hungry.
This figure will rise further when food shortages spread across the world. Agricultural destruction due to natural disasters and unusual weather patterns.
For instance, several farmers in flood-ravaged parts of Vermont this month have lost all they planted…
Corn and soybean producers in the Midwest suffer catastrophic losses due to a prolonged drought. Of course, the United States is not the only country feeling the effects.
Last week, India’s historic tragedies caused tomato prices to skyrocket 400%.
Due to the continuous drought that has plagued Saskatchewan, one farmer in central Canada has yet to produce a productive crop since 2016. Regrettably, the future holds nothing but increased challenges for farmers everywhere.
In Summary
I advise you to buy up now while supplies last. I understand that current costs may seem exorbitant, but they will only increase from here on out.
Canned peaches, for example, are pretty pricey as it is, but they will become even more so in 2023 since “the Peach State” will produce almost no peaches at all.
I have written extensively on many more cases like this before. Producing food is challenging in every corner of the worldwide.
You can hope that things will “return to normal” at some point, but the reality is that this is not likely to happen.
We have at a critical inflection point, and extraordinary things are about to happen that were previously unthinkable. These are the facts.