Call Me Stormy

Finding righteous currents in turbulent times

Archive for the tag “JBS Meats”

Colorado Has Gone Full Woke

Angela Rose says her home state of Colorado has gone full woke. Who’s responsible?

Is it the 11,000 to 33,000 Californians who move into Colorado every year? Or how about the gay governor Jared Polis, who has proven he’s ill-tempered after allowing the jailing of Tina Peters over simply alleging ballot fraud has been occurring. We no longer need acid-proof, We know the Democrats have been cheating for half a century or more!

Meanwhile, in Greeley, Colorado, some 3,000 or so Third World migrants have gone on strike at the JBS meatpacking plant. The plant produces bout five percent of the beef sold in the United States. Over the weekend, the strikers made a concession, saying they would return to work while wage negotiations continue.

Engineered Food Scarcity

We are entering an era of engineered food scarcity and can expect political instability and quite possibly upheaval as well as a clampdown. That’s the analysis of the Ice Age Farmer Christian Westbrook, speaking here with Mike Adams of Natural News.

Westbrook says the Globalists have long been aware of the natural cycles, where the changing sun lengthens or shortens the growing season and levels of production. Now, we are seeing this knowledge exploited as a weapon to control humanity.

Three more food plant/ farm processing fires just happened around the United States, involving Cargill, JBS Meats and Nestle Hot Pockets food plants. Fires are destroying food processing plants, leading to a food supply chain collapse. More from The Economic Ninja.

The container shipping supply chain remains in the deepest crisis it has ever seen. As the massive backlog of containerships stuck outside Chinese ports is cleared to start sailing again, disruptions are rippling globally, and industry executives are warning that it will take several months to unwind the catastrophic logjam that is now forming. 

US ports are already scrambling with record volumes of cargo, a shortage of manpower, and truck drivers to deliver the goods across the nation. So if you find empty shelves again in the coming weeks – don’t be surprised.More from The Epic Economist.

Post Navigation