https://youtu.be/hhH-vFBAyx0
Ranchers Are Selling Off Their Cattle In Unprecedented Numbers As Global
Starvation Plan Accelerates
Thousands of U.S. ranchers are being forced to sell their cattle as grass
and water supplies continue to shrink due to extreme weather conditions. A
horrific drought is devastating large swathes of the Southwest, leaving
ranchers in “panic mode” as they struggle to keep their herds alive. Many
of them are rushing to sell all their livestock because they don’t have any
other options. The situation is raising major concerns about our domestic
meat production, and it’s threatening our ability to feed ourselves in 2023
and beyond. Local reports describe that North Texas has become the
epicenter of this crisis, and thousands of ranchers are being forced to
make some really difficult decisions. Thanks to the abnormally dry weather,
there isn’t enough grass and water supplies for the herds, and ranchers
are selling off cattle by the thousands before conditions get even worse.
Typically, when extreme weather starts affecting cattle feed, ranchers
usually give them hay instead. But that’s not something they can afford to
do anymore. Prices of hay have shot up by 56% over the past year, according
to a June report from the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City. Cattle
producers are estimated to have lost money in the past two months,
according to a cost-and-return analysis from Iowa State University. In
other words, even if they can find hay for sale it has become so expensive
that it is simply not economical.  Bridgeport rancher Jarrod Montford is
one of the thousands who've had to sell his cattle due to the high costs to
keep them fed. “It’s gonna hurt and it’s gonna hurt bad,” Montford said.
“It’s a strain. And sometimes you have to sell some cattle to keep a
few." Others are deciding to sell their entire herds because they ran out
of options. In central Texas, the supply of hay is so small that many don’t
even have alternative ways to keep their cattle alive, and hot temperatures
are making ranchers fear that some of the older cattle may not survive
until the end of the season. According to Bloomberg, this means that in the
short term a flood of beef will come into the supply chain. But in the
long-term, next year’s meat supply will be compromised by a shortage of
cattle. One thing most Americans don’t think about very often is where the
meat they eat on daily basis actually comes from. And something we never
really think about is the fact that a very small number of ranchers are
responsible for feeding the entire country. But as the Texas rancher Jarrod
Montford has pointed out, we rely upon a very small sliver of the
population to feed all the rest of us. “1.6, 1.7% of the population feeds
the rest. It’s not how bad are we at the end of the day,” Monfort said. “It’s
the fact that if we don’t survive, our nation fails,” Montford emphasizes.
All of this is happening at a time when the UN is warning about the worst
global food crisis in decades.
Approximately 24 million Americans are already experiencing food
insecurity, and famines are starting to erupt all around the globe while
food supplies get tighter and tighter with each passing day. For years,
people who worked in the food industry have been raising the alarm about
this worsening situation and asking our leaders to take action to reverse
or mitigate some of these worrying trends before it was too late. But
nobody wanted to listen to what they had to say, and now, this is where we
are.At this point, if you can stock up on meat before prices go through the
roof, we advise you to do so, because meat prices won’t come back to where
they are right now for quite some time.

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