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No U.S. Wheat In Storage

Mike

Well-known member
Government Holdings of Wheat are at Zero
KDVR | 7/23/09 | Benjamin Gisin


IDAHO FALLS, ID - Quietly, the last of the U.S. government's wheat reserves, held in the Bill Emerson Humanitarian Trust, were sold in late May onto the domestic market for cash. The cash was put in a trust for food aid. With no other government wheat holdings, U.S. government wheat stocks are now totally exhausted.


(Excerpt) Read more at kdvr.biz ...
 
A

Anonymous

Guest
Mike said:
Government Holdings of Wheat are at Zero
KDVR | 7/23/09 | Benjamin Gisin


IDAHO FALLS, ID - Quietly, the last of the U.S. government's wheat reserves, held in the Bill Emerson Humanitarian Trust, were sold in late May onto the domestic market for cash. The cash was put in a trust for food aid. With no other government wheat holdings, U.S. government wheat stocks are now totally exhausted.


(Excerpt) Read more at kdvr.biz ...

Mike I look for other commodities to be in short supply pretty quick. The population of the world has reached a point that the world and earth can no longer support them. Some will have to starve to make things come back in line. Birth control around the world needs to be implemented now. A decrease in population will also help the so called gobal warming. I read an article by some wall street analist a few days ago. He thought by 2050 the economywould be totally gone. The people of the world would be regulated to subsistence farming to survive. If I can find the article I will try to post it.
 

burnt

Well-known member
hurleyjd said:
Mike said:
Government Holdings of Wheat are at Zero
KDVR | 7/23/09 | Benjamin Gisin


IDAHO FALLS, ID - Quietly, the last of the U.S. government's wheat reserves, held in the Bill Emerson Humanitarian Trust, were sold in late May onto the domestic market for cash. The cash was put in a trust for food aid. With no other government wheat holdings, U.S. government wheat stocks are now totally exhausted.


(Excerpt) Read more at kdvr.biz ...

Mike I look for other commodities to be in short supply pretty quick. The population of the world has reached a point that the world and earth can no longer support them. Some will have to starve to make things come back in line. Birth control around the world needs to be implemented now. A decrease in population will also help the so called gobal warming. I read an article by some wall street analist a few days ago. He thought by 2050 the economywould be totally gone. The people of the world would be regulated to subsistence farming to survive. If I can find the article I will try to post it.

Gee it sounds so bad I think we should all have a group hug and pull a Jimmy Jones move.

surely hurley, you jest!! Your entire post is based on sensationalist propaganda, 5-cents-a-copy opinion writers and tabloid crap. If Lester Brown still breathes, I doubt that he has a pulse so his voice is hardly audible. More of a death rattle!!

There have always been those who get a morbid thrill out of spewing out dire predictions. And there have always been those who love to be morbidly thrilled by them.

There are countless ways that the world's food supply can be increased and, before you panic and chain yourself to a tree, without cold-bloodedly SLASHING more rainforest!!!

Why not start by putting some of the world's best productive land back into production for example, Zimbabwe's farmland? That would take some changes in political will, of course.

This fatalistic view you present is a not-so-subtle form of nihilism that accompanies or results from an improper perception of both human and divine value. Look up, man, it's much better than you think!!
 
A

Anonymous

Guest
Wouldn't it be great if this was true- and that wheat/grain farmers could make a true profit....

Makes me wonder tho- when wheat is trading at under $6 a bushel locally tops- and most is around $5 a bushel- (almost 1/2 price of last year)- and corn prices keep dropping- with the folks in the midwest telling me its the biggest corn crop in years... Talked to a couple local feeders/buyers the other day that said they weren't buying any hay until they saw how low corn/grain crop prices fell.....
 
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