Record Global Food Prices Expected To Soar Even Higher!
- The global elites use food as a weapon, ie. as a means of depopulation and conquering destitute countries using the pretext of humanitarian aid. This is a deliberate Illuminist plan.
To cause by means of limited wars in the advanced countries, by means of starvation and diseases in the Third World countries, the death of three billion people by the year 2050, people they call “useless eaters”. The Committee of 300 (Illuminati) commissioned Cyrus Vance to write a paper on this subject of how to bring about such genocide. The paper was produced under the title “Global 2000 Report” and was accepted and approved for action by former President James Earl Carter, and Edwin Muskie, then Secretary of States, for and on behalf of the US Government. Under the terms of the Global 2000 Report, the population of the US is to be reduced by 100 million by the year of 2050. Targets of the Illuminati and the Committee of 300 By Dr. John Coleman
WORLD DEPOPULATION IS TOP NSA AGENDA – CLUB OF ROME
Investigations by EIR have uncovered a planning apparatus operating outside the control of the White House whose sole purpose is to reduce the world’s population by 2 billion people through war, famine, disease and any other means necessary. … This group drafted the Carter administration’s Global 2000 document, which calls for global population reduction .. The Haig-Kissinger Depopulation Policy -Lonnie Wolfe
“We are going to get Global 2000 implemented, one way or another by famine, starvation, or by choice…We need a real economic shock, a depression to get our message across.”
–Statement of a Zero Population Growth spokesman (9/18/81), GLOBAL 2000 – Depopulation Program
- Commodity prices will rise spectacularly because Illuminist banksters are behind it to make money and screw the world !
Record global food prices expected to soar even higher
Global food prices rose to a record high in December and are expected to climb even further, topping 2008 levels when riots broke out in a number of countries, the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation warned Wednesday.
REUTERS – Food prices hit a record high last month, outstripping levels that prompted riots in 2008, and key grains could climb even further as weather patterns give cause for concern, the UN’s food agency said on Wednesday. Its measure of global monthly price changes for a food basket of cereals, oilseeds, dairy, meat and sugar reached its highest since records began in 1990, topping levels in 2008 when a food crisis sparked riots in some countries.
A mix of high oil and fuel prices, growing use of biofuels, bad weather and soaring futures markets pushed up prices of food in 2007/08, sparking violent protests in countries including Egypt, Cameroon and Haiti. UN Food and Agriculture Organisation economist Abdolreza Abbassian told Reuters the FAO was worried by the unpredictability of current weather activity, given the already high price levels and low supply of some grains.
“There is still room for prices to go up much higher, if for example the dry conditions in Argentina tend to become a drought, and if we start having problems with winterkill in the northern hemisphere for the wheat crops,” he said. Winterkill occurs when cold attacks plants seeded, generally in the autumn, for harvesting the following year.
Abbassian added that despite high prices, many factors that triggered the sometimes deadly food riots in 2008, such as weak output in poor countries and a sudden surge in crude oil prices, were not currently present, reducing the risk of more turmoil. Last September 13 people were killed in Mozambique in riots which followed a 30 percent bread price rise sparked by the leap in global wheat prices.
Prices of grains surged in 2010, with wheat buoyed by a series of weather events including drought in Russia and its Black Sea neighbours. European wheat prices doubled, U.S. corn rose more than 50 percent while U.S. soybeans jumped 34 percent.
Low stocks of grains such as corn mean that more weather-related damage to crops could be critical for markets. China in particular has a huge appetite for corn and is keen to secure adequate stocks of the grain.
Inflation
“The fundamentals of the corn market are clearly the tightest ones,” said Societe Generale analyst Emmanuel Jayet. “It’s the grain where stocks are already very low and where there are questions about a further drop to historically low levels,” he said, adding that he also expected soybeans and wheat prices could rise on a fall in supplies.
Pinpointing soybeans, Jeffrey Currie, Global Head of Commodities for Goldman Sachs said the protein-rich beans were a more attractive investment than wheat due to greater potential demand growth and limited supply. Crude oil prices have also crept higher on a resurgence in global demand, which has raised concern of a double burden of high food and energy prices particularly for developing countries with import needs, Abbassian said.
“That’s when people have problems because of inflation. Fast-growth developing countries are more vulnerable,” he said, mentioning India and China. But he did not see the oil price buoying grains and oilseeds markets to the extent it did in 2007/08, because it had not seen such a drastic and sudden surge and because the biofuels industry is no longer growing as rapidly.
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[...] weeks ago, the Food and Agricultural Organization of the UN announced that food prices had reached record levels – higher even than those of 2008. At the same time, the price of oil is creeping back to $100 per [...]
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