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America’s capacity to feed itself is under unprecedented strain. Florida’s orange production has collapsed by 95 percent from its 1996 peak, the national cattle herd has shrunk to its smallest size since 1951 despite a population more than double that of the early postwar years, and severe drought across the Southern Plains is suffocating the wheat crop that supplies much of the nation’s flour. These are not isolated setbacks. They form a pattern of vulnerability that policymakers and the public ignore at their peril.
Once-symbolic industries that helped define American abundance now signal fragility. Florida’s citrus groves, long a source of national pride and economic vitality, face near-total erosion. Ranchers have liquidated herds amid persistent dry conditions and soaring costs. Wheat fields that should yield the staff of life stand parched and stunted. The question is no longer whether food prices will rise, but how sharply and for how long—and whether the underlying productive base can recover before broader consequences set in.
Read More: https://discern.tv/floridas-oranges-americas-beef-and-winter-wheat-are-harbingers-of-coming-food-shortages/
See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
By JD RuckerAmerica’s capacity to feed itself is under unprecedented strain. Florida’s orange production has collapsed by 95 percent from its 1996 peak, the national cattle herd has shrunk to its smallest size since 1951 despite a population more than double that of the early postwar years, and severe drought across the Southern Plains is suffocating the wheat crop that supplies much of the nation’s flour. These are not isolated setbacks. They form a pattern of vulnerability that policymakers and the public ignore at their peril.
Once-symbolic industries that helped define American abundance now signal fragility. Florida’s citrus groves, long a source of national pride and economic vitality, face near-total erosion. Ranchers have liquidated herds amid persistent dry conditions and soaring costs. Wheat fields that should yield the staff of life stand parched and stunted. The question is no longer whether food prices will rise, but how sharply and for how long—and whether the underlying productive base can recover before broader consequences set in.
Read More: https://discern.tv/floridas-oranges-americas-beef-and-winter-wheat-are-harbingers-of-coming-food-shortages/
See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.