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Growing US hunger as food banks struggle

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Food banks struggle to feed hungry Americans
14 Nov, 2021 02:13 / Updated 20 hours ago
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Food banks struggle to feed hungry Americans

Man waits to load an incoming vehicle as the Los Angeles Regional Food Bank program "Let's Feed L.A. County" distributes food, March 23, 2021. © Reuters

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Food banks across the United States are struggling to keep up with the number of Americans in need of assistance amid record inflation and the supply chain crisis, which have gripped the nation ahead of the holiday season.
The Alameda County, California Community Food Bank was forced to “make a lot of really tough choices” due to inflation and the rising costs of food, its executive director, Regi Young, told NPR on Saturday. With prices spiking for some “core food items,” such as fruit, vegetables, and canned meats, he said the bank was forced to stretch their budget “as much as possible to ensure that families in our community have the food that they need.”
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The food banks are also being crippled with transportation issues and lengthy delivery times. “Last year, we were able to get things from about two to three weeks. However, today, we have to really double that time frame,” Young said.
Growing inflation and supply hiccups are especially painful ahead of America’s upcoming holiday season, with some food banks already resorting to giving out chicken, fish, and other meats for Thanksgiving instead of the traditional turkey.
“Just to put it in perspective, last year, we did anywhere from 5,000 to 6,000 turkeys, and, this year, I have five in my freezer,” said Tracey Engel, director of Arkansas’ River Valley Regional Food Bank on Friday, adding that food deliveries are now taking “up to four months” due to the huge rise in transportation costs.
“It’s not because there’s no turkeys, it’s that the turkeys are in the wrong places at the wrong time,” an agricultural economist at Michigan State University, Trey Malone, explained to Vox earlier this week, dismissing the term “shortage.”
Seeing a rise in Americans seeking assistance over the Covid-19 pandemic, food banks are increasingly calling for more volunteers and donations to meet the heavy demand.
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Feeding America COO Katie Fitzgerald warned this week that “food insecurity” for those in need has gotten worse and that food banks across the country will be unable to absorb the costs for much longer. Fitzgerald – whose organization oversees more than 200 food banks in the US – called the shortages an “insult to injury” to struggling families who have already suffered so much over the past few years.
President Joe Biden has been widely criticized for his perceived failure to rein in the country’s inflation, with even CNN calling it a “political nightmare” for the 46th president. The cost of living in the US has risen by a two-decade record 6.2%, according to a Department of Labor October report. Goldman Sachs recently warned that inflation will “likely get worse before it gets better,” and even Biden himself admitted that the prices are too high.
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Any rational person would be appalled at US lunacy. It is a deadbeat failed state in freefall and yet spends trillions of dollars on warmongering and delusional fantasies of "global hegemony". Officially now 17% of the population is below poverty level, the real numbers are much higher as the once "middle class" as been hollowed out. The national debt is pushing $34 trillion or worse than Greece, but the idiots still maintain 800 military bases around the world and are now militarizing eastern Europe. The Zionist Jews who have a stranglehold on US policy are pushing it into an abyss.

It’s Time to Rein in Inflated Military Budgets
In an era of pandemics and climate change, we need to reconsider what “national security” means


The devastating impact of the coronavirus pandemic and its economic fallout provide ample reason to reconsider what truly constitutes national security.


Such a reassessment is long overdue. Despite the trillions of dollars Congress and successive administrations have lavished on the Pentagon since the turn of the century, the massive U.S. arsenal and fighting force deployed worldwide are powerless against grave, nonmilitary threats to national security—from a raging pandemic to the fact that tens of millions of Americans breathe foul air, drink tainted water, and struggle to pay for food, housing and health care.
 
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