Anonymous ID: 0762d3 May 6, 2022, 8:04 a.m. No.16221247   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1508 >>1775 >>2013 >>2142

Food Shortages Planned in 2015

 

Simulation by Cargill in 2015 with many of the same parties as all other simulations. Clinton, Gates, Podesta, etc.

 

https://www.cargill.com/story/food-chain-reaction-simulation-ends-with-global-carbon-tax

 

Food Chain Reaction crisis simulation ends with global carbon tax

 

Climate, hunger, civil unrest and spiking food prices came together at the Food Chain Reaction game in Washington DC this week. Cooperation mostly won the day.

 

November 12, 2015

 

On Monday and Tuesday, 65 international policymakers, academics, business and thought leaders gathered at the World Wildlife Fund’s headquarters in Washington DC to game out how the world would respond to a future food crisis.

 

The game took the players from the year 2020 to 2030. As it was projected, the decade brought two major food crises, with prices approaching 400 percent of the long term average; a raft of climate-related extreme weather events; governments toppling in Pakistan and Ukraine; and famine and refugee crises in Bangladesh, Myanmar, Chad and Sudan.

 

moar…

Anonymous ID: 0762d3 May 6, 2022, 9:21 a.m. No.16221721   🗄️.is 🔗kun

REALLY????

 

This is what our government focuses on?

 

https://delawarelive.com/bill-aims-to-keep-government-hands-off-lemonade-stands/

 

House Bill 331, sponsored by Rep. Andria Bennett, D-Dover, defines the stands as ones that operate on a temporary, occasional basis, serve or sell lemonade or other beverages to others, and are located on private property with the permission of the private property owner.

 

The proposal exempts those stands from state regulations on food establishments, soft drinks and other beverages, requirements related to child labor laws and retail licensing requirements.

 

The bill also prohibits counties and municipalities from enacting laws or regulations that prohibit, regulate, require a license or permit for, or impose a fee on a stand operated by a child.

 

The bill requires a two-thirds vote in both chambers of the General Assembly because it indirectly affects the charter of municipalities in the state.

 

Bennett said she became interested in drafting the bill after talking with students at W. Reily Brown Elementary School in Dover.

 

“We worked with them and we invited them to the Legislative Hall,” Bennett said during the committee hearing. “We talked about how to put a law together…we brought up the public health issues and how public health had to be involved.”

 

After all their efforts, COVID hit and schools closed down, Bennett said. The bill was put on the backburner, but it wasn’t forgotten.

 

Many of those students are middle schoolers now, and Bennett said she still gets calls from them wondering when the bill will come up for a vote.

 

“They still feel like it’s their bill, even though it’s a different number and it’s going through a different General Assembly,” she said. “They’re the ones that created this bill.”

 

Rep. Jeff Spiegelman, R-Clayton, joked “it’s not that we soured on the bill,” but rather that COVID delayed its passage.

Anonymous ID: 0762d3 May 6, 2022, 9:29 a.m. No.16221772   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2013 >>2142

Moar Theft right under our nose…

 

https://www.delawareonline.com/story/news/2022/05/03/chesapeake-bay-restoration-238-million-spend/9618917002/

 

$238 million is the five-year total targeted for Chesapeake Bay restoration as part of the bipartisan infrastructure law, the Environmental Protection Agency announced Monday.

 

The funds, also to advance efforts to promote environmental justice and counter climate change, will help support ready-to-go projects throughout the 64,000-square-mile Chesapeake Bay watershed.

 

"This is particularly important as we confront increasing pressures on our watershed from climate change such as extreme weather events,” said Sen. Ben Cardin, D-Md. “These federal investments also get more people engaged in the Chesapeake Bay restoration efforts, which is a victory in itself. The latest federal investments provide a historic opportunity to advance on-the-ground projects.”

 

The sum of the initial $40 million includes $25 million to be administered through the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation’s Chesapeake Stewardship Fund. The remaining $15 million will be distributed to the six watershed states and the District of Columbia under the Most Effective Basins program

 

Another $7.8 million in first year funding will be used primarily for competitive grants for on-the ground restoration projects.

 

“A clean Chesapeake Bay is crucial to the success of our state's economy and the health of our environment," said Sen. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md. "That's why we fought to secure historic funding for the restoration of the Bay through both the annual government funding legislation and the infrastructure modernization law.”

 

moar…