Food bank only had raisins. My food stamps were cut by two thirds. Inflation is way up. Specific shortages. I asked some people around me and they’re also struggling. No emergency announcements. Feels like a cover up. I heard US shale oil is peaking. All this and I live in the central valley of California, ag central. I should have food easily, instead it’s a struggle.
Are you near Fresno? If so, you can always get a free meal over at the Poverello house. You can also get a food bag. https://poverellohouse.org/what-we-do/food/emergency-food-bags
I used to volunteer over there. Great place.
As far as prices go, you can get a big 25 pound of rice/beans for less than 20$ over at Winco. Back when covid happened it lasted my wife and I about a year on both. It gets boring, but it works.
Yeah around there. I’ll check it out.
if you can find a local restaurant supply store they also have the huge cheap as shit bags of rice and beans
I mostly shop at Costco and am not struggling so maybe my perspective is skewed but it seems like food prices have been coming down recently, and I haven’t noticed any shortages. If you think it feels like things are being covered up that sounds a little paranoid and conspiratorial to me, food distribution in the US is a huge and complicated system involving a whole lot of people, it seems completely implausible that a cover up of a major food crisis would even be possible. There’s just too many people who would notice (and there isn’t any kind of centralized hierarchy involved that could pull something like that off). I don’t see the relevance of shale oil production, the US produces plenty of oil to be both self sufficient and one of the largest oil exporters in the world. If you’re concerned the US doesn’t have enough oil or something like that you really shouldn’t be.
What do you mean you don’t see the relevance of shale oil production?
How did the price of oil affect the raisins in the shelf? Why relate the two?
Agriculture depends heavily on oil.
Dude you need more than that, the availability of labour affects agriculture too would it be fair to claik thensupposed food shortage is related to excess desths due to covid.
What are you talking about? It’s a major factor. I didn’t say it was the only factor.
How is it creating a food shortage? It would be a factor in a price increase not a shortage.
Everything is connected.
I mean I don’t see how it has anything to do with allegations of a secret food crisis, it seems like a non sequitur.
Literally agriculture depends heavily on oil.
It’s a lot more complicated than that. Even if we accept a simplified model where “more oil = more agriculture”, the US has seen massive growth in oil production over the past decade so it contradicts the claim that there’s food shortages because of oil production. If there are food shortages happening right now it’s not at all related to oil production in the US.
I’m referring to shale oil peaking. That’s the only reason oil production has increased in the United States recently - shale oil production increasing massively over the last decade. I saw something that seemed to indicate the US shale oil peaking which would be a major factor in food production going forward and may have spooked the markets and thereby disrupted supply chains. What do you think I mean by ‘factor’ or ‘depends heavily on’? When someone is brainstorming it’s common courtesy not to get all dismissive and degrading, also basic decency.
Food prices have been high for a while and it’s probably tough for donations. We are looking at a 30% higher cost of groceries compared to 5 years ago with some items up to 50%. I think the main reason for the cost is corporate greed. If you have an Aldi nearby it’s probably the best place to shop on a budget.
Where are you?
My dad is retired and volunteers at a food bank. They had to cut the number of bags of groceries during the pandemic but it’s since bounced back.
I’m 100% sure this is regional though, so it obvs doesn’t represent your area. Where are you at, roughly?
Sorry to hear about your struggle. Food costs are up.
U.S. BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS - Division of Consumer Prices and Price Indexes
Looks like:
- fast food outpaced everything
- $10 worth of groceries in May 2023 cost $10.10 in May 2024… seem like more? :)
Prices have been going down around here.
Please withhold all complaints until after November 5th. Thank you for your cooperation in Saving Democracy.
If I don’t starve before then.
Oh cheer up already. All you have to do is guess who the king is. Really making a big deal out of this.
There is a broader crisis at work you should really be aware of. Watch ‘Collapse’. It’s a great documentary centered on the work of sustainability activist Michael Ruppert that gets into this.