USA - Water recedes near Lone Rock Beach, a popular recreational area that used to be underwater, at Lake Powell. The nation's second largest reservoir has fallen to the lowest levels on record since the lake was created by damming the Colorado River in the 1960s. Growing demand for water and climate change are shrinking the Colorado River, endangering a water source that millions of Americans depend on. Banks along parts of the Colorado River where water once streamed are now just caked mud and rock... “The challenges we are seeing today are unlike anything we have seen in our history,” Camille Touton, the bureau’s commissioner, said at a US Senate hearing. The Colorado River cascades from the Rocky Mountains into the arid deserts of the Southwest. It’s the primary water supply for 40 million people. About 70% of its water goes toward irrigation, sustaining a $15 billion-a-year agricultural industry that supplies 90% of the United States’ winter vegetables.
USA - As escalating tensions among the United States, Russia and China revive old fears of nuclear war, some researchers are warning that even a limited-scale exchange between such nations as India and Pakistan could have catastrophic consequences for global food supplies and trigger mass death worldwide. A nuclear conflict involving less than 3% of the world’s stockpiles could kill a third of the world’s population within two years, according to a new international study led by scientists at Rutgers University.
USA - You may not care too much about what is going on in California right now, but you should. The worst drought in 1,200 years is absolutely devastating the production of fruits and vegetables in the state, and that is really bad news for all of us. In particular, we are being warned that tomato production is likely to be way below expectations this year. But if California doesn’t grow enough tomatoes, there won’t be enough spaghetti sauce, pizza sauce or tomato paste to go around in 2023. And there will be a whole lot of really cranky people out there if that were to happen. I really wish that more people would take this crisis seriously. If farmers do not grow our food, we do not eat. We need them to be successful, and right now they are repeatedly telling us that we are facing a scenario that we have never faced before. Our country and our entire world are both changing at a pace that is absolutely breathtaking, and we are moving into a future that is going to be exceedingly challenging.
UK - Shoppers were shocked to find Christmas decorations on the shelves of a garden centre – even though the big day is still 131 days away. Baubles, tree ornaments and wreaths now welcome customers at Summerhill Garden Centre in Billericay, Essex. Customer Ila Frankes, 48, told the Southend Echo that she travels from Romford every year for their famed selection, and that 'it is never too early' to get into the festive spirit. 'More places should have Christmas decorations available from August… there are so many people like me who like to start early,' she added.
USA - US cotton prices continued to surge above the boom days of 2010-11 after a massive crop estimate cut by the USDA, shocking Wall Street analysts and traders, due primarily to a megadrought scorching farmland of Texas, according to Bloomberg. Futures in New York for December delivery were up 4.5% to $1.1359 a pound and up more than 21% this month. "I don't think you can put a top on prices right now," Louis Barbera, the managing partner for VLM Commodities, told Bloomberg. "I have been going to Texas for more than ten years, and this is by far the absolute worst I have ever seen, said Barbera. Last Friday, the USDA's bigger-than-expected cut to domestic cotton crop stunned many on Wall Street. Crop output plunged to 12.57 million bales, the lowest in a decade. The cut also pushed down the US from the world's third-largest producer to the world's fourth. Barbera said the western Texas region (around Lubbock and Lamesa), the epicenter of America's cotton-growing belt, has "literally nothing" in fields that are just desert sand. He said fields that had drip irrigation were harvestable, but ones that weren't weren't salvageable.
USA - Joe Biden has signed a $430 billion bill into law in what is considered the biggest climate package in US history. The bill is designed to cut domestic greenhouse gas emissions as well as lowering prescription drug prices and higher inflation. At a White House event to celebrate the signing of the bill, the 46th US President was joined by Democratic leaders whose support was crucial in passing the Inflation Reduction Act. The legislation will allow the federal health insurance programme Medicare to negotiate lower drug prices for the elderly. It will also ensure that corporations and the wealthy will pay the taxes that they owe. Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell criticised the bill arguing that it would make inflation worse. "The partisan bill President Biden signed into law today means higher taxes, higher energy bills, and aggressive IRS audits."
UK - Furious farmers have hit out at crops going to waste on UK farms as a labour shortage continues throughout the UK. The National Farmers’ Union has said crop losses have occurred thanks to a lack of workers due to high employment levels across the UK, with workers being able to access higher pay and better job security elsewhere. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has also disrupted worker flow, as Ukraine usually provides a large proportion of the UK’s harvest workers. Tom Bradshaw, the union’s deputy president, said: “It’s nothing short of a travesty that quality, nutritious food is being wasted at a time when families across the country are already struggling to make ends meet because of soaring living costs."
UK - A farmer is giving away more than 140,000 onions after the summer heatwave has stopped them from being sold in supermarkets. Tim Young has invited anyone to help themselves to some of the 40 tonnes worth of onions in order to stop his crop from going to waste, which was damaged by soaring temperatures and downy mildew. This comes as Brits are being encouraged to 'pull together' and buy 'wonky' vegetables due to the ongoing drought damaging farmer's produce and destroying harvests. Mr Young said: 'It seemed such a waste to plough them back into the field, especially when there is the cost of living crisis at the moment. The National Famers' Union has said shoppers must be willing to buy vegetables which has not met the high standards of supermarkets, such as not being the shape and size."
USA - Instagram and Facebook apps track what people do when browsing third-party websites without their consent, privacy researcher Felix Krause has warned. Krause, a former Google engineer, wrote on a blogpost on Wednesday that the iOS app injects codes into every website shown and uses “a custom in-app browser” instead of the built-in Safari to monitor users’ activity. The app does so “without the consent from the user, nor the website provider,” Krause wrote. The researcher said that he could not determine the exact data Instagram is tracking but stressed that such in-app browsers allow everything a user does on a website to be tracked, including “every tap” and “scrolling behavior.” He added that such browsers could be exploited to steal sensitive data, such as home addresses. In a statement to The Guardian on Thursday, Instagram’s parent company Meta said that injecting a tracking code was in accordance with users’ preferences on whether or not they allowed apps to follow them.
GERMANY - The German Air Force, known as the Luftwaffe, is heading Down Under for the first time and will join Exercise Pitch Black 2022 across the skies of northern Australia in coming days. The Luftwaffe will send more than 200 personnel, six Eurofighter Typhoons, three A330 Multi-Role Tanker Transports and an A400M transport aircraft. The assignment is part of a German government plan to lift engagement in the increasingly troubled Indo-Pacific region. Chief of the German Air Force Lieutenant General Ingo Gerhartz said German and Australian air forces have never trained together before, according to the Australian Defence Force (ADF). “The Indo-Pacific is of great importance to Germany. We share the same values with many partners in this region,” Lieutenant General Gerhartz said. “Defending those values in case of a war emergency and being able to support our partners is something that needs to be practised.”
USA - The Fed is doing something it’s never been allowed to do in its 109 years of operation. And, it’s doing it without any pushback from Congress. The Fed draws its statutory authority from the Federal Reserve Act of 1913 which created the Fed’s “discount window” for making loans to Fed member banks which are engaged in making loans for “agricultural, industrial or commercial purposes….” The Federal Reserve Act strictly prohibited the Fed from making loans “for the purpose of carrying or trading in stocks, bonds, or other investment securities….”
USA - The endgame is total control of the slaves with a cash-free system. Those at the top will fully control a central bank digital currency or CBDC, and once they roll it out, it’s game over for the slave class. Executive Order 14067 signed by Joe Biden gives the ruling class the power to create CBDCs, distribute them at will, take them from you when they want, and just shut it off if you do something they don’t like. Famous Author of the book Rich Dad, Poor Dad, Robert Kiyosaki has called this executive order “communism in its purest form,” encouraging Americans to “stay awake.” But this is beyond communism. This is permanent and overt slavery. They are no longer hiding it. We are not free and they intend to make it permanent. It would behoove everyone to listen up and stand together to oppose this and refuse to participate. Choosing the CBDC is literally choosing to be slaves. Before, we were lied to and propaganda was used to make sure we thought we were free. This is overt, and in our faces now.
GERMANY - Price explosions: German supermarkets attach anti-theft devices to staple foods. Food items have been secured with anti-theft devices based on the Anglo-Saxon multicultural model as the first German citizens seem to be driven to acts of desperation in view of the price explosions. This does not affect high-priced items such as champagne, but staple foods. Are these now becoming luxuries? Inflation is causing food prices to skyrocket, and further price increases are forecast for the next three months. This was the result of a survey by the ifo Institute, as reported by ARD. More and more people can no longer afford these horrendous prices and are driven to desperate acts with the number of thefts increasing. Supermarkets have been taking countermeasures – with anti-theft devices. A supermarket in Berlin-Weißensee has now attached security markings to some types of meat – yellow stickers with the inscription “Secured article”. How could things have gotten so bad in Germany, which is said to be so rich, that people are forced to steal the food they need because they can no longer pay for it?
UK - Households should pack 'grab bags' containing mobile phones, insurance documents and emergency cash the Met Office has said, as an 'incredible deluge' will see three million homes at risk of flooding this week. Britain was hammered by heavy rain and storms yesterday – bringing a turbulent end to one of the driest heatwaves on record. Families braced themselves for traffic chaos and power cuts as forecasters warned of dangerous flash floods. And local authorities told people to prepare an emergency bag of vital belongings in case their homes are damaged by deluges. However experts warned that the drought is far from over as the country needs weeks of rainfall to replenish supplies. It comes after the country's driest July on record and the driest first half of the year since 1976.
USA - Two people are dead after heavy rain poured into Las Vegas casinos and flooded streets Thursday night in the wettest monsoon season in a decade, according to Clark County officials. Officers with the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department and Clark County Fire Department firefighters located and then removed a man in a flood channel on Thursday night. He was taken in an ambulance to the University Medical Center of Southern Nevada where he later died, according to Clark County Deputy Fire Chief Billy Samuels. In Nevada, the "exceptional drought" area dropped to 4% from nearly 30% over the prior week - its lowest point in nearly two years, the report said. Conditions worsened in California's Central Valley but improved some in the eastern deserts after the notable rains brought flooding last week to Death Valley.
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