That is all.
EDIT: Boy, did this get lively. And we have a new term here: "Mom shaming."
Interesting how all these people interpret the question in the title their own way, one that has nothing to do with this simple question, nor its intent.
Is all the formula sold for babies whose mothers can't breastfeed? No. Has baby formula been around the 150,000 years that Homo sapiens has been around? No. There's a fundamental problem here.
We humans need to be free. Free from large corporations. Free from government. If babies are dependent on large corporations and "supply chains," there is something seriously wrong.
The globalists created a fake "women's rights" movement to get women out of the home into fake careers so they could control and tax them. It is at that point that so many children stopped being breastfed. For 150,000 years it was totally normal for mothers to breastfeed their babies, then suddenly not? Seriously question this.
So then a manufactured shortage of baby formula causes complete chaos.
You are being manipulated, folks.
Some mothers physically cannot breastfeed. Is the answer to that to make those mothers dependent on corporate supply chains? Isn't there a better way to handle this? Shouldn't this be something produced on a household or local level?
Lots of the discussion below sounds like a pack of Wokes. It is based on emotion, not logical thought. Playing victim is never the answer. Finding practical, local solutions not dependent on the globalists is.
Here is a quote from the comments: "It's pretty easy for a man or non-mother woman to talk about breasts." Why does this writer assume that's who is writing this post? And "Mom shaming"?
Frankly no. I did not have a situation that allowed me to do so. Try working in the tech field a traditionally men's job in the 80s and 90s when I had my three. What they had was a woman who knew what I was going to do. Oh and your last sentence is bull. Woman have to stop believing that they can't! And just do. Lose your job or a husband? There are always more of each. And do not claim being single because I've been a single working mom more than once. Divorce and death. Being married has nothing to do with it.
Then maybe you’re misinterpreting what my prior 2 posts actually meant?
It seems based on your replies to me you’ve assumed my message and responded out of emotion in ways that seem largely to actually support and extend what my actual intended message was.
Allow me to clarify: not all women are able to breast feed for a variety of reasons, including medical, situational and economic to name a few. To the original post I responded to, the reply aimed to spotlight how without having lived the life of another it is foolish and arrogant in the extreme to expect another to make the same choices as one may imagine themselves to have chose.