Just a note - There's a difference between 'destroyed' (which is in the headline of the OP and the GWP article) vs. 'damaged part of a plant.' As some of these articles have been coming out over the past months, I looked at each of them to determine if it was total disruption of the supply, for good, or else a setback which could be repaired and back online within a reasonable period of time. WE don't know how much industrial sabotage goes on (internally or by competitors) in a 'normal' year. And with the economy headed south, lots of companies are looking for wounded targets for M&A talks. (spez: I'm seeing a lot of this stuff (merger talks/sales) happening in our state's restaurant sector right now, esp because smaller restaurants unable to staff adequately).
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I found this (the map is at the bottom of the article):
https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2022/06/interactive-map-details-destruction-numerous-us-food-manufacturing-plants-compares-us-incidents-global-trends/
Just a note - There's a difference between 'destroyed' (which is in the headline of the OP and the GWP article) vs. 'damaged part of a plant.' As some of these articles have been coming out over the past months, I looked at each of them to determine if it was total disruption of the supply, for good, or else a setback which could be repaired and back online within a reasonable period of time. WE don't know how much industrial sabotage goes on (internally or by competitors) in a 'normal' year. And with the economy headed south, lots of companies are looking for wounded targets for M&A talks. (spez: I'm seeing a lot of this stuff (merger talks/sales) happening in our state's restaurant sector right now, esp because smaller restaurants unable to staff adequately). .'