Between food processing facilities being attacked and chickens not laying eggs, everyone is talking about the sky high cost of eggs. Eggs are a very important food in our diet. Many farmers are talking about the massively reduced lay rates of thier hens since summer which makes no sense. Something in the food? Where have we seen reproduction issues before? Who wants to "vaccinate" our food supply? Who owns vast amounts of US farmlands?
Eggs are a super food. They contain nearly every vitamin and mineral your body needs. They are also an excellent source of cholesterol. Cholesterol? Thats bad for you isn't it? This is a loaded subject. Some of the many benefits cholesterol provides is cellular repair and the production of certain hormones. One of those hormones being testosterone. The big "T". With this in mind, the "high cholesterol and low T problems" with our men today makes more sense. Dr. Burg has a channel on youtube that covers this topic in depth. The videos are a bit dry but highly informative.
Now, take into consideration that 1 egg provides about 300mg of cholesterol which supplements the 3000 that you body produces and recycles. Providing you body with a nice surplus if you are eating 4+. Up to now, eggs have been one of if not the cheapest food used to bulk up, providing an excellent source of protein and healthy fats and nearly 0 carbs.
Eggs are used in so many recipes for cooking and baking. The food industry will suffer immensely as meal prices will continue to skyrocket, the cost will turn many away from eating them on a regular basis and thereby reducing our nutritional health even further.
Some ideas to help mitigate the problem, I would like to encourage my patriotic brothers and sisters to invest in free ranging your chickens if you have the land for it. Eggs may soon be the gold bullion of food. If you are able, make plans for providing low cost or even free eggs to your family and neighbors. If you have a good community and it doesn't violate laws maybe a neighborhood chicken co-op where you would let them free range throughout the neighborhood and the whole neighborhood can collect eggs.
With everything else going on i know the high cost of eggs is going to play into the WEFs plan to get everyone eating bugs and reducing the population.
Stay awake my fellow patriots.
Yep, and as soon as that magic hour in February hits, they start again. You can hear the raucous in the barn as soon as it starts. The old ones still lay, but they quit around August, as soon as the days get shorter. I think the big operations are shutting down, which is good, I hate factory farming where it ends up just 3 or four outfits are selling to the supermarket chains. I grew up in Queens, NYC, back in the day, there were farms on Long Island, New jersey, Yonkers and north to Connecticut.They were big farms but not mega producers, like now. No one gets rich farming chickens, so a bad case if avian flu can wipe a farmer out. The big egg producers contract with "farmers", who do care and feed and house the birds, they are given an amount of money to do the caretaking, but the birds do not belong to them. Chickens are very cool animals, they are smart, and there is no restaurant anywhere that can match the taste of a home raised chicken, for meat or eggs.