A Crisis You Probably Never Knew Existed!

I came across this in my reading yesterday: Hormel Foods is once again sponsoring what it calls the “10 Under 20 Food Heroes Awards” to honor young people working in the fight against “food insecurity.”

What is food insecurity?

The US Dept. of Agriculture’s definition is “a household-level economic and social condition of limited or uncertain access to adequate food.”

I wasn’t sure what that meant, so I went on a little Google search. I found nothing that helped me understand it any better, but I did discover that, apparently, it’s a huge crisis.

According to Feeding America, one of more than a dozen non-profit, fund-raising businesses that are enjoying the growth of this crisis, “nearly 40 million Americans, including 12 million children, faced food insecurity in 2020.”

Did you know that?

I didn’t. Nor did I know that “food insecurity can have a seriously bad impact on people that experience it.” For example, they say that…

* Food insecurity can cause serious health issues when people must choose between spending money on food and medicine or healthcare.

* Food insecurity can make it more difficult for a child to learn and grow.

* Food insecurity can lead to difficult decisions, like choosing between food and rent, bills, and transportation.

I know what you may be thinking: “Really? In America? I thought the food problem here is that so many Americans are too fat!”

Well, yes. That is true. The data (from the FDA as well as other government sources) indicate that 20% of America’s children and 30% of its adult population are obese. Another 30% of adults are just fat – too fat, in fact, to be eligible for basic training. And the lower the family income, the more likely it is that family members will be fat or obese.

So then, if you were heartless, you might wonder whether the Food Insecurity Industry’s efforts to get more food to our low-income people is the right thing to do. Because if lack of food was the problem, wouldn’t all those tens of millions of “food-insecure” people in America be skinny? Like the photos we see now and then of adults and children in third-world countries?

No. In America – and the rest of the developed world – we have the opposite problem. So, clearly, it’s not because they need more food.

Starvation and undernourishment (when people are not able to consume enough calories to sustain health) are problems that do exist. They are much less common than many people think, but they exist, usually on a temporary basis, in third-world countries suffering from famine or war.

But in America, we have neither starvation nor undernourishment. We have malnutrition caused by eating too much of foods that make you fat and sick.

Countless studies have shown that when your diet is heavy in carbohydrates and processed foods, all sorts of unhealthy things happen. One, for example, is that your insulin spikes. And when insulin spikes, you experience (an hour or two later) a craving for more junk.

In other words, low-income Americans do not suffer from not eating enough. They suffer from eating too much of the wrong foods.

And the Food Insecurity Industry is telling us it’s a crisis. If they were to say, “In America we have a crisis of Americans eating too much junk food and being fat,” I would agree. But they won’t say that because then how could they justify the billions of dollars they raise each year to “solve” that problem?

It would be a hard sell, because we all know how to solve the problem of being fat. We don’t need a thriving industry, funded by taxpayers, to figure it out.

They say a picture is worth a thousand words. Here are four that may help.

This is what starvation looks like:

 

This is what undernourishment looks like:

 

This is what malnutrition looks like:

 

This is what food insecurity looks like:

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“Did You Write That?” 

Mustafa Taher Kasubhai, US District Judge nominee for the District of Oregon, at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing last week 

Over the past several years, I’ve watched dozens of Congressional and Senate interviews of people nominated for important government positions. They are generally Biden nominees, and the interviews all seem to follow the same plotline.

First, the Democrat representatives toss the nominees softball questions, allowing them to strut their credentials. Then, the Republican representatives question them about opinions they’ve expressed on various politically sensitive topics in the past. Opinions that suggest they might approach their new jobs with bias.

The nominees first try to dismiss their former statements by putting them in an exculpatory context. “I was representing a client when I said that.” Or, “That was a college paper I wrote thirty years ago.” But when they are confronted with dozens of similar statements made over the years, including recent ones, they move to, “I don’t allow my political beliefs to influence my decisions.”

In my experience watching these interviews, the credibility of this line of defense ranges from hard-to-believe to “Are you kidding?”

Watch this one and tell me if you disagree.

Click here and here.

 

Let’s Be Reasonable

After a federal investigation into a complaint brought against them, United Airlines agreed to make concessions for passengers who use wheelchairs.

They did the right thing, I think… provided we’re talking about people who actually need wheelchairs – i.e., who use wheelchairs full-time. Not the oldsters that can walk perfectly well but ask for wheelchairs to get preferential treatment going through security and getting upfront seating.

Click here.

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Alarm. Then Complacency.

Addison Wiggin, bestselling author and founder of Agora Financial 

At 2:20 EST on Wednesday, Oct. 4, every cellphone in America went off. Did you notice? It was a mass message from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). The purpose, they claimed, was to be sure they can “effectively warn the public about emergencies, particularly those on the national level.”

“Spooky,” my friend Addison Wiggin’s son Henry wrote to his dad from his seat on an Amtrak train. “The government is tapped into all our devices!”

Henry described the experience on the train as mass concern and confusion, but just for a moment. “Then, within moments,” he said, “everyone settled back into a weird complacency.”

First confusion. Then complacency. That’s a pattern Addison sees happening in the financial markets today. Read his analysis here. 

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For Investors Only: Current-Day Scams to Watch Out For

Sir Gregor MacGregor 

Have you heard of Sir Gregor MacGregor, the early 19th century Scottish mercenary and shyster?

In this essay, my colleague Garrett Baldwin tells the story of how MacGregor came to Florida and pulled off one con after another, before returning to England as the self-dubbed Prince of Poyais, a fake country whose land he sold to hundreds of hapless investors. Baldwin also explains how, in earning the title of “the founding father of securities fraud,” MacGregor created scams that are still being played on investors today.

Click here.

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“The US is courting trouble.” 

“The federal government is 43% larger than it was four years ago, and its reach is expanding mightily. More than a third of the surge in investment spending [since then] can be traced to government subsidies, credits, and handouts. The chosen corporate recipients of the government’s largesse ostensibly benefit, but the rest of the private economy will be burdened by significantly higher rates and rising costs of doing business.” – Kevin Warsh, former member of the Federal Reserve Board, 10/6/23, WSJ

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 Quick Bites: News from the DC Swamp, Bill Bonner on the War in Ukraine, an FDA Loss in Appeals Court, Surprise House Guests, and a Movie Quiz

Rochelle Walensky 

  1. CDC Director Walensky’s husband received $16.9 million in Health and Human Services grants. This is yet another example of dozens of financial conflicts of interest between Big Pharma and Big Government today. Click here. 
  1. Bill Bonner on the War in Ukraine. Speaking of government-corporate conflicts, few writers today are brave enough to tell the obvious truths about the billions of dollars we are devoting to the war in Ukraine. Click here.
  1. Federal appeals court revives lawsuit accusing the FDA of “overstepping” its authority on anti-ivermectin messaging. Click here.
  1. How much do they really care? I’m not sure if this is staged or real, but it succinctly summarizes my suspicions about the commitment many have to their passionate political beliefs. Click here.
  1. Film firsts. I scored a dismal 60% on this quiz. But some of the questions I had wrong had interesting answers. Click here.
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From AS re my essay “How to Be a Conservative, Part II” in the Oct. 3 issue: 

“I laughed when I read the part about the military hierarchy. My second day of basic training, I saw this graffiti on the wall of the latrine: ‘The definition of the army is the uneducated telling the unwilling to do the unnecessary.’ In my experience, it proved to be mostly true.”

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I look good, right?

I’m in Myrtle Beach this week for a sort of mini high school reunion.

It’s an annual event that has been going on for at least 30 years. And it’s always a good time. Gorgeous golf courses, delicious dinners, fine cigars, aged spirits, and great, nostalgic conversation in the evenings.

This tradition started at least a decade before I joined it. In the early days, I’ve been told, everyone could drink more, stay up later, and golf better. But the general drift since I became an honored member has been distinctly downward. With one exception: The post-prandial stories seem to be improving. I’d like to believe that’s because we have improved our narrative skills as we have aged, but it’s also possible that our standards in storytelling have diminished.

Each year, someone takes a group photo, which is always appreciated. The one above is not current. It may be six or seven years old. I selected it because… well, because it’s one of the few that flatter me. Don’t you think? (I’m third from the left, top row.)

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