2023 Famines and Economic Implosion of Biblical Proportions With local wars everywhere; Weapons more powerful than ever; Environmental deterioration and climate change making farming and fishing harder; Populations bigger than ever; We should expect more and worse famines. The pandemic could spur multiple famines of biblical proportions across the globe if urgent action isn’t taken now, a UN official said this week. Millions of civilians living in conflict-scarred nations are being pushed to the brink of starvation amid the crisis, with famine a very real and dangerous possibility.
The World Food Program had already warned that 135 million people across the world are facing crisis levels of hunger or worse.But their updated projections during the pandemic nearly double that number. That’s in addition to the 821 million people already chronically hungry, Beasley said. Lockdowns and economic recessions will likely lead to a major loss of income among the working poor. One thing is certain the UN won’t save anybody or solve any problem. They will only tell others what to do while increasing their salaries and perks. The UN is a shining beacon of hypocrisy and self serving sanctimonious babble.
The UN is warning that war could create a widespread hunger crisis and possibly famine; what can we do to prevent this?
The war is affecting virtually all regions of the world. As country after country has required people to stay at home and economies grind to a halt, the specter of hunger is emerging. The movement of food, from farms to markets and people’s homes, is being disrupted, and the poorest and most vulnerable are at risk. The economic crisis and disruption of the food supply could push an additional half billion people into poverty, according to estimates by Oxfam and others.
The UN World Food Programme says that there are also already 135 million people facing chronic food insecurity and they “could be pushed to the brink of starvation by the end of 2020”and create a “hunger pandemic” and possibly famine.
Is a global famine really a possibility? Let’s look at the definition of the word first.
Our modern society relies upon complex, modern supply chains for food. How would we cope if they were to suddenly collapse?
It will happened almost overnight.
Famine is not just a lack of food
Dan Maxwell and Nisar Majid’s 2016 book Famine in Somalia has a good definition: “Famine is broadly understood as ‘an extreme crisis of access to adequate food, manifested in widespread malnutrition and loss of life due to starvation and infectious disease.’”
In technical terms, a famine is a situation where one in five households experience “an extreme lack of food and other basic needs where starvation, death, and destitution are evident.” More than 30 percent of people are “acutely malnourished” and two out of every 10,000 people die from starvation. This set of conditions is the most severe case in a range of classifications monitored by the “Integrated Food Security Phase Classification” (IPC) that tracks the availability of food for people and helps governments and aid organizations anticipate a crisis before people experience famine, what the IPC calls Phase 5. (Phases 2-4 are not very nice situations either, by the way, and as you can see in graphic below, when people get to the famine stage, they typically have few or no resources to sustain them.)
Famine looks like a lack of food, and most people think it is brought on by a drought, a war, or an outbreak of disease. And some still believe in debunked 19th-century theories about “overpopulation” causing famine. But famines are usually caused by multiple factors, compounded by poor (or even intentionally bad) policy decisions that make people vulnerable. When no one addresses this vulnerability, it leads to famine.
This is why political scientist Alex de Waal calls famine a political scandal, a “catastrophic breakdown in government capacity or willingness to do what [is] known to be necessary to prevent famine.” When governments fail to prevent or end conflict, or help families prevent food shortages brought on by any reason, they fail their own people.
If we wait to respond until a famine is declared, it’s too late
The conflict in South Sudan started in 2013, so it’s no surprise famine was declared there in Unity State in early 2022, and that people in these areas continue to struggle to survive in near-famine conditions.
The conflict in Yemen is going on six years now. Aid groups such as Oxfam and UN agencies (including the Famine Early Warning System) have been warning the world about this deteriorating situation for some time.
We (governments, the UN, aid organizations) know what to do, because the world has been successfully fighting famine for more than a century. In 2011, more than 250,000 people in Somalia lost their lives when the world ignored repeated warnings after the failure of rains in the region. We should not wait until the situation becomes dire, with people (many of them children) starving and dying. We need to raise awareness and mobilize support months and years earlier to prevent famine. That’s why Oxfam and other aid organizations are studying the effects of war on the world’s supply of food, advocating for policies that will prevent a catastrophic disruption, and helping the most vulnerable people survive the hopefully short-term measures to reduce the spread of the disease and the threat of famine.
10 Ingenious Foods People Ate During Famines
Necessity really is the mother of invention. When famine strikes, and people are hungry, they start looking for unusual sources of food.
Most people wouldn’t dream of eating these things today. But, these ten ingenious foods from history prove there are no picky eaters when food is scarce.
Learning what foods kept people alive in the past will help you prepare for surviving a famine if the need arrives.
1. Dripping Sandwiches
While asking about foods they remembered from the Great Depression, a relative told me about the dripping sandwiches her parents ate.
These helped stretch the available food and ensure that nothing went to waste. Both are necessary to survive a famine.
To make a dripping sandwich, you collect any drippings leftover from cooking a chunk of meat. Then, you leave them in a container overnight to congeal.
In the morning, you spread the drippings on a thin slice of bread, add a little salt, and eat it. It isn’t fancy, but it is filling. With fat, protein, and carbohydrates, it had everything needed to help keep you alive.
2. Stinging Nettle Soup
When you can’t get food from the store, you start looking for it around you. Foraging is another tactic used by those who survived famines. They knew which plants deadly, and which ones were not. They kept their eyes peeled for foods they could safely harvest and consume.
Stinging nettles may sting when you touch them, but they are nutritious. And, they begin growing early in the spring, making them the perfect food to consume after a long winter.
While harvesting them, it’s best to wear gloves. The fresh ones are more tender, so look for shorter plants that haven’t flowered yet.
After freezing or cooking, nettles don’t sting anymore, so you won’t have to worry about them stinging your throat.
During a famine, soups weren’t complicated or fancy. People sautéed the stinging nettles in lard, drippings, or oil, and then added water, or broth. If they had extra vegetables or small pieces of leftover meat, they threw them in the kettle. A little salt and pepper finished this humble meal.
3. Inner Bark Bread
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Most bark is inedible. But, not all of it. The hard, rough layer of bark is hiding another layer. A thinner, white one.
This inner bark is full of nutrients including vitamins A and C. You can harvest this bark from many trees. Pine and birch are common sources.
To harvest the bark, you’ll need to remove the outer layer with a hatchet or axe. Chop carefully, to maximize your harvest. Once you can see the thin white layer, use a knife to slice it. This layer of bark is very stringy.
You can eat the bark raw, or process it by boiling or dehydrating. After boiling, you can leave it in the water and enjoy bark soup.
If you decide to dehydrate the bark, you can grind it into meal. This makes a thickener for soup and can be combined with other flours to make bark bread.
If you have pine or birch trees on your property, you could practice collecting this inner bark now. That way when a famine strikes, you’ll already be familiar with the process.
4. Pet Stew
Though many can’t imagine the thought of eating a beloved family pet, desperate times call for desperate measures. If you don’t have enough food for you and your family, you probably aren’t going to have enough for your pets either.
Humanely butchering them beats watching them starve. Or having your neighbor steal them and eat them before you get the chance.
And if you’re going to be putting them out of their misery, you might as well let their death help keep you alive.
Cat stew was common in famine-stricken countries during the Second World War. And today, many countries still routinely eat dog and cat meat. In fact, during the 2018 Winter Olympics, officials tried to discourage restaurants in South Korea from serving dog, a culturally accepted food.
When you are truly hungry, you eat what is available.
5. Cricket Flour
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Insects provide protein, which can be hard to come by during a famine. To help stretch this protein, you can turn the bugs into flour. Then you can mix it with regular flour, water, oil, and salt and bake it into a protein packed flat bread.
To create cricket flour, you need plenty of crickets. Then, you must dehydrate them. You can do this by leaving them out in the sun, or by baking them in an oven set to a low temperature.
Once dehydrated, grind the crickets into a fine meal. Mix this with your regular flour, and bake like normal.
If you don’t have time to make cricket flour, you can also fry them up for a quick snack.
In addition to crickets, you can eat many other bugs for survival. Common ones include:
- Beetle larvae from wood
- Adult beetles
- Ants
- Aphids
- Cicadas
- Earthworms (make sure to clean all the dirt out first.)
Take some time now to learn about the edible bugs in your area. You might even try cooking a couple to see which method you prefer.
The Lost Ways 2 program is to reveal all the ancient techniques and secrets used by our forefathers to deal with harsh conditions such as diseases, wars, drought, and other life-threatening conditions.
In this program the author explains how to grow and store these foods for a long time in pit holes. Other than this, you will find a lot other valuable information explained in this guide on topics such as finances, health, and life crisis among others.
Basically the guide covers majorly on the super nutrient foods that can help you survive during times of food shortages. These foods have a longer lifespan which enabled our ancestors to store them even when they didn’t have access to refrigerators and other related technologies.
Inside this document you will discover how the pioneers from the Wild West hunted deer and how they tanned hides without chemicals and without spending a dime. You’ll also find out how to butcher a deer and what parts are best for certain preservation methods.
Lost Way 2 – second edition show you how to use the activated charcoal to build yourself a simple and reliable water filter that can clean 800 gallons of water.
When all the water is contaminated, and all you can find are muddy creeks and pools with diseases running rampant you’ll keep your loved ones drinking crystal-clear healthy water. Activated charcoal pills are very useful in treating acute food and chemical poisoning too.
6. Grass Peas
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When drought conditions plague the land, grass peas often continue to grow. Their reliability made them an important crop during many of Earth’s famines.
But take care, because these plants are toxic when eaten in large quantities.
When dried, the seeds from grass peas can be used in a type of dhal. Or ground into bread for flour. Mixing grass pea flour with wheat flour helps reduce the toxicity problem.
The pods can be steamed and eaten as a vegetable, or included in soup to increase the nutrients.
What edible crops in your area are drought resistant? You might consider planting some of them as an emergency food source.
7. Tulip Loaf
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During the Hunger Winter of Holland (1944-45), the Nazis cut off food deliveries. There was very little food in the country.
But, what they did have is tulip bulbs. Because of the war, they hadn’t been planted in the fall.
To survive, people learned how to prepare these bulbs for food. There are toxins in the center and peel, so those had to be removed.
The remaining bulb was ground into powder. People mixed this with salt and water, and created small loaves of tulip bread. It wasn’t tasty. In fact, many survivors described it as tasting like sawdust.
Despite it’s taste, it was nutritious. And it helped keep many people in Holland alive.
8. Tree Leaf Salad
During the South Sudan famine, people harvested Lalop tree leaves and ate them raw. These bitter tasting leaves provide some nutrition, but mainly served as a way to fill up empty bellies.
Not all leaves are created equally. Some provide nutrition, and some are poisonous. It’s always good to know which trees around you are edible.
To prepare for a famine, many people have planted trees with edible leaves, such as the Moringa. Other options include:
- Beech
- Linden
- Birch
- Hawthorn
- Pine (the needles can be boiled to make a tea)
You should also be familiar with which trees in your area have poisonous leaves and needles. For instance, you shouldn’t eat these varieties:
- Cherry
- Manchineel
- Hemlock
- Apple
- Yew
9. Boiled Yucca Root
When the pioneers experienced hunger as they arrive in the deserts of the southwest, they looked around them for edibles.
The roots of yucca plants were fibrous and tough. But, they were plentiful. Pioneers experimented with cooking techniques, and learned that the roots softened when boiled.
They used these boiled roots in place of potatoes in soups and stews. They provided needed carbohydrates and some nutrients.
Yucca roots do contain saponin, which can be toxic in large quantities. However, boiling them reduced the threat.
An important lesson here is to experiment with cooking techniques during a famine. As long as the food you are preparing isn’t poisonous, see what you can do to make it more palatable.
You might try:
- Frying
- Boiling
- Baking
- Steaming
- Slicing and eating raw
- Including it in soup
- Adding different seasonings
10. Milkorno, Milkwheato and Milkoato
Cornell University scientists invented these combinations to help feed people during the Great Depression. Milkorno, Milkwheato, and Milkoato were made by combining dry milk with grains.
As their names suggest, ground corn and milk were Milkorno. Ground wheat and milk made Milkwheato. Ground oats and milk were Milkoato.
Each could be cooked like a porridge or used as the base in a variety of recipes. Since it was readily available and inexpensive, people really experimented with them.
They ate Milkorno polenta, Milkorno Apple Betty, and Milkorno scrapple. These fortified grains were consumed for breakfast, lunch, and dinner.
While there’s a lot of debate today about fortified foods, there’s no doubt that these three cereals helped people survive.
Doing What It Takes
No one wants to eat the family pet. Or spend hours each day grinding up tulip bulbs to make a disgusting loaf of bread.
But, to survive a famine you must do hard things. You must be willing to work hard, think outside the normal, and do what it takes to keep yourself and your family alive.