Infowars – by Adan Salazar & Kit Daniels
Atlanta residents ransacked neighborhood grocery stores in frantic preparation for their second major snowstorm of the year, waging fights over food items and leaving destruction and empty shelves in their wake, a stunning precursor to what will ensue once a major crisis impacts the U.S.
After three inches of snow shut the city down two weeks ago, causing major havoc and leaving miles of cars stranded on immobile roadways, the residents of Atlanta took heed and shopped early.
According to people who Tweeted photos of barren store shelves, residents went crazy over essentials like milk, water and eggs, and in some cases “people were fighting. Yes fighting,” alleges one user.
@wsbtv @BradNitzWSB empty bread shelf…people were fighting. Yes fighting. #Atlanta pic.twitter.com/gyAy70akih
— Pra G (thicc boi) (@pragatl) February 11, 2014
Yikes!!! 7:15pm in #atlantasnow and Publix is out of bread… OMG – that equals a lot of sandwiches.. pic.twitter.com/I6chFaKQjK
— AmFam_Louis4 (@AmFam_Louis4) February 11, 2014
@dcjames5 @rissakris Atlanta is already panicking like a hurricane is coming. I took this pic at target in Dunwoody. pic.twitter.com/geeuwXQyQF
— DJ (@derrickjammison) February 11, 2014
Given Americans’ propensity to riot over such inanities as Black Friday sales and winning sports teams, could fights and empty shelves also be expected in the midst of a major crisis?
Of course, and the only remaining question is merely what kind of crisis would trigger such panic. It could easily be triggered by an economic collapse, for example, which America is already teetering towards.
Currently, the U.S. stock market is behaving eerily similar to how it behaved right before the stock market crash of 1929 which ushered in the Great Depression.
“The market over the last two months has continued to more or less closely follow the 1928-29 pattern outlined in that two-months-ago chart,” Mark Hulbert with MarketWatch reported. “If this correlation continues, the market faces a particularly rough period later this month and in early March.”
America is already in worse shape economically than it was prior to the 2008 financial collapse and a number of other past economic crises.
Oh no. Someone said the word "snow" in Atlanta again. pic.twitter.com/r0VbNUJtKD
— Pancreassassin (@Pancreassassin) February 10, 2014
Another winter storm coming to Atlanta, grocery store out of bread pic.twitter.com/6WwPplK6n1
— Robᵉʳᵗ Graham (@ErrataRob) February 11, 2014
“We’re in worse than we were at the peak of the NASDAQ bubble in 2000,” financial commentator Peter Schiff said in October. “We’re in worse than we were going into the Great Depression in the 1930s.”
For the past several decades, countries around the world have relied on the fiat U.S. dollar as the world’s reserve currency, which has kept America afloat despite its mass disappearance of manufacturing capability and its burdensome trade deficit.
Yet demand for the dollar is already waning globally.
China already announced back in November that it would stop stockpiling dollars, which will gradually decrease the demand for the dollar as well as its value.
The Shanghai Futures Exchange also announced that it may start pricing crude oil in yuan instead of dollars, a move that will accelerate the dollar’s collapse even further.
So it’s a given that a major crisis will occur, at least economically, and we’ve already seen mass panic recently.
…and out of water pic.twitter.com/ZlzHMxQcYb
— Robᵉʳᵗ Graham (@ErrataRob) February 11, 2014
Bread aisle in Atlanta area Kroger pre #snowpacalypse via @tricarter pic.twitter.com/3MpCdewhNZ
— Kris Muir (@krismuir21) February 11, 2014
this is the damn bread aisle in walmart! you'd think the apocalypse was bout to hit atlanta LMAOOOOO pic.twitter.com/YB5svP0p5u
— WHAT IT DO BAYBEEEE (@GucciMenks) February 11, 2014
4 all my Atlanta ppl, as usual Welcome 2 Atlanta where the word "Snow" = no bread, milk or water…#fb pic.twitter.com/ogxBH07bJw
— DJmarkharris (@sirrahmedia) February 11, 2014
As we documented late last year, Americans were already prepared to riot if the EBT food stamp system crashed, as it did in Mississippi and Louisiana, where residents staged mini-riots and looted several Walmart chain stores.
And a recently passed federal farm bill will bring even more cuts to the food stamp program, approximately $8.6 billion, or roughly $90 per month per recipient – nearly a week’s worth of groceries.
Following the acquittal of George Zimmerman in the Trayvon Martin murder case, teens in different parts of the country instituted a “rolling crime wave,” establishing a trend of flash mobs, mini-riots and looting.
Indeed, one need look no further than last November 29, where Black Friday shoppers at Walmarttrampled and ravaged one another over cheap electronics and other non-essentials.
While users are correctly attributing this round of panic buys to inclement weather, the fact that stores across the nation could see similar activity in the wake of a major crisis isn’t so far-fetched.
If Americans already engage in riots and mass panic buys at nearly every opportunity, it’s certainly no stretch to speculate the type of scene witnessed in Atlanta grocery stores could unfold in every U.S. city in the event of a bank run, a food stamp crisis or the dollar’s eventual collapse.
(H/T: Twitchy)
http://www.infowars.com/panicked-shoppers-fight-over-food-amid-snowpocalypse/
The Government math and classifications are CRAZY. If people have more than three days of foods the Homeland says we are terrorists. If we grow our Veggies to stay away from the GMO we are terrorists. This story is a perfect Example why people need to store foods for a week or 2 becuase of these ongoing snow storms and blizzards. And water pipes frozen all over the country. It is about time to tell the FEDS to take a flying walk someplace else. people need to prep and have guns, if it ever got bad people will kill for food and supplies it happens all over the world, and countries where the government has too much power
Mark
We need more than 2 weeks of food. I would say a years worth at the lease, and a lot of NON GMO, heirloom seeds, and learn how to save seeds. I have atleast a year’s worth of food, and looking into purchasing another year’s worth. Storage is my issue, but I will figure it out. Please don’t forget wheat or some type of grain for bread, even if all you can make is pita bread. I bought a 50 pound sack of flax seed, I packaged it myself to store for 30 years, it will be a great addition nutritionally speaking. Even if people stock up on chunky soup when it goes on sale, better than nothing.