valarltd: (politics--gilead)
[personal profile] valarltd
I had a mini-meltdown in Wal-Mart last night.

We had gone in for tea and peppermints and a few other things. There was not a bag of peppermints to be had. The Brachs were stripped. The Best Choice were gone.

I know it was 9:30 on a Sunday and the trucks hadn't come in yet. But I started looking and seeing other empty shelves. Places where a whole product was missing and hadn't been restocked.
Wal-Mart had 15 ocean-going containers in their parking lot. Why the hell don't they have peppermints?

I've been noticing this more and more. Wal-Mart is OUT of things. This is not supposed to happen. It makes my world feel insecure. And sometimes Kroger and Walgreens and Big Star and Save A Lot are out too. There are times when the (very common) item I want is not to be had in my town.

This is only going to become more common. There's a drought this year. There will be famines. Not so much here, except for rising food prices, but elsewhere. And unless we get agriculture and our lives under control, it will touch us.

But that is not our way. We drive the car off the cliff first and fasten our seatbelt after.

You read it here: I'm predicting food riots in ten years.

Please feel free to laugh at me and call me a nervous nelly in 2025. I'd rather that than be right.

Is it pre-election jitters?
Is it pre-cog I can't control?
Is it just a lot of free-floating angst about my kids' future?
Is it incipient depression?
I don't know. I'll keep writing my stories and making my crafts until my arthritic fingers can take no more. Then I'll dictate them.

Date: 2012-11-05 05:59 pm (UTC)
beckyblack: (Default)
From: [personal profile] beckyblack
I agree that it's probably down to stock control changes. They probably want to hold less stock in store and of course that leads to empty shelves sometimes when things sell faster than expected and they don't have enough reserve stock.

But food is bound to continue to still be a big problem. We've got issues in the UK with things like the wheat harvest because we've had a really wet summer. And that has a knock on effect, makes animal feed more expensive. And in many cases the rain and flooding made grazing impossible, so farmers have been having to use feed all year around instead of just in winter. The the supermarkets have cut the price they pay for milk as they try to keep customers who have less to spend. It's been a horrible year for agriculture here.

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