Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Mankind faces famine, and World War II

Against the backdrop of the recent tragic events in Japan, the data in this report appear in a new light. According to analysts, the scale of the Japanese catastrophe ' in fact guarantee the ' outbreak of another world war within the next 12 months.



all damages caused to the agricultural sector over the past 12 months, completely destroyed the ability to feed the world population, which totals 6 billion 800 million people '.



These lines are now superimposed disturbing reports from Japan, where a natural disaster death toll is close to ten thousand. Despite the fact that the Japanese authorities have announced the largest mobilization of defense forces since the Second World War to cope with this crisis, the scale of the disaster continues to grow. The greatest threat today comes from nuclear facilities damaged by disaster.



The earthquake and subsequent tsunami struck a severe blow to the national economy, affecting a number of agricultural areas and fishing ports. And given the fact that agricultural land in Japan devoted only 15 % of the territory, the consequences for the country and its people can be very sad: millions of survivors of the cataclysm will be delivered in terms of the struggle for food and water.



Although the cash reserves of the state are sufficient to prevent the people starve, the Japanese economy lies in wait for a new challenge - an unprecedented high food prices on the world market. The food crisis, caused by natural disasters last year, is already causing much anxiety specialists. As stated in this regard the executive director of the International Food Programme Josette Sheeran, ' if people will not have enough food, they will have only three possibilities - to emigrate, to rebel or die '.



According to British news agency, amid popular uprisings in recent months, sweeping parts of Africa and the Middle East, a number of authoritarian regimes around the world have already started to dramatically increase food supplies and lower prices for basic foods. However, as the agency, the measures taken to prevent the riots too late against the backdrop of warnings that ' from a full immersion into the chaos of our world divides only one poor harvest '.



With the global food crisis, the growth in food prices can affect not only third world countries, but also the world's largest economy, leading experts say. According to Director General of the National Institute for Research Trends (Trends Research Institute) Gerald Celente, ' by 2012 America will become a undeveloped country, torn by food riots, acts of rebellions, revolutions, tax and labor marches '.



A week before the earthquake in Japan, a senior economist at HSBC's Karen Ward warned that food riots in the foreseeable future will be commonplace in the UK. ' In a city where I live, poverty has become a way of life for too many people. Given the lack of jobs for young people the future looks hazy. Imagine the unrest and food riots in the streets of British cities seem complicated, but if you live in other countries. For me it is, unfortunately, just '.



Against these gloomy predictions, journalists snapping in the quote book Adalsindy Bahmeyer ' The Great Famine 2009 - 2012 '. On the pages of his work, the author draws the reader's attention to a series of catastrophic events, and argues that the threat of an impending food crisis is activated by genetic memory of mankind. Sleeping within each person ' the great hunger gene ...



At the end of the publication whatdoesitmean article argues that the events in Libya - the first stage of a new world war for resources, has waged between East and West. This is stated in the information published on the day Wall Street Journal News Service. According to journalists, mankind is now on the brink of global conflict, which even in 2001. warned a member of the board of directors of the international organization Human Rights Watch Professor Michael T. Clare. In his book ' War of the resources: the new landscape of global conflict, ...









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