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RJ Rambler's avatar

All this talk about jabs in meat feels like another psyops. I can believe they would just kill all our food like so many other nations have done before. Why add jabs? They can contaminate vegetables just as easily.

I like beef and chicken. I can't raise beef. I can't raise all my chicken feed. I'd betcha I'm WAY more self sufficient than 90% of this group but we can't be an island to ourselves. It ain't even BIBLICAL. But call me if you want to butcher chickens. I can but I hate to.

PS. Bird seed feeds chickens to. You don't think they'd willingly infect the wild bird seed and kill off ALL Earthly life, do you?!πŸ€”πŸ§

There's NO WAY to live thru this. I suggest suicide and beat them to the satisfaction. πŸ˜‘πŸ™„

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David A's avatar

There is hope. The saying that we "go mad in crowds, and regain sanity one by one" has some truth. We cannot change the world, but we can with grace change ourselves. https://open.substack.com/pub/anderdaa7/p/does-absolute-power-corrupt?r=slvym&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web

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Freebird's avatar

RJ…A local chicken/egg raiser reported that her chickens started laying again after she switched them to goat feed. With God’s help this evil may be outsmarted. Please retract the suicide comment, even if it was made in jest, that’s really not Biblical! We will fight this - and win!

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Bingham22's avatar

We found the same: Ran out of chicken feed last month and switched to livestock cattle feed…no eggs for months before that, switched the feed, and the next day they were laying, and daily since!

I think there is absolute truth in this story.

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Lisa Ca's avatar

this is complete insanity!!! how nefarious and evil and tragic. Yet, Gates wants everyone consuming poison chemicals so of course. He is building so many fake foods. I have no doubt he would be behind all of this.

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Raptor's avatar

It could be the hens are laying less because it is winter and there is less sunlight. Hours of sunlight effects egg production so unless you provide artificial light in their coop, they will lay less in winter. They should also be fed layer feed which is higher inn protein. If they spend the vast majority of their day out foraging, they can probably get by without the higher protein feed and not have production stalled. Light feed stress, molting, age. Those are the major things I can think of that keep hens from laying.

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Freebird's avatar

If we follow through with getting chickens this spring - I'll have to go to chicken school! I know next to nothing about them.

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Raptor's avatar

A good website to look at even before you take the plunge is https://www.backyardchickens.com/

Chickens are very addictive. Just a friendly warning. They are very stress reducing and funny to be around.

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RJ Rambler's avatar

🀣 Not fond of them but I just can't give up eggs. I feel like clucking every time I get one. That's what I love! πŸ₯š 🍳

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Raptor's avatar

Maybe ducks. Quack.

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Donna in MO's avatar

I had a friend send me a post on this last week about chickens not laying eggs. Did a little digging around and this post makes a lot of sense. https://www.fresheggsdaily.blog/2023/01/chickens-not-laying-eggs-dont-be-too.html Although I would not be surprised if big ag was not screwing around with the food supply, the truth is probably somewhere in the middle.

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Freebird's avatar

Interesting. I know there is a lot of truth in what she says, no doubt she is knowledgeable about chickens. Do you think she knows as much about nefarious events? It’s not β€˜just’ a matter of hens not laying, but so many being destroyed because of so-called bird flu, and many production facilities burning. And at this point I have zero trust in big corporations like Purina. Someone else commented that they are basically owned by Pfizer.

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Donna in MO's avatar

I doubt she knows much about nefarious events, but did think she knew a lot about chickens!

Purina is owned by Nestle, they have a pet food production plant in St. Joseph, MO and also have an animal feed test lab there, I did a project for a client cataloging all of the animal health companies in the region a few years ago. At least according to the company representative I talked to in 2021, they don't do any pharma stuff, it's all feed production and research, at least at their facility in this area. I dunno, I distrust big corps as much as the next guy, but I do feed all my cats Purina One, and they are all healthy, although I did lose one last year who was 21 years old.

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Freebird's avatar

Donna, the other commenter mentioned that Purina was owned by Nestle, and that Nestle was owned by Pfizer. Who knows? But if your cat lived to 21, that’s about the maximum life span for a cat isn’t it? My daughter has one that’s about that age and she is an ancient poor old thing.

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Donna in MO's avatar

Ok well I am behind on the comments! Got curious and looked it up, Nestle is publicly traded on the Swiss stock exchange, looked at their board of directors and did not see any pharma companies on their board. https://www.nestle.com/sites/default/files/2022-03/2021-annual-review-en.pdf Glad, as I didn't want to change pet food! I think the average age for a cat is around 15 but some do live into their 20's. My daughter's cat lived to 22, we lost a 21 YO last year, and a 20 YO the year before that. But we've had multiple cats for 30 years, some died as young as 9, 16, and one got out and got hit by a car. Anyway, they love their food and very little barfing, skin, or stomach issues since we switched about 10 years ago. They are kind of a woke company though, sadly.

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Freebird's avatar

Thanks for looking that up Donna, I’ve learned that you’re a sharp cookie in the research area! 😊 I glanced through it and didn’t see anything that looked like a red flag except a little side post about their ESG rating. Naturally every large company is probably mandated to have a statement on that.

So you don’t have to change cat food! We’re dog people, but I like cats too and would love to have one, except that I’ve had several fall prey to the coyotes in our neighborhood. I always tried to get them in at night but you know how they love to hunt.

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Donna in MO's avatar

Yes, I was glad, I am a boycotter but it's hard sometimes. There are local pet food providers but they cost an arm and a leg, and we have 4 cats (crazy cat lady), and a stray we are feeding who looks in our back window and 'sings' to our cats at night. We do try to get them all in by dark, no coyotes but we do have raccoons and one of ours got into it with one when he didn't want to come home at night and came home pretty torn up. All surface wounds but he hid in a closet for 3 days, think he was embarrassed.

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Maggie Think of Me's avatar

Egg production is down even in warm climates...

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Raptor's avatar

Unless they live in S FL or S TX the hours will still be shorter. But then again I had hens in a location close to the equator and they still laid off laying a bit in the winter. So maybe there are other factors.

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Maggie Think of Me's avatar

Very likely something to consider.

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MaryAnn's avatar

God is sovereign.

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Raptor's avatar

Very uplifting ending. Well done. You work for the Canadian government?

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Oona Pilot's avatar

Control. Food is control.

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