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Thursday, September 29, 2022

The Coming Famine

 The Coming Famine: Are the Globalists Making History Repeat Itself? – By Dean Dwyer - https://harbingersdaily.com/the-coming-famine-are-the-globalists-making-history-repeat%EF%BF%BC%EF%BF%BC/ Think engineered famine could never happen? Is the world on the verge of a global Holodomor on steroids? Perhaps it’s time to learn the story pertaining to this Ukrainianword as history repeats itself. As we are forced to watch the global economy being systematically destroyed, the reality is bringing into much clearer view the fact that this is an engineered depopulationphenomenon. The powers that be are pulling the pin on industrialized agriculture under the guise of saving the planet from ‘climate change’ – pushing over the dominoes that will eventually lead to mass starvation. This has happened before, though on a much smaller scale. The Holodomor – a deliberate man-made famine that occurred in Ukraine between 1932 and 1933 – appears to be makinga return amid all the financial and economic chaos we are presently witnessing. The term Hólodomor is a combination of the Ukrainian words holod (hunger) and mor (extermination). This famine resulted in the deaths of at least 3.9 million Ukrainians throughforced labor, executions and starvation. The Soviets actively silenced news of the famine, forbidding government officials and journalists alike from writing about it or even discussing it. Stalin covered up the 1937 census results to disguise the massivedeath toll. At least 18 countries around the world, including the US and the Vatican, have recognized the horrendous event as a State-sanctioned genocide, but Russia continues to deny the fact. On the surface, the Holodomor was disguised as the need for bread for the cities, amplified by the USSR’s rapid industrialization. While the need for bread in the cities wasreal, the Holodomor was actually carried out by the Soviet government as part of the broader famine that affected the grain-growing regions of Russia, Ukraine, and Kazakhstan from 1931 onwards. It was also part of a much more focused campaign of repressionand persecution against Ukrainian identity, one specifically aimed at destroying any seeds of independence and cultural autonomy following the Soviet-Ukrainian War in which Ukraine had briefly established itself as an independent state from 1917 to 1921 – the year the civil war between the Red Army (the Bolsheviks) and the Whites came to an end. In 1929, Soviet leader Joseph Stalin ordered the collectivization of agriculture in Ukraine, forcing farmers to forfeit their lands to the State to work on collective farms,with a set amount of the harvest going to the State. Some small subsistence farmers – the Kulaks (rich peasants) as they were called by the Soviets – resisted. Those caught were declared enemies of the State and either sent to forced-labor camps or simplyeliminated. Plans were also made to deport as many as 50,000 Ukrainian families. By the autumn of 1932, the Soviet quota for grain was so high that the Ukrainian farmers were 60% short of the target. In punishment for missing the quota, families were forcedto give up the grain they had set aside to feed themselves. Some, suspected of hoarding grain, were imprisoned. Stalin also used the farmers’ failure to meet the quota as an excuse to further intensify his campaign against the Ukrainian identity, issuing aban on the use of the Ukrainian language in official correspondence. The food shortages and famine caused by the Soviet collectivization sparked peasant revolts. In response the Soviets took even stronger action against the Ukrainians, preventing food fromreaching certain farms, villages, and towns and barring peasants from trying to leave the Ukraine to find food. When a further-increased quota for grain was not met in the harsh winter of 1932-33 Soviets broke into peasant’s homes, taking all the edible goodsthey had set aside for themselves. With no more room in prisons and labor camps and with the Ukrainian peasant population decimated the Soviets were forced to ease the collectivization program, but by then the damage was done. The globalization that has occurred post World War 2 has made it possible to inflict another Holodomor, this time on a global scale. Global trade has become the glue thatholds together life as we presently know it, but the Covid crisis, the war in Ukraine and financial chicanery has created favorable conditions for a worldwide genocide event. What we are seeing transpire with the targeting of carbon, nitrogen and other food-growingfertilizers and nutrients is part of that. Without agriculture people will die on a scale far surpassing the horrors that devastated Ukraine back in the 1930s, and once again Ukraine is ground-zero for the mass genocide that is unfolding, though in a muchdifferent context this time. Back then it was Joseph Stalin who ordered all Ukrainian agriculture to be collectivized, with those refusing to comply being declared enemies of the State. Fast forward to Dutch farmers of today – to give one example. If theyrefuse to cull their herds and to stop growing food in order to halt ‘climate change’ they’re subjected to punishments by their government. Ukraine has been known as the breadbasket of Europe for centuries. This title is entirely accurate given that it is home to around a quarter of the world’s super-fertile chernózem – or black soil. The yet-untapped potential of Ukraine’s agricultural sector is staggering. Prior to the Russia/Ukraine war 32 million hectares were cultivated annually, representing an area larger than Italy. It boasts around 42 million hectares of primeagricultural land and is the world’s largest producer of sunflower seed as well as a key exporter of wheat, rapeseed, barley, vegetable oil and maize, but Russia’s aggression since February 2022 has undermined its capacity to harvest and export crops. No majordisruption to crop production is anticipated in Russia, but uncertainties exist over its capacity to export even though international sanctions have so far exempted both food and fertilizers. Russia is the world’s largest exporter of wheat and an importantexporter of barley and sunflower seed, as well as being a leading exporter of energy and fertilizers. A reduction in export capacity from Ukraine and Russia – along with rising fertilizer and energy prices – are pushing up international food prices, therebythreatening global food security. Recent findings suggest that the full loss of Ukraine’s capacity to export, together with a 50% reduction in Russian wheat export, could lead to a 34% increase in international wheat prices in the 2022/23 marketing year. In the Tribulation Period, famine will strike the Earth when the third seal is opened and the rider on the Black Horse comes forth, leaving many throughout the world writhingin the clutches of stabbing hunger. We praise God that we will be taken at the rapture prior to the judgement which will befall the Earth. Yet, we must also recognize the urgency of the hour, ensuring that we redeem the time and reach out to the lost with the soul-saving message of the gospel.

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