Image by Here and now, unfortunately, ends my journey on Pixabay from Pixabay

 

 

And So It Begins – 1000s Of Cattle Are Literally Dropping Dead From Starvation In Northern Mexico

Francesco Abbruzzino, The Uncensored Report, LLC

 

 

A lot of people didn’t think that it would ever come to this.  Many simply assumed that conditions would return to “normal” eventually and that everything would work out just fine somehow.  But here in the middle of 2021, everything is definitely not fine.  In fact, cows are literally dropping dead from starvation in northern Mexico in very large numbers.  This isn’t the sort of thing that is supposed to happen in North America.

 

For years, I have been warning that Dust Bowl conditions would return to the Southwest.  Just check my old books and my old articles.  Now it has happened, and everyone is in shock.

 

For years, I have also been warning that global food supplies would get tighter and tighter.  And even though they can see it happening, many out there are desperately hoping that I will be proven wrong somehow.

 

What we are witnessing south of the border right now should be a huge wake up call for all of us.  The following comes from an article that was originally published by the Los Angeles Times entitled “In drought-plagued northern Mexico, tens of thousands of cows are starving to death”

 

In the parched hills of southern Sonora, Marco Antonio Gutierrez paced around a clearing, counting the dead.

 

There were seven rotting carcasses — jutting ribs and shriveled hides — and two sun-bleached skulls. Nine cows, felled by heat and hunger.

 

“There’s nothing for them to eat,” said Gutierrez, a wide-brimmed hat shading his downcast eyes.

 

I fully understand that it is hard to believe that this is actually happening in our part of the world.

 

Sadly, Gutierrez hasn’t just lost nine cows.

 

The article goes on to explain that he has actually lost a total of 70 cows to starvation so far…

 

Gutierrez doesn’t use the phrase “climate change” to describe what’s happening, but he laments that every year seems drier and hotter than the last. In recent months, he has watched helplessly as 70 of his 100 cows have starved to death.

 

70 cows!

 

Of course the losses suffered by Gutierrez represent just a very small fraction of the overall tragedy.

 

At this point, the number of cattle in Sonora has dropped by nearly half a million over the past two years…

 

Two years of extreme drought have turned large stretches of northern Mexico into a boneyard. Between starvation and ranchers forced to prematurely sell or slaughter their livestock, officials say the number of cattle in Sonora has dropped from 1.1 million to about 635,000.

 

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