The Prepper Broadcasting Network - The Strange Truth- The Drought and Bird Flu Strikes Again- Update on threats to food supply.
Episode Date: November 17, 2023The Strange Truth Podcast hosted by Karl A.D. Brown, the author of The Prepper Part One: TheCollapse, is always a lively discussion centered around Christianity, Preparedness and the newsstories no on...e dares touch. To know more about Karl and to contact him visithttps://www.karladbrownauthor.comwww.element.io create a screen name to join the live chat!www.prepperbroadcasting.comwww.disastercoffee.comSupport Our Great SponsorsThe Preppers Medical Handbook https://amzn.to/3piYAlUPoint Zero Energywww.pointzeroenergy.comThe Wellness Companytwc.health/pbnCheap Raw Land (code PBN for $100 off!www.yourcheapland.comDisaster Coffee www.disastercoffee.comSupport The Prepper Broadcasting NetworkBecome a Member and Recieve Exculsive Content https://bit.ly/3pniGLYSign up for the Newsletter https://bit.ly/3Df15e0Check out Patreon! https://bit.ly/3uDkBQHCome Unity; Community https://amzn.to/3ddsN0dThe Christmas Hook https://amzn.to/3rxTlS1Some of My Favorite PrepsMy EDC Bag 3VGear Outlaw Sling Pack https://amzn.to/3oklKZZMy EDC Flashlight Olight S1R https://amzn.to/3djpBQKQuick Aquaponics System https://amzn.to/31keqVA
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Thank you for watching! Welcome to this episode of The Strange Truth.
I'm your host, Carl B., and hopefully everybody's had a
good week. You know, I feel like I am kind of like a motorist witnessing and, you know, like an
accident, right? You're kind of driving by and, you know, the chaos and the carnage is spread all over the road,
you know, in front of you, beside you, behind you.
And you're just kind of, but you're still kind of insulated from it.
You're still kind of watching from afar, you know,
insulated from it you're still kind of watching from afar uh you know um and there is a a certain amount of crazy uh surrealism to it to it all right um there's a lot of stuff happening in
the world right now folks uh a lot of stuff that you know could could could tip our peace of mind one way or the other.
And, you know, we're just kind of, you know, right now we're just passive observers.
And, you know, that's why it's good to really get away from a lot of this stuff, right?
You cannot, you cannot really like, you know, just be completely consumed by all of the stuff that's going on.
And it's amazing, too, because while you have a small percentage of the populace really clued in,
you know, the people in the prepping community are usually clued in.
A lot of people in the Christian community are usually clued in to the state of affairs going on.
Christian community are usually clued in to the state of affairs going on.
The majority of the Americans, the majority of people, you know, they're just kind of living their lives on their phones and, you know, they really have no clue, really, just
how serious things are, right?
they really have no clue really just how serious things are right um anyway today we're going to talk about we're going to talk about some food issues some uh you know farming issues some
weather issues uh we're going to talk about there there's a report out about you know how many people
in the united states would survive a nuclear war. We're going to kind of take a look
at that. But I also want to say that, you know, it is, you know, it is a season, right, for
Thanksgiving. And we have a lot to be thankful about. And as we watch all these things overseas,
you know, the war in Ukraine, you know, how that's just torn both countries apart.
How the people in Taiwan are just living in fear because they don't know if they're going to be invaded or not.
And then the war in the Middle East is going on.
That's threatening to get bigger and bigger by the day.
uh you know we we you know we take a lot of this peace and freedom uh for granted uh and it can just and it can be taken away so easily so uh you know we have a lot to be thankful for this
uh uh christmas and this thanksgiving um and uh you, when you meet with your relatives, you know,
you know, in the days to come, and you sit at the table and you chat with them,
just bear that in mind. Bear that in mind that you remember how quickly things changed once
COVID dropped and how like one day you could go to the store and pretty much what?
Within a couple of days, a day, a couple of days, you couldn't go out to the store and you had to be like locked up in your house.
And just how quickly things can evolve.
You know, take the time, folks.
Take the time to hug your loved ones.
Take the time to have a real conversation with the people that you're going to be hanging with this Thanksgiving.
Because you never know.
You know, we live in such uncertain times.
We never know if, you know, is this it?
you know, is this, is this it, you know, so please, just take the time to, you know, give a loved one a hug to, you know, really, you know, touch bases with all those relatives that,
you know, you've probably, you know, have lost, you know, touch with, you know, just go out and try to really reconnect with folks because the world is dicey, right?
The world is getting pretty dicey.
So, yeah, I'm going to get my turkey tomorrow.
So I'm getting my turkey tomorrow, you know, yeah, it's amazing how quickly the days came
around, right, I'm getting my turkey tomorrow, and I'm just putting it in the fridge and let it thaw
out pretty much over the next couple of days, because when is it, you know, When's the morning? I got to put that bird in, right? I guess when's the morning, right?
Got to put that bird in the oven.
And, you know, and we'll have a nice Thanksgiving meal.
So go on out.
Enjoy yourselves.
You know, enjoy yourselves this weekend.
And, you know, get away from all the stress.
If this is stressing you out, feel free to turn this off and come back and rejoin us another time.
This is going to be a short one tonight because there's a lot on PBN.
You know, there's a lot. So I don't want to, a lot. I don't want to overload anyone, but we're going to talk about some important stuff tonight.
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So we're going to start off with some of the issues that are popping with food, right?
And we'll segue into the rest of the program from there.
If you've noticed that when you go to the store, beef is probably $2 to $3 higher than it normally is, that's all over the country.
There is a real problem with beef right now,, plan accordingly. Okay. I'm going to read an article from Markets Insider, and it says,
Beef prices have spiked to a record high recently as a mega drought that slammed the U.S. a few years ago shrank cattle supplies.
Retail prices hit $8 a pound, topping the previous record of $7.90 a pound during the pandemic.
According to a Financial Times analysis of data from the Agricultural Department,
that's after the southwestern U.S. saw the lowest rainfall it has seen in 1,200 years
during the 2020 to 2021 season, according to a study published last year.
And I'm going to read another article about the drought that's really going on, especially in the central U.S.
While the historic dry spell has since eased somewhat, inventories of hay are still low and feed costs remain too high for some cattle farmers to afford.
The result, a whittled down national herd size that fell to a 61-year low.
Intensifying the high feed costs has been the Russia-Ukraine war that has pushed up prices of soy, corn, and wheat,
all of which ultimately means farmers can support fewer cattle, and that scarcity spells
higher beef prices. Unlike hens and pigs who give birth to multiple eggs and piglets a year,
heifers give birth to one calf every 12 months. The impact of the drought, the higher feed costs,
and a shrunken cattle supply is expected to have longer-term effects in the market.
A rancher in Louisiana told the FT that it's better to offload cattle than to feed them.
This drought is an environmental event having a significant impact on the national herd, she says.
You're seeing cattle all being sold off heavily. And
my immediate concern is what does our region and the country's cattle industry look like
six months from now and 12 months from now? What do our markets look like? So, you know,
it's an ongoing problem. There is really no relief to it. it seems like this problem is going to you know uh
go into the next year and even beyond that because it takes a long time to make a cow
and it takes a long time to uh replenish the uh the you know the beef supply so um plan accordingly folks you know uh tinned beef uh you know um you know ground beef
uh you know any kind of beef that you use right now you know um will cost you more so plan
accordingly okay now the other article that i'm going to read is from the End Times Headlines.org.
And it says nearly one million chickens to be killed on a Minnesota farm because of bird flu.
We all thought, well, you know, we haven't heard about the bird flu in a while, right?
There hasn't been a lot of articles being published about it.
flu in a while, right? There hasn't been a lot of articles being published about it, but here you have a major, major culling, right, of birds that I'm sure has, this has already been taken care of.
And the article says nearly 1 million chickens on a Minnesota egg farm will be slaughtered to
help limit the spread of the highly contagious bird flu after it was confirmed there, officials
said Monday.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture announced that the virus was found at a farm in Wright County,
Minnesota, as well as in three smaller flocks in South Dakota and Iowa. So that's Minnesota,
South Dakota, Iowa. It's amazing how this stuff just pops up in different states at major bird production plants, distribution centers.
I always have the suspicion that these things are not an accident, especially when they affect so much of our food supply, because this is a massive, massive hit for our food supply.
However, I'll continue.
So that's, I'll just reread that.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture announced that the virus was found at a farm in Wright County, Minnesota, as well as in three smaller flocks in South Dakota and Iowa.
smaller flocks in South Dakota and Iowa. Whenever the highly pathogenic avian influenza virus is detected on a farm, the entire flock is killed to keep it from spreading to other farms.
In addition to the Minnesota case, the USDA said some 26,800 turkeys will be killed on a farm in McPherson County in South Dakota, and nearly 17,000 birds will be slaughtered on two farms in Iowa's Clay County.
The egg and poultry industry has been dealing with a bird flu outbreak since last year. In 2022, nearly 58 million birds, mostly chickens and turkeys, were slaughtered
to deal with the virus, contributing significantly higher egg and turkey prices. The Minnesota farm
is the first egg-laying operation where bird flu has been found this year. The toll overall has
been much lower in 2023 than in 2022, as the number of cases found in wild birds plummeted
and farmers redoubled their efforts to prevent any contact
between their birds and the ducks and geese migrating past their farms.
Even after 940,000 chickens on the Minnesota farm were slaughtered there will there will nearly i'm sorry there will
only have been about 3.4 million birds killed this year they say only have been about 3.4 million
birds killed this year i'm thinking that each one of those birds can provide what four or five meals to you know to a family so so that's a massive massive hit to our food supply
right uh you know if you're looking at you know one bird providing say four meals okay you know
just do the math right it's a massive hit to our food supply minnesota has now lost a total of more than 5.5 million birds since the outbreak
began. Iowa, which is home to many massive egg farms, has been the hardest hit with more than
6 million birds slaughtered, including one case where 5 million egg-laying chickens had to be
killed. Egg farms, like the one in Minnesota, tend to have the most birds on any one farm. Turkey and chicken operations usually involve fewer birds.
to migrate south for the winter, but the virus can be found on any farm because it is spread easily primarily through the droppings of wild birds or direct contact with them. Egg and poultry
farmers take steps like requiring their workers to change clothes and sanitize their boots before
stepping inside their barns, limiting the sharing of tools between barns and sealing up their facilities to prevent wildlife from getting inside.
You know, these numbers are just staggering, man, just staggering.
Minnesota has now lost a total of more than 5.5 million birds since the outbreak began.
You know, it's just incredible to me.
It's just incredible to me.
They say Iowa, which is home to many of the massive egg farms, has been the hardest hit with more than 16 million birds slaughtered.
Wow.
You know, as I said, right, you could just do the math.
You know, if one bird can provide four meals, pretty much, right, you can just see just how what a massive hit uh this has been for our food supply is this all just you know coincidence or is this all just nature i i don't know i don't know
there seems to be more going on here than meets the eye right so that's beef and that's chickens. I want to read a story about the conditions that we're experiencing, especially in the middle of the country.
These things don't get any airtime on ABC, right?
NBC.
Forget CNN, right?
Who really watches that?
You know, on Fox News.
Any of the major news outlets.
And these are major news items.
You know, the beef and the chicken thing.
That's not on television at all in any of the major news articles. Right.
And and and the stuff going on with the weather in the middle of the country is just insane.
And that's not getting any airplay there. But of course, we are PBN. Right.
We pay attention to these things. So this is from the most important news dot com.
I'm sure this is an article probably written by Michael Snyder, right?
He's pretty prolific, really thorough.
It's amazing that, you know, all the stats and the different things that he pulls together
in these articles.
But here, I'm just going to read some of it.
It says, conditions are drier than the dust ball years in the heartland of America.
And of course, this was published in, what is it, November 14th, 2023. So this is very current.
This is happening right now. The seemingly endless drought in the heartland of America is not going
to be good for food production. For years, I've been relentlessly warning my readers that the
dust ball conditions would return to the middle of the country, and now dust ball conditions have
returned to the middle of the country. In fact, as you will see below, it is being reported that
conditions are drier than the dust ball years in some parts of Iowa. If the heartland of America
doesn't start getting more precipitation, we're going to be
facing some enormous problems in the years ahead. According to drought.gov, half of the Midwest is
experiencing drought right now, and things are particularly dire in the state of Iowa. 94% of Iowa is currently in drought with 24% in extreme drought. Despite decent improvement
over the last month, drought is still impacting 68% of Wisconsin and 58% of Minnesota. Needless
to say, the heartland of America produces much of our food. So it should deeply concern all of us that communities all over the
Midwest are starting to run out of water. The southeast Kansas city of Caney will run out of
water by March 1st without rain. Officials said its school district has moved to a four-day week
to conserve water. Four wells in Belle Plaine, Iowa are producing 40% as much water as usual.
Residents of Oscolia near Des Moines can be fined $65 or more if they defy water restrictions.
Residents in many towns aren't allowed to wash their cars.
Port potties have replaced some public bathrooms.
We're hoping it just rains, says James Rainbolt, manager of a wholesale water plant that supplies parts of four counties in southern Kansas.
We're at the mercy of the weather.
Ultimately, we're all at the mercy of the weather.
the weather. Ultimately, we're all at the mercy of the weather. Despite all of our advanced technology, we remain highly vulnerable to shifting weather patterns. And at this moment,
we're being told that some parts of Iowa are literally drier than the Dust Bowl years.
Two counties in Iowa have had the driest three-year period on record going back at least
to the 1890s, said drier than the dust
bowl years he said dozens of other communities are carefully watching well levels and streams
hall said trying to make sure that they don't end up in the same situation as bell plain uh uh or
osculea which are experiencing water. As a result of the extremely dry conditions,
major dust storms are becoming increasingly common in the Midwest. Earlier this year,
a colossal dust storm in Illinois actually caused a vehicle pileup that involved dozens of motorists.
Gusting winds in the Midwestern United States have kicked up a fatal dust storm, reducing visibility to zero and triggering a major vehicle pileup that killed at least six people on an Illinois highway.
The lack of precipitation is also causing enormous headaches all along the Mississippi River, and the authorities are warning that this is not likely to change anytime soon.
and the authorities are warning that this is not likely to change anytime soon.
Lack of rain brought drought to much of the Mississippi River basin early this summer,
and it's likely going to linger into winter, Army Corps of Engineer Leadership said during a press conference on November 8th in Memphis, while a dredge was working nonstop to keep the river channel open a few miles south.
working non-stop to keep the river channel open a few miles south. It's the second year in a row that extreme drought has caused a shrinking channel, forcing the core to dredge later in
the season than normal. Last year, low river levels lingered into winter and dredging continued
until January. It's shaping up to be the same this year. Welcome to
the new normal along the Mississippi River and considering the fact that so much of our food is
transported on vessels that use the Mississippi River, this is a big problem for all of us.
Of course, drought is just one of the factors that has been depressing food production in this nation.
Overall, natural disasters caused $21.5 billion in agricultural losses in the United States last year.
Research from the American Farm Bureau Federation suggests that nationwide, natural disasters caused $21.5 billion in agricultural losses last year.
Only about half of those were protected by insurance, the majority of which is sold through federally backed programs.
Their payouts to farmers have increased over 500% in the last two decades.
The number is almost certainly to be even larger this year.
number is almost certainly to be even larger this year. And this is one of the reasons why food prices are going to continue to go up no matter what our leaders choose to do. Food production
is being hammered from one direction after another. And this is happening at a time when
global supplies of food are becoming tighter and tighter. And he says, so I hope that you decided to stock up on food while prices are
still relatively low because they are a lot higher now and it won't be too long before they reach
exceedingly painful levels. So he said that he hoped that you decided to stock up on food while
they were low, right? And that was what, maybe years ago you know a year or so ago right uh
you know so you can see uh this drought right which gets no airtime no airplane no one talks
about it right it's still ongoing it's still causing us kind of all kinds of problems and and
it is affecting our food supply uh and of course that affect the prices of the foods that we we consume
right you know in you know every you know where you go to a restaurant you
know from a restaurant to the supermarket to ordering food online like
if you order you know supplies for your pantry online to your you know even your
local farmers right you know they have to pass on the cost.
Everybody's passing on the cost.
And our food supply, you know, is dwindling, right?
It is under threat.
And it's just a matter, you know, as I said, you know, earlier in the podcast,
I'm like, I'm like, I'm just driving on a highway and I'm just going by all these car wrecks, right?
These accidents, right?
And you're just kind of just watching the carnage.
And that's what we're doing right now with all the wars, with all the stuff going on.
Economically, there's been so many red flags popping up in the economic sector, right? You know, about, you know, it just seems like,
it's amazing just how long this Ponzi scheme that they're playing is going to last, right?
So that's another thing that we're watching as well.
And then we have all this stuff going on with the food supply, which is just crazy.
Okay.
supply, which is just crazy. Okay. So I'm just going to read another article here. And this one is coming from allnewspipeline.com. And, you know, I don't know, the farmer's almanac is usually
pretty accurate, right? And they're predicting that, you know, we're going to
get, you know, a lot more snow this year than normal. It seems certainly warmer than normal,
right? I can tell you, right, driving home from work today, it was 70 degrees and we're talking November 16th, right? You know, me driving, you know, upstate New York, right?
It's just incredible to me that it is that warm at this time of the year.
So I'll just read a little bit of this and then we'll close out it says
dangerous weather ahead every u.s region will see above average snow precipitation or rain this winter
um this is here
and this was written by susan duclos and says, the reason this winter will be colder ends Tuesday, March 19th, 2024,
can be learned from past winter storms where the masses decided not to prepare
until the very last minute.
Panic shopping until the grocery store shelves are empty.
And it says here,
Farmer's Almanac forecast, right?
And it says region one, the northeast.
Will there be snow?
Yes.
Precipitation and snowfall will be above normal.
The snowiest stretches occur in mid to late November and mid-December and early to mid-January.
There will be a white Christmas in the mountains, but it is less likely in the foothills along I-95.
How cold will winter be?
Winter temperatures will be above normal.
The coldest periods will occur mid to late November, early to mid January, and early to mid February.
Region 2, the Atlantic Corridor.
Will there be snow? Yes. Winter precipitation and snowfall will be above normal,
2 to 3 inches above monthly averages.
The snowiest periods will occur at the end of December,
late January, and mid-February.
We don't expect a white Christmas.
How cold will winter be?
Winter temperatures will be above normal overall.
Specifically, December is slightly above average temps.
Temperatures for January and February are below average.
The coldest spell will run from late January to mid-February.
Region 3, the Appalachians.
Will there be snow?
Expect above normal precipitation and snowfall.
Wow.
The snowiest spells will occur in late December, mid to late January, and early to mid-February.
We expect a white Christmas in the higher terrain of West Virginia in the north, but not elsewhere in the region.
How cold would winter be?
Winter temperatures will be below normal overall.
December temperatures are just 1 degree below average.
January and February temperatures are 2 to 3 degrees below average, respectively.
The coldest period will run from early January through mid-February.
Region 4, the Southeast.
Precipitation.
We expect a wet winter and above normal precipitation and snowfall for the southeast, most of North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia.
The best chances of snow occur in late January and mid-February.
We do not expect a white Christmas.
Temperature
Unlike much of the U.S., the southeast will have a mild winter with above normal temperatures overall.
East will have a mild winter with above normal temperatures overall.
The coldest periods would arrive in late December and early and mid February.
Region five, Florida.
It says precipitation, winter rainfall will be above normal for most of Florida. So expect a wet winter along with those mild temperature along with the mild temperature
the southern end of florida will be drier than normal but remember that's all relative in a
tropical climate we don't expect a white christmas temperature florida's winter temperatures will be
milder than normal this year great news for all those snowboards the coolest temperatures occur
in late december late january and early february
and just flipping through here right it says uh the deep south region eight
right precipitation precipitation will be above normal coming mainly in the form of rain given
temperatures in the mid to high 40s the highest threats of snow in the north are mid
and late january and mid february we do not expect a white christmas winter will be colder than normal
in the north and warmer than normal in the south with the coolest coldest periods in late
december early january late january early february wow and uh you know you should pick up your your copy of uh you should
pick up your copy of the uh the almanac right this is just fascinating stuff um you know uh
all across the United States it's it's just saying rainfall or snow is going to be above normal.
Rainfall and snow is going to be above normal.
You know, the areas that are down south, it seems like they're going to be milder, but there's going to be a lot of rainfall.
That seems to be the trend.
So check it out.
You know, all this is just saying is that prepare.
Okay. You know, if you live up north
right and if you live uh you know um in the in the midwest in the midwest right central us okay
then uh you might have a colder uh a snowier um uh you know time of it this winter.
So just prepare for it.
Get those snow tires on, right?
Get those snow tires on.
Make sure that your snow removal equipment is working.
Make sure that you put that oil in, right?
And everything else in your snow blower, right?
Make sure that,
you know, everything works.
You know, if you use a tractor to move all that snow out, right, you got to make sure everything works before it comes through, okay?
You know, cut down any trees or anything that's close to your home that if, you know, you
do get that wet, heavy snow, right, you know, the limbs don't break off and cause damage.
You do all that prep work now while there's still time, okay?
You know, I went about it really late, but I actually, you know, I shocked my well.
You know, yeah, I put the pellets in and, you know, and, you know, put the, you know,
wash down the top of the well with chlorine and everything else. And, you know, we're running all
of that through the house right now, all that chlorine, you know, we're just running it through,
right, we had to shut off all the, you know, the, you know, all the other equipment, right,
that, you know, the filters and everything else.
We had to shut all that off while all this stuff gets processed through the pipes and everything else, right?
But these are all necessary things that you do to make sure that things keep functioning, right?
You know, and things keep working.
So that's pretty much all I've got, right?
I wanted to talk about the food issue because we haven't really talked about that in a while.
And I also want to do a little bit more comprehensive thing about our food supply as we go into the new year.
You know, if you notice that your turkey is probably costing a little bit more
this year right which it is then uh you know there was a huge loss of birds this year plus the cost
of feed plus you know everything is just way more expensive so you know that ham that you're going
to be buying this year as well you know that's going to cost you a lot more right you know all
of all you that that turkey dinner is going to be a lot more expensive this year than well you know that's going to cost you a lot more right you know all of all you that
that turkey dinner is going to be a lot more expensive this year than it has been in the past
but you know that's all beside the point if you can spend quality time with your folks then please
do it you know i urge you to i urge you to put you know if you can put aside all the fighting and the arguments and all that stuff aside,
and touch bases with your relatives and your loved ones this Thanksgiving, I really strongly urge you to do so.
And as Christians, we have to keep praying.
We have to keep praying that, you know, we're still a country relatively safe, relatively at peace with an abundance of bounty.
with an abundance of bounty, you know, and we have to keep praying that, you know,
and we have to keep reminding ourselves that, you know, not to take any of this stuff for granted,
you know, not to take any of this stuff for granted because it's all very, very fragile, right? You you know one thing covid taught us was just how fragile everything is right and we should never lose sight of any of
that okay folks so have a wonderful wonderful thanksgiving um you know keep listening to pbn
i know this weekend right uh you know know, we're going to have some fantastic
shows on. Changing Earth podcast is going to be on with Chin Gibson and Sarah Hathaway on Sunday.
I don't know if there's going to be a Reliance on, but I do know that there will be a Draven Rock and,
you know, and all the other great shows that are going to be on this weekend.
Who knows? We might even hear from Dave Jones, right?
You know, Dave has gone quiet.
But we might even hear.
It would be nice to get a little update from Dave.
We're going to see how he's doing.
And, you know, we all hope that he's doing well
and not stressing too much, you know about everything uh um and uh you know you can
always scroll back and listen to any of the programs from this week right you can scroll
back in the player and select if there's something there that you like you know you can listen
please pass pbn around please pass this podcast around. If there's anyone that you know that needs this type of material, right,
if they're craving this type of material, please pass this around.
Let the folks know what we offer here on PBN.
Okay.
So I'm going to call it a night. Okay, folks, it was nice catching up,
right? And have a wonderful, wonderful Thanksgiving. And, you know,
right? And don't eat too much, right? And hug your loved ones.
And take care.
Good night.
The second largest producer of agricultural products, the Netherlands,
is being forced to shut down 3,000 of its farms in 2023. This is to meet the strict emission goals of the European Union.
This is to meet the strict emission goals of the European Union.
2023 will be a year of food shortage and increased food costs across the world.
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Are you prepared to be the family doctor in a disaster or emergency?
This is the Intrepid Commander, and I'm holding The Prepper's Medical Handbook by William W. Forgy, M.D.
In this great book, you'll learn how to prepare for medical care off the grid.
You'll learn about assessment and stabilization.
for medical care off the grid.
You'll learn about assessment and stabilization.
You'll even deal with things like bioterrorism response,
radiation, and how to build the off-grid medical kit at home.
Look, 2020 taught us a lot about the limitations of our medical infrastructure in America.
Get the Prepper's Medical Handbook today at Amazon.com.
Again, that's the Prepper's Medical Handbook by William W. Forgy. Thank you. សូវាប់ពីប្រាប់ពីប្រាប់ពីប្រាប់ពីប្រាប់ពីប្រាប់ពីប្រាប់ពីប្រាប់ពីប្រាប់ពីប្រាប់ពីប្រាប់ពីប្រាប់ពីប្រាប់ពីប្រាប់ពីប្រាប់ពីប្រាប់ពីប្រាប់ពីប្រាប់ពីប្រាប់ពីប្រាប់ពីប្រាប់ពីប្រាប់ពីប្រាប់ពីប្រាប់ពីប្រាប់ពីប្� Thank you.