Wasn't supposed to send a new briefing so early because I prefer having more sources to pull from and analyse the bigger trend and the system itself, alas here we are. Still mainly focused on China.
That is not ebola, that is hasta virus and the fact that anyone reading this didn't know any better makes me think about the future. You are being Psy oped. Be more aware.
As previously outline in Dabs (Daily Briefings) and Everything Shortages posts, and the most recent oneEverything...Collapse, last quarter trends are just solidifying themselves.
One of the most important minerals for the production of most of industry, and chemicals will still be in short supply for most of 2022.
Lysene, one of the most important amino acids to raise animal protein, will still experience shortage for at least half of 2022 (and a self inflicted wound if you read the image).
This news has been circulating around like it's a new possible pandemic on the loose. And below my opinions about it.
Per the last post, the trucker shortage near ports in China is driving scarcity, disruption and lowering overall output in the region, the trends for the entire month are pretty clear and any layperson could tell you.
Not anything new, overall the trends for most of 2022 are bleak. There will be less food, higher prices and incredible amounts of disruption around. And some populations might become desperate.
Desperate people breed desperate government, and that only gives you stupid, short sighted decisions.
New Covid-19 high for Chinese Terracotta Warriors city battling deadly seasonal fever
Hantaviruses in rodents and humans, Xi'an, PR China
Xi'an, the capital of Shaanxi province, located in north-west China, is one of the major endemic areas for haemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS) 1
A 30 second Google search will give you plenty of scientific and journalistic articles about the endemic nature of HF in Shaanxi province and consequently Xi'an. Worth to note the clear and possible Hybrid Warfare angle, but I doubt it as of now. On to actual problems I guess.
Trucking Snarls Near Key Chinese Port Costing Economy $4 Billion a Day
The health of the global supply chains in the next few weeks may partly hinge on the vitality of the trucking sector in a key port near Shanghai.
This suspension, along with restrictions on truckers in some areas in and around Zhejiang, has halted operations at some yards and warehouses at Ningbo port.
Ports around the world have been struggling to ease congestion as the pandemic heads into a third year. Ningbo is one of the world’s top container gateways and a crucial part of supply chains that connect factories in East China to consumers of automobiles, machines, electronics and toys in the U.S., Europe and elsewhere.
A week’s delay of trade at Ningbo’s port could cost $4 billion including exports of circuit boards and clothes, according to consultant Russell Group. Some polyester factories in Ningbo have stopped work because they can’t receive raw materials via truck or ship out goods, according to analysts at Wood Mackenzie. Road deliveries of liquefied natural gas, an important fuel for industries unconnected to pipelines, has also slowed.
The port was partly shut for weeks last August after a Covid-19 outbreak, causing a slowdown in exports, disruptions and congestion across supply lines. 2
Aluminum Prices Spike Up 62% and Will Continue Rallying in 2022 3
After the semiconductor crisis, the former Audi Board Member for Purchasing Bernd Martens and Ingolstadt economics professor Dirk Hecht expect the next bottleneck in magnesium. China dominates the semiconductor market and has almost a monopoly on magnesium with 87 percent of global production, said Hecht on Monday. The severe shortage of magnesium is already leading to record prices, creating global market distortions and “heralds enormous disruptions in the supply chain”. Political and strategic measures to ensure the flow of deliveries were not taken.
The current semiconductor shortage was not only caused by the corona pandemic, said the professor for procurement management at the TH Ingolstadt. China is efficiently implementing five-year plans for core technologies. Martens criticized that buyers are still largely based on costs. “The current example of supply bottlenecks and record prices for magnesium or a few years ago for rare earths show how the previous approach leads to a dead end.” 4
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22837422/
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/newsletters/2022-01-10/supply-chain-latest-chinese-ports-watched-for-more-supply-snarls?utm_medium=social&cmpid=socialflow-twitter-business&utm_campaign=socialflow-organic&utm_source=twitter&utm_content=business
https://www.globaltrademag.com/aluminum-prices-spike-up-62-and-will-continue-rallying-in-2022/
https://marketresearchtelecast.com/former-head-buyer-and-economic-researcher-expect-magnesium-shortage/24050
Can you explain in a little more detail how Dr Robert Malone's post about hemorrhagic fever points to psyops? In the tweet you screenshotted, there are a lot of words I'm not familiar with. But I'm new to your sub stack so maybe they are explained in your posts. I am familiar with the various methods of psyops, and also recall that a side effect of the vaccine could be hemorrhagic fever.