Thursday, July 3, 2008

July 3, 2008 - News

TOP TRENDS 2008

The Trends Journal

Vol. XV, No. 1  /  2008

 

Here is a sample of what you will find in the Trends Journal®

 

 

“Just as the Twin Towers collapsed from the top down, so too will the US economy from an Economic 9/11. When the high-stake speculators, banks, brokerages, and buyout firms that leveraged billions with millions get hit… everything underneath them will turn to rubble.”

 

 

“Failing banks, busted brokerages, toppled corporate giants, bankrupt cities, states in default, foreign creditors cashing out of US securities… whatever the spark, the stage is set for panic in the streets. When the giant firms fall, they'll crush the man on the street….”

 

 

—CW Says,Click here to read this important update!

 

 

Tyson Foods Kills All 15,000 Hens Exposed to Bird-Flu Virus

By:  The News Tribune, Associated Press /  June 5, 2008

 

“State officials said Wednesday that all the chickens exposed to a strain of the bird-flu virus at a Tyson Foods Inc. contract farm in northwest Arkansas have been killed and buried.

 

“Springdale-based Tyson killed 15,000 hens from a flock that tested positive for antibodies of H7N3, a less virulent strain of the virus. The H5N1 bird-flu virus has killed 240 people worldwide.”

 

Click Here to Read It All

 

 

Weather Adds to Food Worries

U.S. farms in bad shape as world clamors for corn, soybeans, wheat, rice

By:  David Streitfeld and Keith Bradsher  /  The News Tribune, The New York Times  / June 10, 2008

 

Heavy rains in the U.S. and drought in Australia signal that global harvests might fall far short of what’s needed to help ease world food shortages.

 

GRIFFIN, IND—In a year when global harvests need to be excellent to ease the threat of pervasive food shortages, evidence is mounting that they will be average at best. Some farmers are starting to fear disaster.

 

“American corn and soybean farmers are suffering from too much rain, while Australian wheat farmers have been plagued by drought.

 

Bob Biehl, whose farm is near St. Louis, has managed to plant only 140 of the 650 acres he wanted to devote to corn. Some farmers in his area ‘haven’t even been able to take the tractor out of the shed,’ he said.

 

“U.S. soybean plantings are running 16 percent behind last year. Rice is tardy in Arkansas, which produces nearly half the country’s crop.”

 

 Click Here to Read Similar Article

 

 

New Seminar Available on Audio CD:

 

A Storm Is Coming!

By Charles Wheeling

 

Burleson, Texas – February 2008

 

Almost 8 hours on 6 CDs – $25

 

Click Here to Order

 

 

 

quotablegraphicjpeg

“If you have ten thousand regulations you destroy all respect for the law.”

 

            –Sir Winston Churchill

0 comments: