Author: Web Curator
-
“The Great American Famine” by Liz Reitzig
(This is a topic I’ve wanted to tackle for months now. It’s heavy, and complex. But it’s necessary. Now, with the culling of millions of chickens, the ramping up of testing cattle for bird flu, a vast increase in acreage going to “renewable energy” sources, and the constant destruction of ecosystems for “development,” this seems like the right time to touch on this topic.)
“If only one man dies of hunger, that is a tragedy. If millions die, that’s only statistics.” – Joseph Stalin
If I ask you to imagine 45 million people you probably can’t.
What does it even look like?
That’s roughly twice the population of Australia, or the whole population of Spain or Argentina, or roughly 14% of the population of the United States.
45 million people of average size standing shoulder to shoulder would take up approximately 3.23 square miles!
It’s almost too enormous for comprehension.
Yet, as recently as 1958-62 (just over 60 years ago), widespread famine ravished China, and, according to historian Frank Dickotter 45 million (approx 7% of the population at the time) Chinese people died unnecessarily as a direct result of the Great Chinese Famine.
But why? How did it get this bad? Why didn’t people stop this from happening? And HOW can we use the lessons from the Great Chinese Famine to prevent this from happening to the American population–if it’s not too late already?
Read the full article on Substack.