Energy Infrastructure Destruction: Engineered Famine and Recession Ahead
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The world is teetering on the brink of an unprecedented global crisis following widespread destruction of energy infrastructure. This has triggered a cascade of dire consequences, from energy lockdowns in Australia to national emergencies due to fuel shortages across Asia.
Beyond immediate fuel impacts, the loss of 25% of global LNG and 21% of Persian Gulf oil, coupled with halted fertilizer exports from major producers, threatens an engineered famine within 8-10 months. These factors are pushing the global economy deep into recession territory, with some nations facing depression.
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Transcript
Let's talk about the implications on our Republic. Um, this destruction of energy infrastructure with all its downstream effects of blocking exports of helium and sulfur and sulfuric acid, not just natural gas. Uh, we're we're seeing uh New South Wales in Australia now declaring some kind of emergency and saying that they're going to have to have energy lockdowns. The Philippines just declared a national emergency based on fuel shortages today. They don't have enough diesel. Uh, Thailand has halted about half its shipping fleet. Taiwan is about to run out of gas that powers its its grid, and Japan is in dire straits financially and industrially if this continues. I mean, the whole world's going to pay the price for Trump's arrogance, it seems. Yeah, no, so, the damage that's already inflicted is significant, it's substantial, and it's going to it it's going to last at least for the mid-term, you know, a couple of years. Um, the uh what the shutdown of the liquid natural gas, because Qatar was a major supplier of that, that's now about 25% of the world's supply gone, shut off. No longer available. Uh, the oil coming out of the Persian Gulf, ...