Conagra Brands Panic As Consumers 'Hunker Down'

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Conagra Brands Panic As Consumers "Hunker Down". Food inflation is getting worse as food prices keep rising.
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We were taught “Use it up, wear it out, make it do, or do without!” We wasted NOTHING.

carolynm
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My dad, had he lived, would have been 100 this year. He hid money in a few pair of socks in the back of his sock drawer.

graywilliams_.
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My Nana canned food she grew on her 7 acre farm in New Mexico. She made everything from scratch and canned food like chili, pot roast, soup-you-can-stand-a-fork-up-in, all kinds of preserves and fermented foods. I was too young to learn from her but I caught the canning fever when I moved to Colorado and discovered Palisades peaches. I studied canning by watching the Guildbrook Farms YouTube channel and now I can almost all the same things my Nana did. I stepped up the skill by learning how to can and preserve foods with no electricity. It’s a priceless, timeless skill and will sustain me and my community wherever I am. Combined with my defense training, including hand-to-hand engagement, grey-man techniques, I-can-fix-anything abilities, medical training, and an iron will to stand up for our country and the US Constitution, I can demonstrate value if needed to support a group. The most important preparedness skill is [mindset] and an rock solid moral and ethical attitude. You cannot survive if you cannot build and maintain trust relationships. Our country will not survive if we are not willing to fight, prevail, and die fighting for her. God bless America and our great Patriots! 🙏🕊🇺🇸

StealthyNomadica
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My Grandpa and Grandma on my Moms side lived on a 66 Acre farm. They fed 8 people. The City folks drove over and begged for food. My Grandpa would tell them. I don’t have food to GIVE you.
Trespassers would hunt our land. Never confront armed trespassers hunting your land. Everybody was starving and skinny. They only got meat on the Weekends. Mom said they mainly ate what they grew.
They fed my Father three times a day. My Father said I thought I was going to turn into beans.

americanharleyrider
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Take note, the 3 largest institutional shareholders of Conagra Rock, Vanguard, and State Street! Surprise! surprise!♥️💕🕊️

christophermathews
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My grandmother wasted nothing. She mended every pair of stockings, cut open toothpaste tubes, skin cream containers, foundation (makeup tubes) and if sugar spilled on a clean surface she would swipe it up put it back into the sugar bowl. She was a woman of means but growing up during the Great Depression changed her. 🙏🏼

juliekostas
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We started gardening, my father in-law gave me half of his garden area so I have squash, cucumbers, peppers and green onions already producing. Lettuce is done. Broccoli seedlings have 24 to 36 days more until they get planted. Onions will be started tomorrow for seedlings and will sow carrots and radishes next week. I buy local meats so I pay a tad more but Bill Gates doesn't have his "fertilizer" machines on it. Grocery prices here are crazy...they never relaxed since the fuel crisis thanks to Hunter's Dad.

jeffreypinder
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My Grandmother told me always keep a stockpile of canned goods but don't ever let anyone know. She said during TGD people would kill you for your food.

allenwalters
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My grandma was a young mom during the depression. She was a hard working, methodical and organized woman who respected everything she owned and was extremely frugal. She saved and reused so many useful things but not in a hoarding way. She never owned or drove a car. My mom said my gran was excellent at making food out of scraps in lean times. My grandpa was self employed. He was quite a hustler and an inventor, always bring in money by selling something they owned, made or by trading for things etc. My mom said he even gave away her dog because a customer really liked it. 😳 hard times are for sure ahead but those with home skills, tenacity, imagination and a desire to make it to the other side will make it.

AcornHillHomestead
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All of my grandparents lived through the Great Depression. One of them had 8 children at the time. That grandpa died young of stress, no doubt. So even many of my aunts and uncles were effected. They were all frugal and ended up well off, but one of the farm barns was made into an organized warehouse of all kinds of horded parts for a huge variety of farm equipment, machinery, nuts, bolts, ANYTHING farm related collected over 70 years. He had a running catapillar bulldozer from 1937 that finally died in the 1990s. Incredible amount of frugal behavior, but that's part of how the family farm survived to this day. They saved the wire ties from bread loafs! Crazy. This is why I started gardening when food prices went up. It's what my family did during hard times.

crfogal
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I hope Conagra is the first to go under… literally one of the most inhumane companies on the planet!

williambixby
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My parents and grandparents went through the depression and while they didn’t talk about it much I did learn by example. They had plenty of food put back and continued to until they passed. When we cleaned out their houses we found ‘old’ food(read past the government Best Buy date’. I do this myself because I knew after myself and my husband retired we wouldn’t have nearly the money we had when working and this has been made worse by this ‘recession’. Ninja, I believe we have not seen anything yet.

thistlemoon
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Just to let you know meat prices are up 100% or more. A steak you could’ve bought two years ago for $3.50 a pound is well over seven dollars. Good thing inflation is only at 4% or less.

jiggajackstrac
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My beautiful Mom God rest her soul was a child of the Depression. She never forgot how life changed and was so good with money. She did without so she could help her kids and teach us about money. You are correct Ninja about the children of the Depression. 😎

cobra_joe
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I bought an AC unit for my window, 5000 BTU's, and I went to Home Depot first and everything was around $300-350 for that so I got my sister's boyfriend to use his military ID and we got one at Lowe's for $177. 😊

kennycarneal
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My grandma was a little kid in the depression. She saved everything, including Christmas wrapping paper and ribbons and bows!

denisedevoto
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Here in Canada, the big groceries companies have had RECORD PROFITS...how disgusting is that. Food and GAS big PROFITS, RECORD PROFITS!!!!

marysinclair
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My parents made it through the great depression. My mother, currently 101.5 years old, doesn't talk about it. My Dad wrote 2 books on his life that included many stories of the depression.

ocanadastandinguard
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My father saved things. He was a young child during the depression. He had an old very old leather work boot. "I might need the leather from it someday." The garage was full of things that I thought we would never use. He grew up on a farm. Food was plentiful. Money was not. He grew up with make-do, do without and do-over ideal. It was cash-on-the-barrelhead. Where I grew up in rural Alberta, Canada there was an old country general store about 20 miles from us. He had the old wooden stave barrels there. There was a huge cylinder of cheese on one of them under a glass cover. A huge knife was there so you could cut off what you wanted. He would weigh it then wrap it up in butcher paper. My father taught me so many hands-on skills. He told me when I was about 14 years old. "You had better learn every hands-on skill you can and everything you can. You will be needing to use them in the years ahead when everything goes to hell." How prophetic his advice has come to be. Now that I am living on an acraege those skills are a necessity for self-reliance.

gordonbone
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My Grandmother did this till she died 8 years ago at an age of 94. She horred everything and sorry to say she knew that there was coming a time we would need them was told to all her children and her eighty nine in total grandkids. Half of which horded and other half keep nothing. But she was a very clean organized horder. Nothing ever seen in the living area of the home. Basement and attic all in order ever box and drum label for future use. Now we are seeing it I am 71, 😢

flojohnson