View Full Version : Conspiracy Theorists wanted -> Egg prices
CoachKandSportsguy
01-29-2023, 03:48 PM
Firefighters Continue to Assess Damage After Large Fire at Bozrah Egg Farm – NBC Connecticut (https://www.nbcconnecticut.com/news/local/multiple-crews-respond-to-large-fire-at-egg-farm-in-bozrah/2964121/)
Lets pile on it on when there one theory, and keep exploiting it. .
-competitors
Aces4
01-29-2023, 04:30 PM
Firefighters Continue to Assess Damage After Large Fire at Bozrah Egg Farm – NBC Connecticut (https://www.nbcconnecticut.com/news/local/multiple-crews-respond-to-large-fire-at-egg-farm-in-bozrah/2964121/)
Lets pile on it on when there one theory, and keep exploiting it. .
-competitors
Some reporting, I don’t even see how many chickens died.
As far as expensive eggs, the clueless could do what we have done all of our lives. Turn to other sources of protein and use as few eggs as possible until prices recover and they will. Of course, one could farm with their own hens.
ThirdOfFive
01-29-2023, 05:52 PM
Firefighters Continue to Assess Damage After Large Fire at Bozrah Egg Farm – NBC Connecticut (https://www.nbcconnecticut.com/news/local/multiple-crews-respond-to-large-fire-at-egg-farm-in-bozrah/2964121/)
Lets pile on it on when there one theory, and keep exploiting it. .
-competitors
Isn't it obvious? Goldurned hens went and got UNIONIZED.
Taltarzac725
01-29-2023, 06:24 PM
Probably abducted by aliens! They want something that tastes like chicken for a change. Too many humans on their menus.
tvbound
01-29-2023, 06:45 PM
While not getting eggcited over some cracked up conspiracy theory, nor taking it just as a yolk either, but quite frankly I'm also not ruling out...fowl play.
CoachKandSportsguy
01-29-2023, 07:44 PM
While not getting eggcited over some cracked up conspiracy theory, nor taking it just as a yolk either, but quite frankly I'm also not ruling out...fowl play.
:bowdown::bowdown::bowdown:
Caymus
01-29-2023, 08:08 PM
Eggs, the new status of wealth.
Michael G.
01-29-2023, 08:41 PM
Firefighters Continue to Assess Damage After Large Fire at Bozrah Egg Farm – NBC Connecticut (https://www.nbcconnecticut.com/news/local/multiple-crews-respond-to-large-fire-at-egg-farm-in-bozrah/2964121/)
Lets pile on it on when there one theory, and keep exploiting it. .
-competitors
My guess is a way to destroy the bird flu sickness and the building owners were behind on the payments . :shrug:
ThirdOfFive
01-30-2023, 09:08 AM
Meat chickens are going up in price as well.
I understand that Sam's Club will be charging more for those roost-ed chickens.
Stu from NYC
01-30-2023, 11:52 AM
Rumor has it that it is all a communist plot to make us all vegetarians and save the cows.
Michael G.
01-30-2023, 03:56 PM
At our age, don't you wonder what's next to raises and announce a shortage of something.
Either there's to many people in the world putting a demand food products or the whole world's going to hell.
Michael G.
01-30-2023, 05:09 PM
If you live in one of these states, you’re spending way too much on eggs (https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/markets/here-are-the-states-where-egg-prices-have-doubled-%e2%80%94-and-the-lucky-few-where-theyve-risen-by-just-50percent-according-to-new-data/ar-AA16x5cY)
Mark1976
01-31-2023, 06:41 AM
While not getting eggcited over some cracked up conspiracy theory, nor taking it just as a yolk either, but quite frankly I'm also not ruling out...fowl play.
Now that’s my kind of humor! Eggcellent!
lpkruege1
01-31-2023, 07:08 AM
Some reporting, I don’t even see how many chickens died.
As far as expensive eggs, the clueless could do what we have done all of our lives. Turn to other sources of protein and use as few eggs as possible until prices recover and they will. Of course, one could farm with their own hens.
Are you suggesting you would raise them in your Linai? Just asking. Between the smell, rats, and mice,,, but then again it would solve the problem of using chemicals on the lawn as fertilizer. The lawn will really green up after cleaning out the coop, I mean Linai. Then there's the fly issue. But they'll keep the gecko problem in check, bugs too. I don't remember seeing anything in the compact, so you should be good to go. :jester:
ThirdOfFive
01-31-2023, 07:45 AM
If you live in one of these states, you’re spending way too much on eggs (https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/markets/here-are-the-states-where-egg-prices-have-doubled-%e2%80%94-and-the-lucky-few-where-theyve-risen-by-just-50percent-according-to-new-data/ar-AA16x5cY)
Excellent graphic. Thanx.
One has to wonder though, just what is too much? Back in 1965, that fifty cents we paid a local farmer per dozen eggs would be $4.46 today. I don't know what we spent for milk back then but with five kids growing up in the wilds of northern Minnesota it must have been substantial. Milk came from the same farmer who supplied the community with eggs. If we got there early enough in the day the milk would still be warm from the cow. Freshness was never a problem. Most everything was locally sourced: beef came from a farmer who raised Hereford cattle. A pig or two in the fall went in large part for ham and bacon, which we mostly made ourselves, and the leftover pork scraps and fat, together with a whole deer, meant 150 - 200 lbs. of sausage. I don't ever remember mom buying potatoes at the grocery store. We raised our own; and enough potatoes to feed a family of seven for a year is a whole lot of potatoes. Not one of my fonder memories though...those were the days before gasoline-powered garden tillers so everything--weeding, tilling, hilling, more weeding, more tilling, finally harvesting--was done by hand. To say nothing of the wild blueberries, raspberries, and cranberries that we picked in the fall so mom could turn them into the best jam and sauce on the planet.
We might pay more per capita for our food today, but really not very much more. We're paying not just for the food but for the middlemen; packaging, shipping, etc., as well--things that back in the day were not an issue. What we gain is convenience. We pay $4.50 per dozen eggs but don't have to clean the coop. That Christmas ham that looks so nice in the cooler at Publix is quick, convenient and delicious; but we don't have to butcher the pig, cut up the meat, soak the hams in brine for a month and then smoke it ourselves. We eat as good if not better today than 50 or 75 years ago, and our "labor" consists of filling the cart, paying at checkout, and complaining about the prices. We're not hoeing potatoes for four hours under a hot August sun.
Don't get me wrong. I wouldn't have traded my experiences growing up for anything. We learned a lot more than just gardening and butchering. But, on balance food-wise, Americans today have it better than ever.
Rodneysblue
01-31-2023, 08:53 AM
Some reporting, I don’t even see how many chickens died.
As far as expensive eggs, the clueless could do what we have done all of our lives. Turn to other sources of protein and use as few eggs as possible until prices recover and they will. Of course, one could farm with their own hens.
Gee, I wish I had a Courtyard Villa. I could have chickens in the backyard. 😜🤣😂😉
Dantes
01-31-2023, 09:01 AM
I know people in Pennsylvania that own chicken farms. They were almost wiped out from the flu. Now they have another problem and they are not alone. Chickens are not laying eggs they are looking into the chicken food to see if the formula was changed it’s far from being over
Bay Kid
01-31-2023, 09:27 AM
I know people in Pennsylvania that own chicken farms. They were almost wiped out from the flu. Now they have another problem and they are not alone. Chickens are not laying eggs they are looking into the chicken food to see if the formula was changed it’s far from being over
My friends I buy eggs from only use a special feed formula that they drive 2 hours where they grind fresh per order. All other feed has been bagged for who knows how long. There is such a big difference in fresh than store bought.
Aces4
01-31-2023, 09:48 AM
Gee, I wish I had a Courtyard Villa. I could have chickens in the backyard. 😜🤣😂😉
You go for it, that’s if you have any farming skills, don’t mind the smell of chicken **** and shoveling it. Don’t forget the predators, they can be a real nuisance.
coleprice
01-31-2023, 10:42 AM
Firefighters Continue to Assess Damage After Large Fire at Bozrah Egg Farm – NBC Connecticut (https://www.nbcconnecticut.com/news/local/multiple-crews-respond-to-large-fire-at-egg-farm-in-bozrah/2964121/)
Lets pile on it on when there one theory, and keep exploiting it. .
-competitors
Multiple farms that sell chickens reported that their chickens have stopped laying eggs, so they don't have any for sale. Apparently there is something in chicken feed that stops chickens from laying eggs. If you have chickens that don't lay eggs, feed them goat feed or a rice and pinto bean mix because it seems anything made as chicken feed stops chickens from laying eggs. Chickens fed other forms of feed will be able to lay eggs.
Geodyssey
01-31-2023, 10:57 AM
Some reporting, I don’t even see how many chickens died.
As far as expensive eggs, the clueless could do what we have done all of our lives. Turn to other sources of protein and use as few eggs as possible until prices recover and they will. Of course, one could farm with their own hens.
Prices will not come back down to where they were (just like gasoline, natural gas, etc)
Inflation in the West is just starting.
A dozen eggs in Russia are about $1.80, same as last year. And gas prices keep falling.
Two Bills
01-31-2023, 11:50 AM
Prices will not come back down to where they were (just like gasoline, natural gas, etc)
Inflation in the West is just starting.
A dozen eggs in Russia are about $1.80, same as last year. And gas prices keep falling.
With the cheap eggs and gas, you can also have free conscription to die in the "Special Military Operation."
A lot more fodder will be needed for the Spring Offensive.
But what the heck, people have always been the cheapest commodity to the Russian elite!
Geodyssey
01-31-2023, 02:39 PM
With the cheap eggs and gas, you can also have free conscription to die in the "Special Military Operation."
A lot more fodder will be needed for the Spring Offensive.
But what the heck, people have always been the cheapest commodity to the Russian elite!
Should the USA put boots on the ground in the ukraine? "Ace" McCain would have.
thelegges
01-31-2023, 03:22 PM
You go for it, that’s if you have any farming skills, don’t mind the smell of chicken **** and shoveling it. Don’t forget the predators, they can be a real nuisance.
You must have had a huge coop to have to shovel sh**. Family had coops growing up, all droppings went to a trough like system, emptied very efficiently. As did the feeding system. Small city coop with only 20 chickens, so very little work, until you need one for Sunday company dinner.:icon_hungry:
Aces4
01-31-2023, 03:52 PM
You must have had a huge coop to have to shovel sh**. Family had coops growing up, all droppings went to a trough like system, emptied very efficiently. As did the feeding system. Small city coop with only 20 chickens, so very little work, until you need one for Sunday company dinner.:icon_hungry:
Chicken **** and pig **** are so odiferous and I’m curious as to how “a trough” solved all the issues.
jimjamuser
01-31-2023, 06:24 PM
Are you suggesting you would raise them in your Linai? Just asking. Between the smell, rats, and mice,,, but then again it would solve the problem of using chemicals on the lawn as fertilizer. The lawn will really green up after cleaning out the coop, I mean Linai. Then there's the fly issue. But they'll keep the gecko problem in check, bugs too. I don't remember seeing anything in the compact, so you should be good to go. :jester:
Wait a few weeks and maybe we can steal some of the wild ducks' and geese' eggs. Or raise pet turtles in the lanai.
jimjamuser
01-31-2023, 06:52 PM
At our age, don't you wonder what's next to raises and announce a shortage of something.
Either there's to many people in the world putting a demand food products or the whole world's going to hell.
Good, now I am NOT the only one that sees that population and over-population of the world can cause problems. According to a wise man centuries ago .........wars and pestilence keep control of the population. We have a war that so far involves 2 countries in ACTIVE combat, but a lot of supporting characters / countries........dangerous. And the US had its share of pestilence, with over 1 MILLION dead. And now we have BIRD pestilence probably caused by excessive chicken and turkey density (to the point of animal cruelty)(as opposed to free-ranging).
.......And what's next? - mad cow disease and pig disease. Maybe as some suggested, it MIGHT be time to re-evaluate and try a little MODERATION - Beyond Meat, eaten once every 2 weeks, tastes good and could HELP the situation.
........Man's inhumanity to their fellow man and GREED to acquire territory (not needed in Russia's case) may lead the whole world down some nasty rabbit hole.
jimjamuser
01-31-2023, 06:59 PM
Excellent graphic. Thanx.
One has to wonder though, just what is too much? Back in 1965, that fifty cents we paid a local farmer per dozen eggs would be $4.46 today. I don't know what we spent for milk back then but with five kids growing up in the wilds of northern Minnesota it must have been substantial. Milk came from the same farmer who supplied the community with eggs. If we got there early enough in the day the milk would still be warm from the cow. Freshness was never a problem. Most everything was locally sourced: beef came from a farmer who raised Hereford cattle. A pig or two in the fall went in large part for ham and bacon, which we mostly made ourselves, and the leftover pork scraps and fat, together with a whole deer, meant 150 - 200 lbs. of sausage. I don't ever remember mom buying potatoes at the grocery store. We raised our own; and enough potatoes to feed a family of seven for a year is a whole lot of potatoes. Not one of my fonder memories though...those were the days before gasoline-powered garden tillers so everything--weeding, tilling, hilling, more weeding, more tilling, finally harvesting--was done by hand. To say nothing of the wild blueberries, raspberries, and cranberries that we picked in the fall so mom could turn them into the best jam and sauce on the planet.
We might pay more per capita for our food today, but really not very much more. We're paying not just for the food but for the middlemen; packaging, shipping, etc., as well--things that back in the day were not an issue. What we gain is convenience. We pay $4.50 per dozen eggs but don't have to clean the coop. That Christmas ham that looks so nice in the cooler at Publix is quick, convenient and delicious; but we don't have to butcher the pig, cut up the meat, soak the hams in brine for a month and then smoke it ourselves. We eat as good if not better today than 50 or 75 years ago, and our "labor" consists of filling the cart, paying at checkout, and complaining about the prices. We're not hoeing potatoes for four hours under a hot August sun.
Don't get me wrong. I wouldn't have traded my experiences growing up for anything. We learned a lot more than just gardening and butchering. But, on balance food-wise, Americans today have it better than ever.
All true. But, one downside is that many Americans eat too much junk food, which you did NOT have to worry about. The US is the most overweight society, I believe.
jimjamuser
01-31-2023, 07:03 PM
I know people in Pennsylvania that own chicken farms. They were almost wiped out from the flu. Now they have another problem and they are not alone. Chickens are not laying eggs they are looking into the chicken food to see if the formula was changed it’s far from being over
Probably NOT free ranging, so MAYBE nature DID go on strike!
Michael G.
01-31-2023, 07:07 PM
Now we can't eat smoked dog meat and say it taste like chicken.....:22yikes:
Sorry, I need to take my meds now!
jimjamuser
01-31-2023, 07:11 PM
Prices will not come back down to where they were (just like gasoline, natural gas, etc)
Inflation in the West is just starting.
A dozen eggs in Russia are about $1.80, same as last year. And gas prices keep falling.
Funny how some folks seem to yearn to live in a Fascist state. Who would want to trade off their freedom for low-priced eggs and have for their leader a greedy, criminal killer like Putin? NOT I.
jimjamuser
01-31-2023, 07:13 PM
With the cheap eggs and gas, you can also have free conscription to die in the "Special Military Operation."
A lot more fodder will be needed for the Spring Offensive.
But what the heck, people have always been the cheapest commodity to the Russian elite!
Agreed, well stated. The whole idea of Russian Fascism is REPULSIVE.
jimjamuser
01-31-2023, 07:18 PM
Should the USA put boots on the ground in the ukraine? "Ace" McCain would have.
Ukraine is spelled with a CAPITAL U. Please DON'T sully the name of a GREAT American HERO. That was a very trashy thing to say.
jimjamuser
01-31-2023, 07:22 PM
Now we can't eat smoked dog meat and say it taste like chicken.....:22yikes:
Sorry, I need to take my meds now!
People in the Village bubble LOVE and practically LIVE for their DOGS. They would rather eat you than let anyone touch their DOGS.
MorTech
02-01-2023, 04:04 AM
The hens were exposed to toxic femininity and went transgender so not to be exploited by white supremacy and the patriarchy...It/They pronouns.
jimjamuser
02-01-2023, 08:59 AM
The hens were exposed to toxic femininity and went transgender so not to be exploited by white supremacy and the patriarchy...It/They pronouns.
That post is in contention for the coveted award of MOST HUMOROUS.
OrangeBlossomBaby
02-01-2023, 03:56 PM
I've found a crack in the egg conspiracy. Someone infiltrated the trade lines and snuck "Sunshine State Eggs" into the Publix rotation. They're brown, cage-free, and only $4.85/dozen.
Now keep in mind - cage-free is not the same as free-range or pasture-raised. It often still means thousands crammed into a single hen-house, and the hens rarely, if ever, see daylight outside the hen-house. But they can spread their wings, are usually not de-beaked, and can lay their eggs in nests.
The eggs won't be as nutritious as eggs from pasture-raised chickens, the yolks never as bright orange, whites never as dense. But they're significantly superior to white eggs from hens in factory battery-cages.
CoachKandSportsguy
02-01-2023, 04:12 PM
I've found a crack in the egg conspiracy. Someone infiltrated the trade lines and snuck "Sunshine State Eggs" into the Publix rotation. They're brown, cage-free, and only $4.85/dozen.
Now keep in mind - cage-free is not the same as free-range or pasture-raised. It often still means thousands crammed into a single hen-house, and the hens rarely, if ever, see daylight outside the hen-house. But they can spread their wings, are usually not de-beaked, and can lay their eggs in nests.
The eggs won't be as nutritious as eggs from pasture-raised chickens, the yolks never as bright orange, whites never as dense. But they're significantly superior to white eggs from hens in factory battery-cages.
All right, some good news!
Stu from NYC
02-02-2023, 11:14 AM
The hens were exposed to toxic femininity and went transgender so not to be exploited by white supremacy and the patriarchy...It/They pronouns.
Thank you for your excellent explanation.
MorTech
02-03-2023, 05:02 AM
First they destroy poultry...Then they go after pork...Then beef....You know...To "save the planet".
Your grandchildren will eat Wheaties and Corn Pops fortified with delicious bugs in soy milk...They kid you not :)
Two Bills
02-03-2023, 05:23 AM
First they destroy poultry...Then they go after pork...Then beef....You know...To "save the planet".
Your grandchildren will eat Wheaties and Corn Pops fortified with delicious bugs in soy milk...They kid you not :)
All those they's, we gotta stop them! :crap2:
MorTech
02-03-2023, 02:25 PM
This is some of the best investigative journalism on earth....
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MtIBLmV2Ywo
It is a conspiracy fact.
Bay Kid
02-04-2023, 09:01 AM
First they destroy poultry...Then they go after pork...Then beef....You know...To "save the planet".
Your grandchildren will eat Wheaties and Corn Pops fortified with delicious bugs in soy milk...They kid you not :)
Doesn't all those fires kill the planet?
CoachKandSportsguy
02-05-2023, 10:05 PM
FACT FOCUS: Egg shortage breeds chicken-feed conspiracies | AP News (https://apnews.com/article/north-carolina-ap-fact-check-business-87009c97a59ba36146aa594623dcc6c9)
Now we have AP Fact check validating the conspiracy theories!
CoachKandSportsguy
02-08-2023, 07:48 AM
Access Denied (https://www.cnbc.com/2023/02/07/wholesale-egg-prices-have-collapsed-from-record-highs-in-december.html)
And POOF just like that, the conspiracy theory collapses . . .
In commodities trading theory, the solution to high prices is always higher prices. . as everyone thinks the prices will continue higher and more product is created. . .
or its the end of the effects of the avian flu and high feed and transport costs. . .
take your pick!
JMintzer
02-08-2023, 08:34 AM
Access Denied (https://www.cnbc.com/2023/02/07/wholesale-egg-prices-have-collapsed-from-record-highs-in-december.html)
And POOF just like that, the conspiracy theory collapses . . .
In commodities trading theory, the solution to high prices is always higher prices. . as everyone thinks the prices will continue higher and more product is created. . .
or its the end of the effects of the avian flu and high feed and transport costs. . .
take your pick!
The prices are still almost TRIPLE the prices from January, 2021...
Djean1981
02-08-2023, 08:36 AM
Some reporting, I don’t even see how many chickens died.
As far as expensive eggs, the clueless could do what we have done all of our lives. Turn to other sources of protein and use as few eggs as possible until prices recover and they will. Of course, one could farm with their own hens.
Dollar General had large eggs on sale for $3.99 last weekend. :)
Bay Kid
02-08-2023, 08:59 AM
Dollar General had large eggs on sale for $3.99 last weekend. :)
Who knows where they came from or their real age. There is a reason they are so cheap.
Aces4
02-08-2023, 10:14 AM
Who knows where they came from or their real age. There is a reason they are so cheap.
Where they came from? Phony eggs?:icon_wink:
collie1228
02-08-2023, 10:26 AM
No conspiracy here. The largest egg producer in the US, Cal-Maine Foods, Inc., reported a 110% increase in profits on November 28, 2022. They said it was mainly due to the increase in egg prices generally. Think about that. If you buy ten portable generators for $500.00 each, take them in your pickup truck to a Florida city where a hurricane has hit, and sell them for $1,000.00 dollars each (a 100% profit), you will be sent to jail. End of story, as you are a price gouger. But if you are Cal-Maine Foods, Inc., nobody seems to care. By my calculations, they are price gouging.
OrangeBlossomBaby
02-08-2023, 10:42 AM
...meanwhile, "Happy Eggs" (the brand) are still available for under $6 per dozen. That is high for regular factory-farm white eggs, but Happy Eggs aren't factory farm white eggs. They're from cage-free pasture-raised hens. Right now I can't get them at Walmart, but Winn Dixie had them for I think $5.94? At Walmart they were $5.88, which is the same price they were last year.
They're more expensive than normal eggs are, WHEN there is no avian flu. But right now they appear to be cheaper than normal eggs, and they're superior to normal eggs. Their prices haven't fluctuated much.
The take-away on this: if you want low-quality stuff made in factories, don't be surprised when something happens at the factory that drives up the prices, and don't be surprised when the CEO of the factory realizes he can make bank even if the factory problem gets fixed, by simply not reducing the price after it was raised.
If you want good quality products and are willing to pay extra for them, you can expect some measure of consistency in quality and pricing.
Djean1981
02-08-2023, 10:45 AM
Who knows where they came from or their real age. There is a reason they are so cheap.
No one really knows where any eggs come from. They tasted great!
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