“The Hunger Clock” reframes the Strait of Hormuz crisis, arguing that the true danger is not an oil shortage but a collapse in natural gas-dependent ammonia production. Since 60% of the world’s ammonia (used for nitrogen fertilizer) relies on this gas and a quarter of that gas passes through the Strait, any disruption would destroy the global planting season for millions of farmers, causing mass starvation.
Mike Adams documents a direct line from a 1969 meeting where elites discussed poisoning food and water supplies to the current crisis. He presents Treasury documents showing that reducing the average American lifespan by 2.5 years would save the government $11 trillion, proving that events like the COVID response and food shocks are deliberate designs for depopulation and control, not incompetence.
The book lays out a terrifying sequence: war with Iran spikes oil to $126/barrel, shipping insurance collapses, Russia and China halt fertilizer exports and Qatar declares force majeure. This wipes out nearly half of the global fertilizer supply. Countries like Bangladesh (50% rice yield reduction), Sudan, Yemen and Egypt are identified as most vulnerable using a “food dependency ratio” metric.
Adams provides specific, actionable advice for resilience: store 600 lbs of wheat berries and 200 lbs of dry beans per family, learn permaculture and seed saving, convert fiat currency to gold and silver and de-Google your devices. He emphasizes that individual bunkers are insufficient, calling for building interconnected community networks with local barter systems and shared skills.
Presented with the urgency of a man who has been right for decades, “The Hunger Clock” uses unconventional sources (Brighteon.AI, leaked documents) but its predictions (fertilizer shock in April 2026, price spikes) are now unfolding. Regardless of one’s view on the globalist agenda, the book’s mechanistic breakdown of how fertilizer, natural gas and shipping connect to your dinner plate is impossible to ignore and fundamentally changes how you see the world.
There’s something deeply unsettling about reading a book that makes you want to both sprint to the grocery store and never leave your garden again. Mike Adams’ “The Hunger Clock: How the Strait of Hormuz Crisis Will Starve Millions by 2027” is that kind of read—the kind that transforms how you see everything from the price of bread to the politics of natural gas.
Read Full Article: https://www.naturalnews.com/2026-07-01-the-hunger-clock-food-supply-hangs-by-thread.html