Hopefully there isn't a Boobie Shortage as well

Kyle

Beloved Misanthrope
PREMO Member
Baby formula shortage hits 'crisis' level, sparking panic in parents across US

Moms and dads nationwide take to social media with pictures of empty store shelves



Parents of infants across the U.S. are taking to social media pleading for media coverage and political action while posting pictures of empty stores shelves, as the country's baby formula shortage continues to get worse.

"If the [mainstream media] can talk about the toilet paper shortage ever (sic) hour, they should be talking about the baby formula shortage at least," one new mom tweeted last week. "We ended [up] finding the Amazon brand online but not everyone is so lucky to be able to feed that. Please share. This is every store!"

The problem has gone beyond finding particular formulas that individual babies can tolerate. Several parents expressed trouble finding formula at all, and delivery is no longer reliable.

Fox News Digital spoke to a Michigan mom with young kids who said her last usual Amazon order for formula was delayed and ultimately canceled on Thursday, so she quickly went out and was frustrated to discover there was no formula to be found in at least four major stores in her area.



 

PeoplesElbow

Well-Known Member
Well....
 

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vraiblonde

Board Mommy
PREMO Member
Patron
The baby formula shortage began with ongoing supply chain issues but has escalated in recent weeks due to recalls by formula manufacturer Abbott Laboratories following the deaths of four infants who consumed formula made at the company's plant in Sturgis, Mich.

So....recalls..... If millions of babies drink Similac without incident, and 4 babies die after drinking it, wouldn't that say the problem lies somewhere other than the actual formula? Or is that too mathy for people?

Regarding supply chain disruptions - let's go Brandon!
 
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Clem72

Well-Known Member
So....recalls..... If millions of babies drink Similac without incident, and 4 babies die after drinking it, wouldn't that say the problem lies somewhere other than the actual formula? Or is that too mathy for people?

Regarding supply chain disruptions - let's go Brandon!

If it's something they added, some negligence on their part, that causes anyone to die then they are likely to recall rather than get sued into oblivion. I assume they know exactly what is wrong; otherwise they wouldn't bother because as you said it's just a few and who knows for sure if it had anything to do with the formula.
 

Clem72

Well-Known Member
Leftist hate baby formula companies ....

but Nestle has done some sketchy things in Africa

Yeah, but they didn't provide bad formula. They campaigned and told people formula was better than breast milk (which is probably true if the mom can't eat a decent meal or has vitamin deficiencies), they even gave formula away for free to new mothers. Then they charge after a long enough time that the mom has likely reduced/stopped lactating.

Oh yeah, and the water used to make the formula needs to be sterilized or the parasites kill the baby, which maybe they forget to mention in the adverts.
 

Hijinx

Well-Known Member
This administration is not worried in the least about babies who have been born, they are too busy trying to kill them BEFORE they are born.
 
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black dog

Free America
Yeah, but they didn't provide bad formula. They campaigned and told people formula was better than breast milk (which is probably true if the mom can't eat a decent meal or has vitamin deficiencies), they even gave formula away for free to new mothers. Then they charge after a long enough time that the mom has likely reduced/stopped lactating.

Oh yeah, and the water used to make the formula needs to be sterilized or the parasites kill the baby, which maybe they forget to mention in the adverts.
My kid was never on the tit, he was fed Similac with well water. We never boiled the water.
 

Monello

Smarter than the average bear
PREMO Member
but Nestle has done some sketchy things in Africa
The indigenous population of Africa, with their tribal mentality, are doing way more sketchy things in the dark continent than some European confectionary company could possibly do. But let's blame this on the colonists & outsiders. Europeans built thriving societies with schools, roads & other infrastructure. Then once African nations got independence, the natives let everything go to seed in less than 20 years.

Here's a list of the last 122 years of African dysfunction:

21st century[edit]​

 

UglyBear

Well-Known Member
Time to return to “milk aunties” and “milk siblings”. A friend my age had half the neighborhood as his milk siblings, because of shortages of formula.

How this works: one mother has above-average supply of milk. She either bottles it and gives it away or other mothers just bring their babies to her for from the tap feeding. Win-win for everyone.
 

Kyle

Beloved Misanthrope
PREMO Member
Time to return to “milk aunties” and “milk siblings”. A friend my age had half the neighborhood as his milk siblings, because of shortages of formula.

How this works: one mother has above-average supply of milk. She either bottles it and gives it away or other mothers just bring their babies to her for from the tap feeding. Win-win for everyone.
Sounds to me like a growth opportunity for a new "Dairy" business.

Hmmm.... No where did I leave that milking stool?
 

RoseRed

American Beauty
PREMO Member
Time to return to “milk aunties” and “milk siblings”. A friend my age had half the neighborhood as his milk siblings, because of shortages of formula.

How this works: one mother has above-average supply of milk. She either bottles it and gives it away or other mothers just bring their babies to her for from the tap feeding. Win-win for everyone.
Wet nurse.
 
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