
By Trevor Brown
Among political circles on Twitter Yesterday, the Hashtag #BareShelvesBiden was trending number 27 on Twitter. The following is some of the tweets this trend entailed.
BREAKING: #BareShelvesBiden is now trending nationwide – keep it up! pic.twitter.com/8XUvAVfauS
— Jack Posobiec 🍊 (@JackPosobiec) January 9, 2022
#BareShelvesBiden Southern, PA pic.twitter.com/om7Que4teB
— Unsophisticated Frank (@Frankie_chins) January 9, 2022
Target. Southern California. #BareShelvesBiden pic.twitter.com/qhXfcmft3t
— CAgrl07 🇺🇸 (@CAgrl07) January 9, 2022
Grocery store in Falls Church, VA #BareShelvesBiden pic.twitter.com/MLU5gP1mlz
— Jack Posobiec 🍊 (@JackPosobiec) January 9, 2022
The Biden Administration has exacerbated the supply chain crisis with a few policies that could be considered failures.
- The vaccination mandates.
2. The extension of Government programs that exacerbated the Labor shortage known as the Great Resignation.
Everything mentioned thus far greatly and negatively impacts everyone from lower middle class people to working class people greatly. Supply chains are responsible for the supply of products and if supplies are low and demand is high then prices go up. When their is already a labor shortage because the government has declared a state of emergency, then the value of labor is valued more. When that higher valued labor is matched by Government unemployment benefits, and not mom and pop shops. Then the mom and pop chops close down making life in lower middle class to working class communities a worse place to live.
I should know as that is the kind of place that I live in and seeing places like Target and Walmart stay open to “slow the spread” and get billions in government subsidies. Via a very near 6000 page omnibus spending bill. While my local thrift store is forced to close down is something quite disheartening. Even in California where I currently live their are plenty of stores experiencing this bare shelves issue. Gasoline is getting more and more expensive by the week and when all of that is combined with the fact that more money has been printed in the last year and the year prior then all other years combined. It feels as if I am being priced out of my own hometown.