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jerra b
Yesterday 11:31 am
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ConservativeWave » Today, 8:05 am » wrote: YOU are an IDIOT!

By BLOCKADING Iran ... and NOT shutting down the Straight (which Trump is doing), Trump is shutting down Iran's Oil sales, and cutting off $500 million/day of revenue... and so, Iran's economy is IMPLODING... No Jobs, NO Imports, NO Exports, NO money... and the Iranian citizens are READY to REVOLT NOW !  ALL THAT while Iran's attempts to shut the straight to the REST of the Gulf states... is becoming less and less effective !!

Not only that, OIL is shut down... but Iran is almost at the point were they have NO WHERE ELSE to STORE the oil they are pumping... OIL wells are a funny thing... ONCE an Oil well is producing it's GREAT, but IF you shut it down... it might NEVER come back... and if it does? It PROBABLY will produce at a reduced output... IRAN is AT that decision point... and they may be DESTROYING their Nations economy for YEARS !


Iran is defeating America?  HA!!  YOU are a COMPLETE FOOL...  All America has to do is SIT TIGHT, KEEP Iran closed, and blow the Iranian "speed boats" out of the water when they see them... THEN, when the Iranian people start to get hungry, thirsty, sick, & FRUSTRATED...and the Mullah's & IRGC can do NOTHING about it... THEY will DEFEAT themselves !!
PARIS/SINGAPORE, April 27 (Reuters) - Farmers around the world are facing the second surge in fertiliser prices in four years due to the Iran war. But with grain prices too low to cushion the blow from the deeper supply crunch this time around, many are rethinking planting plans, putting global food ​production at risk.
The Middle East is a leading fertiliser production hub, and much of the global fertiliser trade typically passes through the Strait of Hormuz, which has seen traffic brought to a ‌standstill by the conflict.The Reuters Iran Briefing newsletter keeps you informed with the latest developments and analysis of the Iran war. Sign up here.Supplies of urea - a nitrogen-based fertiliser - from the world's largest production facility in Qatar have been halted, and flows of sulphur and ammonia, common inputs for a range of fertilisers, have also been curbed.
With a resolution of the conflict proving elusive, analysts, traders, fertiliser producers and agronomists are looking back at the last supply crisis, Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine, worried that this time things could get even worse.
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