Egg price watch
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wrote on 16 Mar 2025, 02:47 last edited by
When life gives you potatoes, make Easter Eggs.
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wrote on 24 Mar 2025, 16:05 last edited by
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wrote 13 days ago last edited by
TRUMP: Eggs… you were the one who asked me. It was the first week. I didn’t even know what you were talking about. Egg prices were so high you couldn’t buy eggs. They didn’t have any eggs. None! And then—we had Easter at the White House and we had thousands of eggs. Thousands. And prices were down 87%. People couldn’t believe it. They were crying.
WELKER: That spike was because of bird flu, not policy. It was a temporary supply shock, not economic sabotage.
TRUMP: Why do you say that? I had—We had the same bird flu as he had. Same birds. Same flu. Maybe worse birds, to be honest.
WELKER: Sir, your timeline doesn’t even match. The outbreak peaked after you left office. Prices surged under Biden due to reduced flock size, and they stabilized because supply recovered.
TRUMP: No, no. Under me, eggs were patriotic. Everyone had eggs. Golden eggs. Under him, people were hunting pigeons. I saved the egg industry. Look it up. Google “Trump Easter Miracle.”
WELKER: You’re taking credit for an agricultural cycle and blaming inflation on poultry diseases.
TRUMP: I fought for eggs. Biden’s too weak on eggs. You need tariffs, you need toughness. You don’t beg the birds — you dominate them.
WELKER: That’s not how avian flu works.
TRUMP: That’s what they said about COVID too. I was right there too. The birds loved me. I never got bird flu, did I?
WELKER: I don’t even know what we’re talking about anymore.
TRUMP: We’re talking about winning. With eggs.
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wrote 13 days ago last edited by
Sadly, I can't tell if that is satire.
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wrote 12 days ago last edited by taiwan_girl 12 days ago
@89th same thought. Sad also that my first thought was that it is true.
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wrote 11 days ago last edited by
I don't think this has been discussed here when talking about the egg crisis in America. We appear to be the only country that sanitizes the eggs , which removes a protective layer, and thus requires refrigeration for storage and display in supermarkets. That has to cost something extra for the delivery of these eggs as we don't like Salmonella in our diets.
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wrote 11 days ago last edited by
Because it had nothing to do with the increased costs. The cost of transportation and refrigeration has been baked into the price for generations. The only way to point to transport as a factor is if the fuel price increased. Now, if we had just switched to this sanitation method, the. You could point to it.
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wrote 11 days ago last edited by jon-nyc 19 days from now
One risk is that people who travel internationally realize ‘you don’t have to refrigerate eggs’. But you do have to refrigerate US eggs.
I often mention this if I’m at an immigrant’s house and see their egg on the counter. They usually ignore me thinking I’m being an overly precious American.
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One risk is that people who travel internationally realize ‘you don’t have to refrigerate eggs’. But you do have to refrigerate US eggs.
I often mention this if I’m at an immigrant’s house and see their egg on the counter. They usually ignore me thinking I’m being an overly precious American.
wrote 11 days ago last edited by@jon-nyc said in Egg price watch:
One risk is that people who travel internationally realize ‘you don’t have to refrigerate eggs’. But you do have to refrigerate US eggs.
I often mention this if I’m at an immigrant’s house and see their egg on the counter. They usually ignore me thinking I’m being an overly precious American.
We actually normally have a few eggs on the counter. Friends with a farm… We don’t get enough to meet all our needs, so normally buy eggs at the regular grocer, too. We use those for baking/cooking ingredients and use the farm fresh for eating…
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wrote 11 days ago last edited by
Yeah that’s fine as they aren’t treated like store bought.