The US, grappling with an egg shortage, is reaching out to Lithuania for egg exports after Finland declined. The situation has prompted ridicule online.

  • Optional
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    561 year ago

    Has the US even said thank you?!

    Tell us to take a long walk off a short pier, Lithuania!

    • oce 🐆
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      81 year ago

      You know it’s AI because of the waist sizes.

  • fox2263
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    271 year ago

    Surely it’s easier to import from land neighbours? Oh…you’ve pissed them off?

    • @NewDay@feddit.org
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      61 year ago

      Trump right now: They do not want to send their eggs to us? Fine, I will just conquer them and send it by myself.

  • @P00ptart@lemmy.world
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    151 year ago

    Seriously? This is just getting sad at this point. Look, you could eat anything else. Literally anything. Why are they so obsessed with fucking eggs? Is it because someone stupid made it a campaign promise?

    • @Joncash2@lemmy.ml
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      201 year ago

      Your missing the point. It’s less about eggs than it is at showing the world how durable and reliable USA is, that it can overcome every problem. The hilarious irony is what it is now showing is how fragile and weak the US has become now that it’s alienated it’s allies. Unable to even cope with a tiny egg problem because the world is turning it’s back. I’m living in America and yet I’m cheering this on, so bizarre.

    • Optional
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      41 year ago

      partially. And partially because it’s used in making so many things like bread and mayonnaise and so on.

      • @P00ptart@lemmy.world
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        21 year ago

        Yeah, and I get that, but comparatively, it’s very low volume of eggs/loaf. Even at the nearly 3x price hike we’ve experienced, it shouldn’t make a whole lot of issues for bread companies. Sure, mayo would get hit hard but that’s another thing that really shouldn’t be that hard to live without.

        • federal reverseM
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          1 year ago

          What kind of bread needs eggs? Are you talking about cake and donuts? Even so, in many recipes, eggs can be replaced by things like linseed/chia, bananas, or bean water (“aquafaba”). I’d actually expect American food manufacturers to be price-conscious enough to have cut such corners a long time ago.

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          31 year ago

          I mean, bread and mayo is like . . the foundations of civilization. For me. Personally. So - those aren’t going to be lived without at least for now.

          But just based on stupid internet searching, the number I’m seeing is 300 million eggs per day for bread. That’s a lot of 19% highers.

          The actual number might be quite different, but I’m assuming that’s probably not that far off.

  • oce 🐆
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    131 year ago

    In before, Trump promises military help in exchange for eggs.

  • Endymion_Mallorn
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    71 year ago

    Why are we asking for this? Just let the flu work itself out, deal with our costs, and focus on domestic production. Eggs are getting thrown out still. And those imports won’t save anyone who’s actually starving.

      • Endymion_Mallorn
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        21 year ago

        I don’t think their thoughts go that far in advance. But yes, that’s how it’ll be sold in six months to a year when our chicken populations stabilize. For me though, this shouldn’t even be a matter for the government, if it’s going to happen at all. The egg producers should be doing this as part of their private enterprise, not the government. Eggland’s Best, Goldhen, and the like could handle it. I don’t want the government trying to do something that should be left to the free market.

  • @criticon@lemmy.ca
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    71 year ago

    Is there even an egg shortage? They stores where I shop usually have their egg fridges as full as usual, only more expensive