BREAKING: The First Crack In The Dam

One of the nation’s five largest food distributors is now quietly pulling back from the massive wholesale margin increases that helped drive the grocery inflation wave since 2021 — including the notorious “auto-padding” markup that insiders say added up to 30% to thousands of products. Is the dam finally cracking? And what does that mean for consumers?
Welcome To The New Normal

If you want the New Normal to end, stop shouting into the void and start shoving this data into the agencies that are supposed to protect you. Send this story — and the Mona Lisa Graph — to three places: the FTC’s Consumer Protection Bureau, your State Attorney General, and your U.S. Representative’s office. Tell them exactly what you now know: diesel prices collapsed, Big Food’s costs didn’t rise, and the CPI never came back down.
Whistleblowers Say ‘30% Margin’ Is Automatic

Between 2020 and 2025, Sysco’s profits surged, UNFI’s revenues jumped, PNG revenues tripled – this information comes from our archived stories. Meanwhile, diesel prices fell nearly 30% from their 2022 peak.
The math doesn’t lie. Somebody’s banking the difference — and it’s not the farmers or the families at checkout.
This UNFI source says the 30% standard has been internal knowledge “for years.” We’re working to verify supporting data and will provide all findings to the proper authorities – which we’ll divulge soon – before publishing specific documentation.
BigFood Exposed: Silence IS Agreement

(Editor’s Note: Based upon last-minute discussions, Hy-Vee was offered an exclusive interview with SpokenFood today, before publication of this story. The company declined to participate–sort of. -SN)
Over the past two weeks, SpokenFood reached out to numerous wholesale food distributors representing retail grocery stores, namely the ones pictured above. We asked the question everyone in America has been wondering:
“Why do your food prices keep rising?”
SpokenFood recently researched ‘Food-At-Home’ costs from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) as part of the Consumer Price Index (CPI). We put their numbers side-by-side on a chart with updated diesel fuel prices. See that chart below. It jumps out at you.
In the course of reporting this story, SpokenFood contacted those four distributors. Their replies became a pattern—one of silence, delay, and even outright error-in-fact.