Dry Heat 707 🇺🇸🌵

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Dry Heat 707 🇺🇸🌵

Dry Heat 707 🇺🇸🌵

@DryHeat707

Everything is a scam.

Arizona, USA Katılım Ekim 2022
128 Takip Edilen35 Takipçiler
Dry Heat 707 🇺🇸🌵 retweetledi
Maury Brown
Maury Brown@BizballMaury·
I interviewed @KenRoczen94 today as part of an upcoming story for Forbes after winning the 450cc @SupercrossLIVE title. At age 32 and a near career ending injury in 2017, I asked what was next? He said he had considered retiring many times over the years but hasn’t yet decided if now is the time. Said he always thought going out on top made sense, but like he said, “After a long season, I don’t feel like getting on the bike right now, but I’m treading lightly around the idea of retirement. You’re busy, busy, busy, and then all of the sudden it stops. And I know that’s a difficult task to do.” It’s easy to say you’re going to retire. It’s hard to walk away.
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Dr. Dawn Michael
Dr. Dawn Michael@DawnsMission·
DMSO is another total game changer in my life! Sore muscles? Gone. Headaches? Completely gone. So how does DMSO actually work? It’s a natural sulfur compound that penetrates skin and cell membranes incredibly deep and quickly. Once inside it: • Blocks pain signals in the C-type nerve fibers (your body’s main pain pathways) • Acts as a potent antioxidant that neutralizes free radicals causing inflammation • Reduces swelling and helps improve blood flow That powerful combo is why so many people report fast relief from muscle pain, soreness, headaches, and more. Watch the full video here 👇
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Mike Grondahl
Mike Grondahl@mggrond·
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Breanna Morello
Breanna Morello@BreannaMorello·
American cattle ranchers are struggling. We’ve let foreign countries flood our markets with imports. These countries don’t have to meet the same high standards and regulations that American ranchers are required to follow. We can’t keep punishing our own producers like this. We need more cattle ranchers in this country, not fewer.
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corndog
corndog@corndogbtc·
Found this on the new farm… can any of my “horticulturalist” homies id for me?
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X Freeze
X Freeze@XFreeze·
Woke is a death cult that executes common sense and devours anyone who tells the truth It spreads insanity like a plague and turns mental illness into the new standard Worst of all, it has turned pure evil into a religion and demands we worship it
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Meriwether Farms
Meriwether Farms@MeriwetherFarms·
DON’T CARE WHO WE OFFEND BY SAYING THIS BUT HOSTILE FOREIGN NATIONS SHOULD NOT BE ALLOWED TO PURCHASE OUR PRECIOUS AMERICAN FARMLAND THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION TO THIS MATTER
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Valerie Anne Smith
Valerie Anne Smith@ValerieAnne1970·
RFK Jr: “CDC THREW OUT THE STUDY SHOWING DTP VACCINE CAUSES AUTISM.” “NONE of the vaccines have ever been tested for Autism. The only one tested was DTP... THAT study FOUND the link... CDC threw it out.” They KNEW. They buried the evidence. And kept injecting our babies anyway.
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Beef Initiative🇺🇸🇸🇻BeefMaps.com
🌽 Did you know? The average American beef travels 1,500 miles from ranch to plate. We're changing that. BeefMaps.com connects you directly to local ranchers — no feedlots, no mystery sourcing, no 1,500-mile truck rides. Find ranchers near you 👇 beefmaps.com
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Trucker Dan
Trucker Dan@TruckerDanUSA·
This old Ford is a keeper. Nothing wrong with it. I would drive it just the way it is!
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Sama Hoole
Sama Hoole@SamaHoole·
They took away tallow. We got seed oil. They took away butter. We got margarine. They took away raw milk. We got oat drink. They took away liver. We got iron tablets. They took away bone broth. We got a stock cube. They took away egg yolks. We got egg-white omelettes. They took away cured ham. We got injected reformed pork. They took away aged cheddar in a cloth. We got plastic-wrapped orange rectangles. They took away wool. We got polyester. They took away leather. We got PVC. They took away the back-garden hen and the family cow. We got a four-pint plastic jug. Every product humans had built civilisations on was removed in a single century. Every replacement is patentable, profitable, and slowly making the population sicker. The originals never asked for shelf space, a marketing budget, or your trust. They had it for ten thousand years before any of this began.
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Dry Heat 707 🇺🇸🌵
@deanguzmanw There are laws against animal abuse. If they make exceptions for corporations then there are, in reality, no laws. You did the right thing.
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Dean Guzman Wyrzykowski
Dean Guzman Wyrzykowski@deanguzmanw·
I went to jail for saving the Ridglan dogs. Now I’m facing 12 years in prison. My mom was terrified when I was arrested. But when she saw the beagles at Ridglan, she understood why I couldn’t stand by. Should rescuing dogs from corporate abuse be a crime? Share to help us win in court. savethedogs.io
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Sama Hoole
Sama Hoole@SamaHoole·
In 1904 a young American socialist called Upton Sinclair travelled to Chicago to work undercover in the meatpacking plants of the Union Stock Yards. He was twenty-six. He had been commissioned by the socialist newspaper Appeal to Reason to write an exposé of the Beef Trust, the cartel of large packing firms that had recently broken a meatcutters' strike. He spent seven weeks alongside the Lithuanian and Polish immigrants who staffed the killing floors of Armour, Swift, and Morris. He went there to expose the conditions of the workers. Twelve-hour shifts in flooded slaughter halls. Children losing fingers to the cutting machinery. Tuberculosis spreading through bunkhouses where the windows had been nailed shut. He wrote a four-hundred-page novel about it. It sold a hundred and fifty thousand copies in the first year. The American public was profoundly affected. By the wrong part. The chapters Sinclair had intended as the heart of the book produced a polite political reaction. The two-page sequence describing what was getting into the sausage, rats, sawdust, the occasional finger of an unfortunate worker, produced a national panic. Sinclair himself, writing in Cosmopolitan magazine in October 1906, observed: I aimed at the public's heart, and by accident I hit it in the stomach. Theodore Roosevelt read the book over breakfast, threw the sausage into the garden, and dispatched investigators to Chicago. The Pure Food and Drug Act and the Federal Meat Inspection Act were both signed within six months. The legislation was sold to the public as a victory over the Beef Trust. The Beef Trust had, in fact, lobbied for it. Federal inspection, paid for by the Treasury rather than the packers, imposed compliance costs the large Chicago firms could absorb and the smaller regional operators could not. The number of interstate meatpackers in the United States fell from approximately 923 in 1906 to 300 by 1910. The four largest firms, the same firms Sinclair had been exposing, came out of the reform with a tightened market share that persists to the present day. The current figure is that four firms control roughly 85% of all American beef processing. The image of the meatpacking floor, fixed in the public imagination by a single chapter of a 1906 novel, has done more to shape Western attitudes towards meat than any other piece of writing in the language. There is a final detail. Sinclair was, at the time he wrote the book, a rigid and enthusiastic vegetarian. His own words. Years of raw food and fasting collapsed his health. In 1911 he tried Dr Salisbury's diet of broiled beef and hot water and found, to his stated astonishment, that he felt better than he had in years. He had wanted to write a novel about the workers. He had accidentally written the founding document of the modern anti-meat movement. He never quite forgave the public for the swap.
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Dry Heat 707 🇺🇸🌵
Dry Heat 707 🇺🇸🌵@DryHeat707·
@mggrond It’s kind of like gamblers who always tell you how much money they won but never tell you how much money they lost. It just feels dishonest.
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Mike Grondahl
Mike Grondahl@mggrond·
But how many members quit ? Never give the net membership….. cancellation is the problem
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Doge Van
Doge Van@ballsdeepindoge·
Yesterday evening we loaded 30 of the Ridglan Farms beagles into the DogeVan and transported them to Big Dog Ranch Rescue’s Alabama location. Dogs that were once destined for research labs are now getting their first taste of freedom. Enjoy the good life, pups… you’ve earned it.
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The Carnivore RN
The Carnivore RN@wilsonhlthcoach·
Here we go again. The news is trying to worry people about another virus. I've seen people claiming this hantavirus "outbreak" will spread like covid or be used as a way to force people into masks, lockdowns, or mail-in-voting again. People better start doing some reading about the virus and not fall for the hysteria being pushed by the media. It doesn't spread like the flu. You catch the virus by inhaling aerosolized virus particles from dried urine, droppings, or saliva from infected rodents. It's extremely rare for it to spread human to human. I once took care of a patient with hantavirus. It definitely can cause severe respiratory distress and has a high fatality rate. This patient of mine worked at a sawmill and caught the virus after moving stacks of timber with piles of rodent droppings. There were two other cases of it from the same sawmill. Did the WHO come in and investigate? No. Did the CDC get involved? No. Was it announced on the evening news? No. So why do 2 confirmed and 5 suspected cases from a cruise ship seem to be a big deal right now? Because it's being used to cause hysteria around another virus. If this virus is spreading easily human to human, it's either not hantavirus or it's a genetically altered form of hantavirus that was manmade in a lab specifically to spread human to human. But, if it's a typical hantavirus and you haven't been inhaling aerosolized rodent droppings from that same cruise ship, there's probably nothing to worry about. Don't fall for the hysteria.
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Ken D Berry MD
Ken D Berry MD@KenDBerryMD·
The erosion of trust in “science” isn’t primarily because people suddenly love conspiracies and hate progress. It’s because major pharmaceutical and chemical companies have repeatedly been caught committing fraud on a massive scale, and too many credentialed experts have been willing participants or silent beneficiaries. Pfizer alone paid a record $2.3 billion in 2009 (largest healthcare fraud settlement in DOJ history at the time): $1.3 billion criminal penalty for illegally promoting Bextra and other drugs off-label, plus $1 billion civil. They pleaded guilty to a felony. That wasn’t an isolated event; the industry’s total settlements and judgments run into the tens of billions over the past two decades. When physicians and scientists defend these companies without acknowledging the documented misconduct, kickbacks, ghostwriting, and selective data presentation, people notice. They don’t “run toward conspiracies.” They run away from institutions that have repeatedly put profits ahead of patients. Restoring trust starts with rigorous, independent science and honest accounting of conflicts, not shaming skeptics.
Simon Maechling@simonmaechling

The collapse of trust in science is going to go down in history as one of the most sad, bizarre, and destructive social contagions of modern times. We fed billions, cured diseases and powered nations - yet people ran toward conspiracies instead.

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