Jon Doe

10 posts

Jon Doe

Jon Doe

@JonDoeipw

Katılım Nisan 2026
122 Takip Edilen3 Takipçiler
biokros
biokros@krobits·
@ChrisJacksonSC I don’t think data centers are giving people Parkinson’s disease and cancer.
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☈ Chris Jackson ☈
☈ Chris Jackson ☈@ChrisJacksonSC·
Because most golf courses, esp so in drought prone areas are designed to maximize water storage and are already strictly rate limited on how much public water they can use. They also become safe havens for wildlife in metropolitan areas. TPC Las Vegas is a great example. The entire course was designed with industry best management practices using natural drainage areas to collect stormwater runoff into the various ponds and it is then used later for irrigation across the course. Most of the time they do not even need their allowable amount of city water. Golf course superintendents are some of the most conservation conscious people I know and are using best management practices not only to save the course money in irrigation costs, but it also creates a naturally beautiful landscape that wildlife enjoy and golfers want to experience. Some raw video I took from a commercial video project I shot there few years back.
Andrew Gebo@Gebo___

Why don't we talk about the water consumption of an 18-hole golf course in the same way we do data centers?

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Jon Doe
Jon Doe@JonDoeipw·
@KeroBasalos @ClarksonsFarm1 The simple solution is to create a boundary. Both worlds can coexist but imo everyone should aspire to have a screened in porch and create a shrubbery buffer to keep ticks and pests away. Then everything beyond that can be totally wild. Both worlds suffer if not separated.
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Kirolos Basalos
Kirolos Basalos@KeroBasalos·
@ClarksonsFarm1 That was my philosophy for 5 years… but then you have to deal with snakes and bugs. Problem with domesticated biodiversity is that it’s diverse… good and bad.
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ClarksonsFarm
ClarksonsFarm@ClarksonsFarm1·
Thoughts on this?🤔
ClarksonsFarm tweet media
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Jon Doe
Jon Doe@JonDoeipw·
@DailyLoud Jet skis have no social benefit except entertainment. If it wasn’t for entitlement issues of “don’t tell me what to do” they’d logically be confined to spaces and subject to weather, wildlife, and water traffic restrictions for rider safety as well as unforeseen impacts.
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Daily Loud
Daily Loud@DailyLoud·
Man on a jet ski goes flying after accidentally colliding with a gray whale that came to the surface in Vancouver, Canada
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Jon Doe
Jon Doe@JonDoeipw·
@KMVC88 @archeohistories Their “archeologists” are notorious. The Dead Sea scrolls were entrusted to their state antiquities and you get lots of stuff lining up with the Christian texts of course the book missing where a J-w marries a Persian out of love because G-d forbid the bloodline purity.
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KM
KM@KMVC88·
@archeohistories I’m guessing that Zionist settlers kicking out Palestinians will use this to justify “ we were here first “
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Archaeo - Histories
Archaeo - Histories@archeohistories·
Imagine diving beneath the sea and coming face to face with a structure older than Stonehenge and the pyramids. This is not fiction. Off the coast of Israel, divers discovered a mysterious stone circle about 40 feet underwater, part of an ancient site known as Atlit Yam, dating back roughly 9000 years to the Neolithic period. From an archaeological perspective, this site offers a rare and haunting glimpse into a prehistoric world now lost beneath the sea. Atlit Yam was once a thriving coastal village, home to early farming communities. The stone circle itself consists of several large stones arranged around a freshwater spring. Many researchers believe it may have held ritual or spiritual significance, possibly linked to water, which was essential for survival in early human settlements. What makes this discovery even more fascinating is how it ended up underwater. At the end of the last Ice Age, melting glaciers caused global sea levels to rise dramatically. Over centuries, coastlines shifted, and entire settlements like Atlit Yam were slowly submerged. This was not a sudden disaster, but a gradual transformation that forced ancient communities to adapt, migrate, or disappear. Excavations at the site have revealed houses, wells, human burials, and even the remains of early domesticated plants and animals. These findings provide valuable insight into how some of the earliest agricultural societies lived, worked, and interacted with their environment. The stone circle stands as a silent reminder of their beliefs and their connection to nature. From a paleontological and environmental standpoint, sites like this also help us understand how climate change has shaped human history. The story of Atlit Yam is not just about the past. It echoes into the present, showing how rising seas can alter entire civilizations. Among the human remains found at Atlit Yam, scientists discovered some of the earliest known evidence of tuberculosis, offering a glimpse into ancient diseases that affected early populations thousands of years ago. #archaeohistories
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Concerned Citizen
Concerned Citizen@BGatesIsaPyscho·
🚨🇺🇸 Meanwhile in America “Look at them crawling out of there - millions of Ticks” The story is so insane - Farmers continue to report finding Boxes full of Ticks on their farmland, clearly left their on purpose. Now the US has already seen a sharp increase in the number of Tick related diseases.
Concerned Citizen tweet media
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Jon Doe
Jon Doe@JonDoeipw·
@jaubreyYT Most useful. Not your agenda but to the agenda at hand he’s incredibly critical.
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Not Sure Gnosis 🦈🐆
Not Sure Gnosis 🦈🐆@ViceLitty·
Knowing that this “mentalist” guy was on stage showing a “magic trick” to Trump at the time of the shots is indeed very bizarre Looking back, Joe Rogan seemed very concerned he knew his PIN code Was this guy issuing a veiled, coded threat to keep Joe in line?
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Jon Doe
Jon Doe@JonDoeipw·
@metsguy353402 @realericmoutsos Ladies and Gentleman, lying with maps 101. It looks like a huge area… but most of that’s the fucking Sahara. There’s virtually no population in most of that region of Africa with less than 4 million people across the entire desert in fairly small scattered settlements.
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Eric Moutsos
Eric Moutsos@realericmoutsos·
Nixon in 1992 on why America's Presidents support Israel 🇮🇱
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