JustChecking
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"You can call myself a little country Braveheart." Louisiana state Rep. Lauren Ventrella says the government shouldn’t be able to kick down someone’s door for raising a deer. reason.com/2025/08/14/lou…
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@hayleycaronia Dear @hayleycaronia ,
For the past week we’ve been working nonstop to share the heartbreaking story of Little Buck 🦌.
We’re in direct contact with the Sibley family who cared for and loved Little Buck.
We need more people to know, please reach out to us.
#littlebuck
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Good morning fam
Remember to spread the change org link
change.org/p/justice-for-…
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If you’re just joining our community, here’s what you need to know about Little Buck, the innocent deer taken from a loving home by state agents. His story sparked a movement, and it’s not over. The Sibley family in Livingston Parish, Louisiana, raised a blind deer named “Little Buck” for seven years after it was abandoned by its mother. The deer was never confined and was free to leave but chose to stay.
In December 2024, wildlife officers from the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries (LDWF) received an anonymous tip about the deer on the Sibleys’ property. Agents arrived in December, seized Little Buck using a dart, and subsequently euthanized him. Jaci Sibley recounted the distressing scene: her son had to be pulled from watching cartoons to say goodbye before agents darted the deer and ultimately euthanized it. Jaci Sibley's husband was fined $1,650 and criminally charged for possessing a wild quadruped.
State Representative Lauren Ventrella has introduced legislation to allow rehabilitation for certain wild animals raised by families, and she believes "Little Buck" should have qualified since he was free to come and go. Ultimately, the charges and $1,650 fine against the Sibleys' family were dismissed, but only after months of emotional trauma and a senseless loss that can’t be undone. By the time prosecutors dropped the case, the damage had already been done. A blind, gentle deer named Little Buck, who had known only love, safety, and freedom on the Sibleys' property for seven years, was dead. Taken not by nature, but by the very state agency that claims to protect wildlife. Let that sink in: a family poured their hearts into saving a helpless creature that had been left to die. And for that compassion, they were punished.
Armed agents stormed their property, seized the animal their children had grown up with, and euthanized him behind closed doors. The deer was never caged, never abused, never posed a threat. He was free to leave. He chose to stay. But the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries (LDWF), after receiving an anonymous tip, decided that rules mattered more than life. More than empathy, more than community, more than common sense. They sent officers with darts, not dialogue. They brought bureaucracy, not humanity. And for what? To prove a point? This wasn't about conservation. This was about control. When the legal system finally backed down and dropped the charges, it wasn’t out of mercy. It was damage control. The state knew it couldn’t justify what it had done. But no dismissal of paperwork can reverse the trauma of watching a beloved animal, a member of the family, be taken and killed by people who wear badges and call it justice. Little Buck is gone. The Sibleys are left grieving. And the state continues to hide behind regulations while families like theirs pay the price for choosing compassion over compliance. But this isn't where it ends. We will not let Little Buck die in vain. As a community, we are standing up, not just for him, but for every family that’s been punished for doing the right thing. We’re demanding reform. We’re calling on lawmakers to fix a broken system that values paperwork over compassion. And we won’t stop until there are real protections in place for families like the Sibleys and the animals they care for. Little Buck’s legacy will not be silence, it will be change. Justice is coming. And we’re bringing it. Together. Justice for #LittleBuck.

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Someone on a Louisiana based blog posted the story.
tigerdroppings.com/rant/o-t-loung…
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The Treasury Coin is built so the floor price always climbs, no matter what direction the price action moves.
Here’s how it works: Every transaction comes with a 1% creator reward. Instead of cashing out, we will put 100% of it In a Treasury Vault, to be permanently locked. As volume increases, more and more supply gets pulled out of circulation and into a vault forever.
The Math:
- $10,000,000 in trading volume → 1% = $100,000 in creator rewards
- $100,000 worth of Treasury Coin will be bought on the open market and locked permanently and publicly in a vault.
- As the treasury grows, the floor price increases.
Every buy makes the base stronger. Every sell funds the vault. Volatility doesn’t hurt, it builds the floor.
It’s a built in Flywheel effect:
More volume → Bigger Treasury → Higher floor → More confidence → More volume
This isn’t just a token, it’s a perpetual motion machine of value.
This is a Treasury Coin.

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Over 14% locked already!
You guys are insane!!!
app.streamflow.finance/token-dashboar…
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