JustusRhoads

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JustusRhoads

JustusRhoads

@JustusRhoads

American/Louisiana Energy & Ports | Pathway for American Industry, American Jobs, Gulf Coast First | no *DMs*

Port of Morgan City Katılım Haziran 2024
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JustusRhoads
JustusRhoads@JustusRhoads·
Post 1/3: A Gulf Coast native, I've got to spotlight Louisiana's contribution to America's industrial powerhouse era -the cypress lumber boom in Patterson, Berwick, and Morgan City of the early 1900s. #LouisianaHistory #MAGA #GulfCoastFirst Atchafalaya Basin held virgin bald cypress stands: trees reaching 120 feet tall, some over 1,000 years old. Much of that ancient beauty can be witnessed today while tourist and locals cool off at the local "Lake End Park" beach. Louisiana led U.S. cypress production from 1900-1920, hitting peaks like 1 billion board feet statewide in 1913.
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JustusRhoads
JustusRhoads@JustusRhoads·
The Economic Doom Loop Without oil revenues, Iran cannot: Maintain existing infrastructure Fund new drilling programs Attract foreign investment or technology Service its population's basic needs That creates a self-reinforcing collapse; no money to drill, no drilling means no revenue, no revenue means deeper poverty and instability. The One Wildcard A future regime change in Iran could theoretically open the door to sanctions relief and foreign investment returning. But even then, rebuilding production capacity from a prolonged shutdown would take many years and tens of billions of dollars, and by then the market would be very comfortable without Iranian supply. This conflict may effectively mark the permanent marginalization of Iran as a global oil power.
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JustusRhoads
JustusRhoads@JustusRhoads·
Important note to anyone who still sees my posts:My account @JustusRhoads is heavily suppressed Louisiana conservative energy voices)they’re getting the same thing: single-digit to low double-digit views, zero organic reach.The algorithm is burying this entire lane. The real-time X integration I used to pay for and build workflows around has been throttled into the ground — including on my own account. So I’m done for now.Letting my Grok subscription run out to zero. I will never pay for Grok again. Might grab a basic X check mark in a year or two, but that’s it.I’ll check back on this platform in a year or two for continued suppression of ideas. Until then, taking my time, energy, and money to xAI competitors and anywhere that actually delivers.Gulf Coast First. See you when (if) things change.
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JustusRhoads
JustusRhoads@JustusRhoads·
@LMacconnell @RobSchneider It's almost like Bill Cassidy forgot back when he 'declared' he was only serving one term for US Senate! Old people and their memories, I can only hope Bill is okay once he's permanently away from the stress of Washington DC.
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🇺🇸Kelly Meaux Simpson🇺🇸
And she's DONE!!! Last Final paper turned in! All that's left to do is walk across that stage and become an LSU ALUM....1 week from today!!! Let's GEAUX 💜💛💜
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Brenda
Brenda@BrendaB0817·
@Playteaux1 I was raised between Opelousas and Eunice a little town called Lawtell 😊
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Playteaux
Playteaux@Playteaux1·
People ask me why I love Louisiana so much and I answer simple: I’m a native and it’s the people, food and culture. But there are so many layers to this proverbial onion and I will give you the long answer. The people welcome you with open arms. No pretension , just wanting you to experience their culture without prejudice. Embracing strangers like family because they want to share. It’s glorious and humbling because wealth doesn’t matter. It your openness to acceptance. The food is warm and fills your belly and your soul. It’s local and it envelops you like your grandmother’s quilt when the rest of the world doesn’t make sense. It’s rich and spicy. Culture is the way we speak that sounds foreign and familiar at the same time. Where everyone is family, everyone has a space at the table and we are all distantly enter twined and connected regardless of family affiliation. It’s why I love Louisiana. The flavor, people and environment runs deep. For all of our faults, we are connected to each other and for the beauty God created.
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Playteaux
Playteaux@Playteaux1·
@Yendorsmada All the time. People not from Louisiana think Louisiana is a dump and then I explain to them why I love it. You’d be surprised. I suspect the same goes for Alabama and Mississippi.
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JustusRhoads
JustusRhoads@JustusRhoads·
The ability to appreciate living in Louisiana is much like enjoying its music. It is not a construction of a corporation. The neighborhoods were built by people, in some cases for hundreds of years. It is too rich for many Americans taste, but those who understand recognize that Louisiana feeds your humanity. Thank you, Lord, for raising me here!
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JustusRhoads
JustusRhoads@JustusRhoads·
HEY YA"LL REMEMER THAT TIME: BILL CASSIDY, Senator from Louisiana inadvertently, announced he was only going to be in the Senate for ONE TERM!
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Eric Daugherty
Eric Daugherty@EricLDaugh·
🚨 HOLY SMOKES. President Trump has just forced Iran into DUMPING millions of barrels of their OWN OIL This is insane. They're cooked. "The Iranians are dumping MILLIONS of barrels of crude into the Gulf. Satellite images show a massive oil slick spreading into the water off Kharg Island." "CENTCOM says 70 Iranian tankers are trapped with over 160 million barrels of oil on board. That's $13 billion of oil just rocking on the docks. They're filled to the brim and can't squeak out of the embargo." "That doesn't look too good. Primetime reached out to Al Gore for comment. Haven't heard back." 🤣 @JesseBWatters
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JustusRhoads
JustusRhoads@JustusRhoads·
@EricLDaugh IRGC hardliners are finally realizing they can only shut down those old low-pressure wells — permanently. Trump’s blockade has Iran choking on their own oil. No exports, no storage, so they’re dumping it into the Gulf or killing future production. Self-own of the century.
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JustusRhoads
JustusRhoads@JustusRhoads·
@poole95423 Trump is choking them on their own oil, those old British and American drilled wells and fields will never be restarted he's destroying their entire energy industry without a shot.
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LOONEY ROO❤️🇺🇲
👇 THATS GOING TO NEED LOTS OF DAWN DISH LIQUID!
The Iran Watcher 🇮🇷@TheIranWatcher

🚨 An estimated 80,000 barrels of oil have spilled into the Persian Gulf from Iran’s Kharg Island export terminal. A major reason is the regime’s chronic lack of modern oil storage infrastructure. Decades of mismanagement, corruption, and misplaced priorities left Iran with limited onshore storage capacity. With the U.S. naval blockade restricting exports, oil reportedly backed up rapidly, forcing excessive pressure on aging pipelines and increased reliance on old tankers as floating storage. Leaks like this are a predictable result. The environmental toll on the Persian Gulf could be severe: ⚪️ Oil contaminates and poisons birds, sea turtles, fish, and marine mammals, potentially triggering large-scale die-offs ⚪️ It damages mangroves, coral reefs, and seagrass in one of the world’s most fragile semi-enclosed seas ⚪️ Long-term pollution threatens fisheries, water quality, and coastal ecosystems across the region Kharg Island is Iran’s main oil export hub, handling the vast majority of the regime’s crude exports. Any disruption, accident, or infrastructure failure there carries major economic and environmental consequences. The spill also exposes deeper problems inside Iran’s oil sector. Years of regime-at-fault sanctions, corruption, underinvestment, and neglected infrastructure have left critical facilities aging and vulnerable. Iran’s environment and wildlife continue paying the price for decades of regime corruption and neglect, while billions flow into the IRGC, proxy warfare, and missile programs instead of critical infrastructure and environmental protection.

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The Iran Watcher 🇮🇷
The Iran Watcher 🇮🇷@TheIranWatcher·
🚨 The U.S. naval blockade strategy appears to be economically suffocating the Islamic Republic, and Iran is rapidly running out of options. CENTCOM reports that more than 70 empty tankers are now trapped outside Iranian ports, blocked from loading or departing. Those ships represent roughly 166 million barrels of potential crude worth more than $13 billion at today’s prices. In just the last few days, U.S. forces reportedly struck and disabled multiple Iranian-flagged tankers attempting to break through, including the Sea Star III and Sevda. Precision strikes reportedly left them dead in the water before they could load. This is not symbolic pressure. This is a physical chokehold on Iran’s only real economic lifeline. Why has this strategy hit the regime so hard? Oil and gas revenues are the backbone of the Islamic Republic. They fund the IRGC, the nuclear program, ballistic missiles, and proxy groups across the region. Without that money, the regime struggles to pay its enforcers, maintain loyalty networks, and suppress its own population. Iran had reportedly been exporting roughly 1.5–2.2 million barrels per day through shadow-fleet tactics and floating storage. The U.S. appears to have slammed that door shut. The blocked tankers alone represent months of exports and billions the regime desperately needs. Iran’s economy is already under severe pressure: ⚪️ Annual inflation near 50% ⚪️ Food inflation above 100% in several categories ⚪️ The rial continues collapsing ⚪️ Capital flight is accelerating ⚪️ GDP projected to shrink sharply this year The regime now faces an impossible choice: keep pumping oil with nowhere to store or sell it, risking long-term field damage, or slash production and watch its cash flow evaporate completely. This is sanctions pressure on an entirely different level: physical, enforceable, and far harder to evade. No more quietly storing crude offshore for hidden sales to China. Every day this blockade continues, the Islamic Republic loses more economic oxygen. The mullahs’ kleptocratic system runs on petrodollars. Cut that flow, and the entire structure begins to weaken.
The Iran Watcher 🇮🇷@TheIranWatcher

Trump said Iran could start “exploding from within” in a few days if its oil gets “clogged.” It sounds exaggerated, but there’s truth to it. Iran produces roughly 2 to 3.5 million barrels of oil every day, and that oil has to keep moving through ports, tankers, and export terminals like Kharg Island. A large share of the government’s budget depends on that flow, so when exports are blocked and there’s NO EXIT ROUTE, the system doesn’t just pause, it starts backing up. Storage tanks fill quickly, and while Iran does have capacity, somewhere in the range of 40 to 90 million barrels, that space can get used up surprisingly fast under full production. Once those tanks hit their STORAGE LIMIT, there’s no room left to absorb anything, and that’s where the real pressure begins. At that point, Iran is forced into a difficult position. They can either cut production and immediately lose massive daily revenue, easily over $100 million, or keep pumping oil into a system that has nowhere to send it. That tradeoff is brutal: LOSE REVENUE OR DAMAGE INFRASTRUCTURE. If production continues, PRESSURE BUILDUP starts inside pipelines and wells, and the crude itself begins to create problems. Oil isn’t uniform, it contains heavier components like waxes and asphaltenes that start separating and sticking when flow slows down. This leads to clogging inside tubing and pipelines, reduced efficiency, and in some cases damage to the reservoir itself, which can make future extraction harder and more expensive. As pressure builds, the risks expand beyond just clogging: ⚪️ Equipment is put under stress ⚪️ Safety systems get pushed ⚪️ In more extreme cases, you can see ruptures ⚪️ Longer-term infrastructure damage It’s not about everything literally exploding at once, but the system starts degrading internally in ways that are costly and sometimes irreversible. When Trump talks about “exploding from within,” he’s compressing all of that into a simple phrase. If you trap oil inside a system that depends on constant flow, you create physical strain that spreads quickly through the entire operation. At the same time, this isn’t just about engineering, it’s part of a broader strategy. This approach builds on the idea of MAXIMUM PRESSURE by going beyond financial sanctions and directly targeting Iran’s ability to export oil. The goal is: ⚪️ Cut off revenue ⚪️ Weaken the state’s ability to fund itself ⚪️ Create internal economic stress that forces a decision For Iran, this is exactly the situation they want to avoid. Shutting down wells risks LONG-TERM DAMAGE to fields, while continuing production under blocked conditions risks harming infrastructure. On top of that, losing oil revenue puts pressure on the budget, the currency, and internal stability. So the message behind the rhetoric is fairly straightforward. If exports stay blocked, Iran is pushed into choosing between immediate financial loss and potential long-term damage to its most important industry. That combination of physical and economic pressure is what’s meant to force movement without direct military escalation.

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JustusRhoads
JustusRhoads@JustusRhoads·
@TheIranWatcher As Iran's old low pressure wells go down they will suffer irrevocable damage, Trump set them up and they are just realizing how badly.
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Big O
Big O@TheCajunOzone·
A lot of rain today. One reason I build raised garden beds.
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