Kit
790 posts






This post said to "look up your local city." So I did, and here are recent arrests. I had to stop taking screenshots; it keeps going. Look up your local city's arrests and please post what you find!



Today is a good day to Repeal Hart-Celler

Miami hotels are quietly replacing front desk staff with workers in India. Guests now check in by video call with a remote representative overseas. No local staff. No in-person service. American jobs are becoming outsourced labor.


At my favorite City Council meeting! I came early to exercise my First Amendment right on Frisco public property since they criminally trespassed me for being on Frisco ISD property



Texas just admitted it needs $174 billion for water. Not for roads. Not for schools. Not for energy. Water. The stuff that comes out of your faucet. The Texas Water Development Board released the numbers last week. $174 billion over the next 50 years to prevent the state from running out of water. Double the last estimate from 2022. Texas is adding 17 million people by 2080. A 53% increase. Water supply is dropping 10% over the same period from depleting aquifers. Without action, shortages could cause $177 billion in economic losses by 2030 alone. More than the cost of fixing it. And it's not just population growth draining the system. Tesla's Giga Texas factory uses 556 million gallons of water per year. A single factory. Data centers are consuming 0.4% of the state's entire water supply and growing fast. In Austin, data centers and industrial demand are straining a water system built for residential use. This isn't a Texas problem. It's a global one. The World Bank just launched a program called Water Forward targeting water security for 1 billion people by 2030. 14 countries signed on. They're calling it one of the defining infrastructure crises of the century. Water is the only commodity on earth with no substitute. Oil has renewables. Gold has Bitcoin (if you believe that). Copper has aluminum for some applications. Water has nothing. You need it or you die. Every person, every farm, every factory, every data center. And it's running out faster than any government projected. Where this creates an investment thesis almost nobody is talking about: Xylem (XYL). The largest pure-play water technology company in the world. Builds the infrastructure that treats, tests, transports, and analyzes water. Revenue above $8 billion. Every dollar of that $174 billion Texas plan flows through companies like Xylem. American Water Works (AWK). Largest publicly traded water utility. Serves 14 million people across 24 states. Water utilities are natural monopolies. You can't build a second pipe to someone's house. The customer can't switch providers. Pricing power is absolute and demand is non-negotiable. Veolia (VEOEY). Global leader in water treatment and waste management. Operates on every continent. When countries need to build water infrastructure from scratch, Veolia gets the call. Essential Utilities (WTRG). Growing through acquisitions of small water systems. Rural water infrastructure across America is crumbling. Most small systems are municipally owned with no budget to upgrade. Essential buys them, upgrades them, and charges the regulated rate. Mueller Water Products (MWA). Builds the valves, hydrants, and pipes that make up the physical water distribution network. Every infrastructure dollar spent on water flows through components these companies manufacture. The Invesco Water Resources ETF (PHO) gives you diversified exposure to the entire water infrastructure chain. When governments start writing $174 billion checks for water, every company in this ETF benefits. Water infrastructure is the most boring and most inevitable investment thesis on earth. Nobody talks about it because it's not AI and it doesn't have a ticker on CNBC's bottom scroll. That's why it's still cheap. every week i cover where the money is actually going before it makes headlines. former banker. felixfriends.org/live (texas just said it needs $174 billion for water. double the last estimate. the state is adding 17 million people while aquifers are depleting. tesla's single factory uses 556 million gallons a year. data centers are draining supply in austin. the world bank just launched an emergency water security initiative for 1 billion people. water is the only commodity on earth with zero substitute. nobody on financial TV is covering this. $174 billion has to go somewhere.)










