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@augieweitz

Nebraska, USA Katılım Eylül 2012
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Brian Allen
Brian Allen@allenanalysis·
🚨 Epstein’s accountant just testified under oath: The Epstein estate settled with Jane Doe 4 — for both Epstein and Trump. Jane Doe 4 alleged to the FBI that Epstein abused her at 13. And that Trump abused her at 15. The Jane Doe 4 files were missing. Discovered only through the Maxwell discovery when lawyers noticed Bates stamp numbers were gone. Those files surfaced after Trump bombed Iran. The lawyer tried to walk back the settlement testimony. The accountant refused to confirm or deny. Trump started a war the same week the Epstein names were supposed to drop. Never stop connecting the dots.
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James Melville 🚜
James Melville 🚜@JamesMelville·
Pete Hegseth, said with no irony whatsoever…. “The problem with Iran is it spends money on weapons and missiles instead of their people.” A bit rich coming from someone who announced that the U.S. government wants $200 billion for the war in Iran.
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Cigarette Nostalgia
Cigarette Nostalgia@CigsMake·
A 30-year-old in 1980 owned a house like this working at the local factory. Married six years with three kids. Weekends meant Little League games. Both sets of grandparents lived within five miles. The kids would attend the same high school he did and grow up with the children of his own friends. This is a dying concept
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Austin
Austin@augieweitz·
@shanaka86 Nah. A huge amount of us prepay and booked all of that stuff months ago like every year.
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Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡
JUST IN: The most irreversible consequence of this war is not happening in Tehran. It is happening in a barn in Iowa. A farmer is standing over a kitchen table looking at two seed catalogues. One is corn. One is soybeans. Corn needs 180 pounds of nitrogen per acre. Nitrogen costs $610 per ton on the CBOT March futures settlement as of yesterday, up 35 percent in a month. Soybeans fix their own nitrogen from the atmosphere through root bacteria called rhizobia. They need nothing from the Strait of Hormuz. The farmer is choosing soybeans. Millions of acres are choosing soybeans. And once the planter rolls into the field, the choice cannot be reversed until next year. USDA projected corn at roughly 94 million acres for 2026, down from 98.8 million. Soybeans at 85 million, up from 81.2 million. Those projections were published February 19, before urea surged past $683 at New Orleans. The actual shift will be larger. USDA Prospective Plantings reports March 31. By then the seeds will be in the ground. This is the transmission channel the world is not watching. A 21-mile strait enforced by provincial commanders with sealed radio orders just rewrote the planting economics of 90 million acres of the most productive farmland on Earth. Not through sanctions. Not through diplomacy. Through the price of a single molecule that corn cannot grow without and soybeans do not need. Now follow the cascade. The Renewable Fuel Standard mandates 15 billion gallons of corn ethanol annually. That consumes roughly 43 percent of the entire US corn crop. The mandate is set by the EPA. It does not flex when corn acres shrink. It is inelastic demand consuming a fixed share of a declining supply. When supply tightens against a fixed mandate, the remaining corn reprices upward. Corn above $5 per bushel compresses every margin downstream. The US cattle herd stands at 86.2 million head, a 75-year low per USDA NASS. Poultry and pork operations face compression from higher corn prices. Feed is the single largest cost in livestock production. When feed reprices, protein reprices. When protein reprices, every grocery shelf in America absorbs the increase. This is the protein cascade. Corn to feed to meat to eggs to dairy to the checkout counter. Each link tightens because the link before it tightened. The originating cause is a urea molecule that cannot transit a strait because a provincial commander’s sealed orders say it cannot. The farmer did not start this war. The farmer cannot end it. The farmer responds to the price on the screen and the biology of the two crops in front of him. Corn needs the molecule. Soybeans do not. At $610 the arithmetic is settled. The planter rolls. The season is locked. Israel just authorised the assassination of every Iranian official on sight. The US has spent $16.5 billion. South Pars is burning. The Fed is holding rates because oil inflation will not break. Gold touched $5,000. Bitcoin is bleeding. China is running exercises near Taiwan. Sri Lanka shut down on Wednesdays. And underneath all of it, a man in a barn is making the decision that determines whether four billion people pay more for food this year. He has never heard of the Mosaic Doctrine. He does not know what a sealed contingency packet is. He knows what nitrogen costs. And he is planting soybeans. Full analysis - open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡ tweet media
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡@shanaka86

Right now, in barns and equipment sheds across the American Midwest, farmers are making the most consequential decision of this war. Not generals. Not senators. Farmers. At $683 per ton urea, corn economics have collapsed. Nitrogen is the single largest input cost for corn production. At pre-war prices a farmer could justify 180 pounds per acre and expect a margin. At $683 the math breaks. Soybeans fix their own nitrogen from the atmosphere through root bacteria. They do not need the molecule trapped behind the Strait of Hormuz. The seed decision is being made this week across roughly 90 million acres of American cropland. Once the planter rolls into the field, the choice is irreversible. Corn seed in the ground stays corn. Soy seed stays soy. The acreage allocation locks in. USDA Prospective Plantings reports March 31. That report will tell the world how American agriculture responded to the Hormuz blockade. But the decisions it captures are being made now, in conversations between farmers and agronomists and seed dealers who are looking at nitrogen prices and making the rational economic choice: plant the crop that does not need the input you cannot afford. Every acre that shifts from corn to soybeans tightens the corn balance sheet for the rest of the year. Corn feeds livestock. Corn feeds ethanol. The Renewable Fuel Standard mandates 15 billion gallons of corn ethanol annually, consuming roughly 43 percent of the US corn crop regardless of price. That demand is inelastic. If acres shift and production falls while the mandate holds, corn prices spike. Feed costs spike. The protein cascade reverses. The US cattle herd sits at 86.2 million head, a 75-year low. Poultry and pork margins that were benefiting from cheap feed compress when corn crosses $5 per bushel. This is how a naval blockade 7,000 miles from Iowa reaches the American grocery shelf. Not through oil. Not through shipping. Through nitrogen. The farmer cannot afford the molecule. The molecule cannot transit the strait. The farmer plants soy instead. The corn supply tightens. The ethanol mandate consumes its fixed share. The remaining corn reprices. The feed reprices. The meat reprices. The grocery bill reprices. The decision is not political. It is arithmetic performed on a kitchen table by a person who needs to plant in three weeks and cannot wait for a ceasefire, an escort convoy, or an insurance normalisation that the Red Sea precedent says takes years. The deepest penetrator in the American arsenal cannot reach a sealed Iranian doctrinal packet. But the fertiliser price it failed to resolve is reaching every planting decision on 90 million acres of the most productive farmland on Earth. The war’s most irreversible consequence is not happening in a bunker. It is happening in a barn. And by the time USDA publishes the data on March 31, the seeds will already be in the ground. Full analysis in the link. open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…

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Brian Allen
Brian Allen@allenanalysis·
🚨 Senator Chris Murphy — one hour after walking out of a classified Iran war briefing — was asked why the US went to war with Iran. His answer: “The simplest explanation might be the one they gave 24 hours in and tried to backtrack from — Israel made us do it. Netanyahu decided on the timeline. He convinced Trump to join him by scaring Trump into believing US assets were at risk.” Then Murphy asked the question every American should be asking: “How weak are we if our allies can force us into wars of choice that are bad for US national security interests?” Mark Warner confirmed there was no imminent threat to the United States. The nuclear program is not even part of the targeting campaign. Seven Americans are dead. 165 schoolgirls are dead. 700,000 Lebanese are displaced. Mines are in the Strait of Hormuz. Gulf allies cut 6.7 million barrels. And a US Senator with classified intelligence access just said Israel forced our hand. How weak does that make America look.
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Karen
Karen@karensam09·
Sai da bolha Nao vou mais responder quem esta me ofendendo ( por mim foda se) Mas quem esta ofendendo minha mae O negócio e o seguinte Levei minha mae la pois ela muitas dores A mulher falou q ela TINHA QUE PASSAR POR DOR levei embora Bjs
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Karen@karensam09·
Levei minha mae em uma fisioterapeuta Chegamos, minha mae contou o q se passava A fisio: mulheres sofrem pq eva comeu a maça e pagamos por isso Eu: mae levanta, vamos embora Fisio: pq? Eu: .....
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The Wolf Of All Streets
The Wolf Of All Streets@scottmelker·
A man deposits $10,000 in a bank. The bank thanks him and records the deposit on its balance sheet. But not where you might expect. For the bank, that $10,000 is actually a liability – because technically it belongs to the customer and might have to be returned. So the bank does what banks do. It lends $9,000 of that money to someone buying a car. Now something interesting happens. The $9,000 loan appears on the bank’s books as an asset – because someone now owes the bank money. So the same $10,000 is doing two jobs at once. The depositor believes he has $10,000 safely in the bank. The borrower now has $9,000 to spend. That $9,000 gets deposited somewhere else. The next bank lends $8,100. That gets deposited again. Then $7,290 gets lent out. Soon the original $10,000 has quietly turned into tens of thousands of dollars of loans scattered across the economy. Everyone believes they have money. Depositors see balances in their accounts. Borrowers have the money they spent. Banks show healthy assets on their balance sheets because people owe them money. And here’s the best part. Banks charge interest on all those loans – maybe 7%. But the depositor who supplied the original money might earn only 0.5% on their savings account. So banks collect interest on money that mostly wasn’t theirs to begin with – and keep the difference. The system works beautifully. As long as nobody asks for the money back at the same time.
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Thomas Massie
Thomas Massie@RepThomasMassie·
His post transitioned.
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Propane Accessories
Propane Accessories@c3accessories_·
@swd2 @grok This reminds me of the old saying. Give a child a fish and they eat for 1 day. Bomb children on the other side of the world and you increase shareholder value in defense stocks enough to buy billionaires another yacht.
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Tara Blume
Tara Blume@tcblume·
This cracked me up but also makes me feel extra old.
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𝚃𝚑𝚒𝚌𝚌 𝙲𝚑𝚞𝚗𝚐𝚞𝚜 🍄
The government in 1773: we are going to tax you without representing you Us in 1773: that’s some bullshit. We aren’t paying that, also fuck your tea and enjoy this war The government in 2026: is literally stealing kids and raping and eating them Us in 2026: I better log onto turbo tax to pay them
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Yogi
Yogi@Houseofyogi·
Unrealized gains tax for Gen-Z: You buy a Pokémon card for $50. Someone offers you $500 for it. You say no. You love that card. You're keeping it. The government says: "Cool, but that card is worth $500 now. You owe us $100 in taxes." You: "…I didn't sell it." Government: "Don't care. Pay up." You don't have $100 lying around. So you're forced to sell the card you love just to pay a tax on money you never received. Next month? That card drops back to $50. Your card is gone. Your money is gone. And the government shrugs. That's a wealth tax on unrealized gains. They don't pay you back the tax... Now picture this. Your mom calls you crying. She has to sell the house she raised you in. Not because she can't afford it. She's lived there 30 years. It's paid off. But some website says it's worth more now and the government says she owes $15,000 she doesn't have. So she sells your childhood home. The kitchen where she made you breakfast. The doorframe where she marked your height every birthday. Gone. To pay a tax on money that was never real. Now picture the opposite. Your dad put everything into his small business. For 20 years he built it from nothing. One year the business is "valued" at $2 million on paper. He owes a massive tax bill. He empties his savings. Sells his truck. Borrows money. Pays it. Next year the market crashes. His business is worth $200,000. He lost everything to pay a tax on a number that doesn't exist anymore. Does the government give him his money back? No. Does the government give him his truck back? No. Does the government care? No. They sold this idea as "taxing billionaires." But billionaires have armies of lawyers, offshore accounts, and trusts. They'll be fine. You know who won't be fine? Your mom. Your dad. Your neighbor with a small business. The farmer down the road who's had the same land for four generations and now has to sell it because dirt got expensive. You're not taxing wealth. You're taxing people for owning things. It's like getting a parking ticket for a car you might drive somewhere someday. They want you to own nothing and be happy. To fund the fraud, waste and abuse of the welfare state they created. There is enough money. More tax isn't needed. It's all a lie. But you've been gaslit into believing this is a rich vs poor debate. I hope you understand what's at stake.
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Thomas Massie
Thomas Massie@RepThomasMassie·
@HasanKhxnx I am not suicidal. I eat healthy food. The brakes on my car and truck are in good shape. I practice good trigger discipline and never point a gun at anyone, including myself. There are no deep pools of water on my farm and I’m a pretty good swimmer.
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Bitcoin Teddy
Bitcoin Teddy@Bitcoin_Teddy·
The White House: We’re unable to track $6.2 billion dollars sent to Ukraine. California: We’re unable to track $24 billion dollars spent to combat homelessness. The Pentagon: We’re unable to track $2.3 trillion dollars of military spending. The U.S. Treasury: We’re unable to track $5 trillion dollars of pandemic spending. The IRS: We know you sent $601.57 to your friend, you better report it or you’re going to jail. What are your thoughts?
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Bethany S. Mandel
Bethany S. Mandel@bethanyshondark·
You know he was a mensch when this is what his ex-wife writes.
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Shawn Ryan
Shawn Ryan@ShawnRyan762·
Just shut the fuck up…
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Beard Vet
Beard Vet@Beardvet·
Breaking 🚨 Nebraska Gov Jim Pillen Not only gave a No-Bid $2.5 Million Emergency Contract to a traveling Lady Friend, Julie Bushell(of Global Sustainability Developers/Ethos Connected) but also to his buddy Steve Corsi(now head of Nebraska DHHS) a $10 Million no-bid “Emergency” deal to EPIPHANY ASSOCIATES, LLC, Corsi’s former employer This along with the help of his Campaign Strategy Company Axiom(Via sister company AxAdvocacy) helped facilitate separate deals with DG Fuels, Twin Platte NRD($1.4-$25 Million with Ethos), Nebraska Public Power District($3 Million deal w/Ethos) All of them are Ridiculous Green New Deal Pipe-Dreams More dots have been connected with confirmation of a Quid Pro Quo with Major improprieties coming soon @POTUS @HarmeetKDhillon
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