Trevor Thompson
2.9K posts

Trevor Thompson
@fourwindsacres
South Saskatchewan grain farmer. U of S Agro. Tepap graduate.
Katılım Mayıs 2014
1.1K Takip Edilen1K Takipçiler
Trevor Thompson retweetledi

Selling dad’s drill. Kept it for a few years after he passed, but it doesn’t get used, so off to a new home. kijiji.ca/v-farming-equi…
English
Trevor Thompson retweetledi
Trevor Thompson retweetledi

Farmers have spoken loudly in a RealAgristudies survey on land ownership restrictions —and 75% agree that there should be stronger limits on who can own farmland.
realagriculture.com/2026/04/75-of-…
English
Trevor Thompson retweetledi

Farmers in Saskatchewan and Alberta will again have strychnine to use against gophers, for now. #plant26 grainews.ca/crops/sask-alt…
English
Trevor Thompson retweetledi

EPA Eases DEF Sensor Rules, But Keeps DEF Emission Requirements in Place dtnpf.com/agriculture/we…
English
Trevor Thompson retweetledi
Trevor Thompson retweetledi
Trevor Thompson retweetledi

Horrific. Transgender Minnesota Democrat advocates for minors to receive access to pornographic websites, arguing children need to view sexually deviant content for "educational purposes”
Pornography exploits, distorts, and harms developing minds.
Adults should safeguard children, not expose them to content that robs their innocence.
English
Trevor Thompson retweetledi

🚨BREAKING: Trans-Identifying Man in Dress Massacres Family at Youth Hockey Game.
Robert Dorgan (aka “Roberta Esposito”), 56, a biological male identifying as a woman, stormed the Dennis M. Lynch Arena in Pawtucket, RI 🇺🇸 during a high school Senior Night game.
As a cop I attended a few rowdy hockey games in the day but this is insanity meets evil manifest. He executed his ex-wife (the hockey player’s mom) and young daughter in the stands, in front of young kids and families.
3 other family members critically injured.
Dorgan then turned the gun on himself.
This was the dad of the kid on the ice.
Long history of family fights over his “transition.” Mental health red flags ignored.
How many more kids have to die before we call this what it is? Severe mental illness, not “identity.”
Time for tough conversations. No more delusions.
RT if you’re done with the lies.
#PawtucketShooting #ProtectKids #EndTheMadness

Disclose.tv@disclosetv
NOW – Robert Dorgan, who also goes by the name "Roberta Esposito," named as the suspect in the Pawtucket, Rhode Island ice hockey shooting.
English

I guess this weather has happened before….
NWS Glasgow@NWSGlasgow
The record high temperature for Glasgow today is 54 degrees last set in 1898. Will it be tied or broken today? #mtwx
English

@BantrySeedFarms Buddy runs one near foremost. DM me and I can give you his contact.
English

Anyone running a C850 cart on a 1895 drill ? Possible to tell me your max product on mid row banders ? #Agtwitter
GIF
English

@Haywire_45 Zero people Everyone I have talked to is running same issues. 10 minutes and sleds are overheating going into limp mode. Snows harder than shit. Iced
English

Snow sucks this weekend. Even with scratchers machines are overheating. Need some big snow to save the mountains #Agtwitter
GIF
English
Trevor Thompson retweetledi

I have a set of like new 710 floaters and rims off a 4045r sprayer. Thought I’d post on here first to see if there’s any interest before I post anywhere else. #Agtwitter




English
Trevor Thompson retweetledi

A 19-year-old making minimum wage just taught a billionaire what integrity looks like.
Joey Prusak was working the counter at a Dairy Queen in Hopkins, Minnesota, when he noticed something that made his stomach turn.
A blind customer had just finished ordering. As the man turned to walk away, a $20 bill slipped from his pocket and floated to the floor. He had no idea.
Joey expected what would happen next. The woman standing behind the blind man would tap his shoulder and hand him his money back.
That's not what happened.
Instead, she looked directly at the blind man struggling to put his wallet away. She watched him walk past her. Then she bent down, picked up the $20, and slipped it into her purse.
Joey couldn't believe what he just witnessed.
When the woman stepped up to the counter to order, Joey did something that could have gotten him fired. He looked her in the eye and asked her to return the money to the man she had just stolen from.
She refused.
She claimed the $20 was hers. She said she had dropped it herself.
Joey asked again. She refused again.
So the 19-year-old manager made a decision. He told her plainly: "I'm not going to serve someone as disrespectful as you. Please return the money or leave this store."
The woman exploded. She started yelling. She cursed at him. But Joey stayed calm.
She stormed out without her ice cream.
But Joey wasn't finished.
He walked over to the blind man, who was sitting peacefully eating his sundae, completely unaware of what had just happened. Joey reached into his own pocket, pulled out a $20 bill from his own wallet, and handed it to the customer.
Joey made about $10 an hour. That $20 represented two hours of his work.
He didn't tell anyone about it. He didn't post about it. He just went back to serving customers.
But someone else in line had watched the entire thing unfold.
That customer went home and wrote an email to Dairy Queen. The email said: "I was in shock by the generosity that your employee had, taking his own money out of his own wallet to give to the customer because some other lady decided to steal something that wasn't hers. Joey has forever sealed my fate as a lifelong customer."
The store owner printed the email and pinned it to the employee bulletin board.
A coworker snapped a photo and posted it on Facebook.
Within days, Joey's story had traveled around the world.
Then something unbelievable happened.
Joey's phone rang. On the other end was Warren Buffett, one of the richest men in the world. Buffett's company, Berkshire Hathaway, owns Dairy Queen.
The billionaire didn't call to offer business advice. He called to say two words: Thank you.
"He thanked me for being a role model for all the other employees and people in general," Joey later said.
But the rewards kept coming.
Strangers started showing up at the store. A woman ran up to Joey with an envelope full of cash for his college fund. A man drove all the way from another town just to hand Joey $100, saying he deserved five times what he had given away.
Radio shows invited him on as a guest. Companies offered him jobs. The Minnesota Wild hockey team called and gave him a private suite for 20 of his closest friends.
All because a teenager refused to stay silent when he saw something wrong.
When reporters asked Joey why he did it, his answer was simple: "I was just doing what I thought was right. I did it without even really thinking about it."
He paused, then added something that stuck with people: "Ninety-nine out of 100 people would've done the same thing as me."
Maybe he's right. Maybe most of us would do the same thing.
But Joey Prusak is the one who actually did it.
He didn't have power. He didn't have wealth. He didn't have influence. He was just a teenager behind a counter, making $10 an hour, with nothing but his integrity and a $20 bill.
And that was enough to remind millions of people what doing the right thing looks like.

English
Trevor Thompson retweetledi










