Gene Gengelbach

2.1K posts

Gene Gengelbach

Gene Gengelbach

@genegeng

Katılım Mart 2010
225 Takip Edilen115 Takipçiler
Maria Rose ❤️
Maria Rose ❤️@BhattiLaib9960·
What year do you think this picture was taken, judging by the outfit?
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Department of State
Department of State@StateDept·
On this day 250 years ago, our forefathers gathered for a national day of fasting and prayer. Today, Americans will come together again as one Nation under God. This is who we are and who we’ve always been.
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Joel Berry
Joel Berry@JoelWBerry·
This is the message that will save America.
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Gene Gengelbach
Gene Gengelbach@genegeng·
2.3 inches Sunday afternoon, another 2.1 inches this morning near Louisburg.
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Michelle Maxwell ™
Michelle Maxwell ™@MichelleMaxwell·
I believe in the power of prayer. Please join me in praying for Maddox. Dear Jesus, please heal him and help his family get through this difficult time 🙏✝️🙏 Last night Maddox Graser had two hits and helped his Wooster High School baseball team win 10 to 0. He was perfectly fine. By 8 pm he was throwing up at home. It got worse fast. He was rushed to the hospital in Wooster and then life flighted to the Pediatric ICU at Akron Children’s Hospital this morning. Maddox is a sophomore. A second baseman. A teammate. A son. Right now he has no brain activity. From a baseball field celebrating a win to a pediatric ICU fighting for his life in less than twelve hours. His family never saw this coming. Nobody did. His mom and dad are sitting in that hospital right now needing every prayer they can get. If you believe in miracles please stop scrolling right now and say one for Maddox. His family is pleading for them. Please share this post. The wider this reaches the more people are praying over this young man tonight. Maddox Graser. Remember that name and lift it up.
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Mark R. Levin
Mark R. Levin@marklevinshow·
The blockade is, in fact, destroying Iran’s oil capabilities. Check this out:
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡@shanaka86

JUST IN: Iran just pulled a thirty-year-old empty supertanker out of retirement and began towing it toward Kharg Island. She is moving so slowly that a voyage that should take a day and a half is taking four days. Her name is NASHA. IMO 9079107. Built 1996. A two-million-barrel very large crude carrier that has been anchored empty off Kharg for years. TankerTrackers confirmed her reactivation yesterday. Gulf News, Iran International, and Fox News all picked it up within hours. The reason she is moving at all is that Iran is running out of places to put the oil. Kharg Island handles roughly ninety percent of Iran’s crude exports. Its onshore tanks had about thirteen million barrels of spare capacity when the US blockade began on April 13. Net inflow since has been running at one million to one point one million barrels per day because exports have collapsed to single digits of vessels while upstream production continues. The math is mechanical. Roughly twelve days of spare capacity. The calendar says that window closes this week. NASHA is not a strategy. NASHA is what you do when you have run out of strategy. A two-million-barrel floating storage vessel buys Iran approximately forty-eight hours of continued upstream production. After that, either the wells get shut in or the crude goes somewhere else. The parallel options being pursued, ship-to-ship transfers in the Riau Archipelago, AIS-dark transits, sanctioned VLCCs returning home through the blockade line, are not enough. Lloyd’s List Intelligence has tracked roughly twenty-six Iran-linked vessels evading since April 13. That cannot absorb a million barrels a day. The wells will shut in. The question is which wells, for how long, and whether they come back. The Asmari and Bangestan carbonate formations that sit under most of Iran’s giant southern fields are high-permeability, strong-water-drive systems. The Society of Petroleum Engineers literature on this specific reservoir class is unambiguous. Remove continuous pressure support for a prolonged shut-in and four damage mechanisms activate simultaneously: water coning upward through the fracture network, fines migration into pore throats, formation compaction under increased effective stress, and clay swelling under altered salinity and pH. The damage is not theoretical. It is documented. And it is measured in months to years of recoverable production capacity, not days. Maleki and Gordon estimate three hundred to five hundred thousand barrels per day of permanent capacity loss if the current shut-in trajectory completes. That is a directional estimate, not a lab measurement, but the direction is not in dispute. NASHA is the archaeological signature of the clock. When a country with the world’s third-largest oil reserves reactivates a thirty-year-old retired tanker to float on top of its main export terminal and buy forty-eight hours of time, the institutional systems designed to absorb shocks have already failed. The insurance market, the shadow fleet, the diplomatic channels, and the reservoir physics are all converging on the same conclusion at different speeds, and NASHA is the one that shows up on satellite. The market is pricing a ceasefire. The Pentagon is pricing six months of mine clearance. Iran just pulled a corpse out of the Persian Gulf and asked it to buy two days. That is not how a reversible crisis looks. That is how a regime tells you, operationally, that it has run out of options between the blockade and the shut-in. The reservoir does not negotiate. open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…

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The Husky
The Husky@Mr_Husky1·
It started with a private jet and a lie. In early 1986, Bo Jackson was a senior at Auburn University — the reigning Heisman Trophy winner and a rare athlete dominating both football and baseball. The Tampa Bay Buccaneers, holding the first overall pick in the 1986 NFL Draft, wanted him badly. Owner Hugh Culverhouse arranged a private jet to bring him to Tampa. He told Jackson the trip had been cleared by the NCAA. It hadn’t. When Jackson returned, he was ruled ineligible for the rest of his senior baseball season. A season taken from him. He believed it wasn’t a mistake. He told Culverhouse: draft me if you want—you’ll waste the pick. They drafted him anyway. First overall. Offered him $7.6 million. He said no. Instead, he signed with the Kansas City Royals for $1.07 million and went to the minor leagues. Bus rides. Empty seats. No guarantees. From the outside, it looked irrational. From the inside, it was principle. On November 30, 1987 — his 25th birthday — Jackson lined up for the Los Angeles Raiders on Monday Night Football against the Seattle Seahawks. Linebacker Brian Bosworth had promised to stop him. He didn’t. Jackson took a handoff, broke outside, and ran 91 yards for a touchdown — past defenders, past the sideline, straight into the tunnel. Later, he ran straight through Bosworth at the goal line. 221 rushing yards. His fifth NFL game. Then baseball came. In 1989, he was named MVP of the MLB All Star Game — chasing down impossible plays and hitting a home run off Rick Reuschel that traveled nearly 450 feet. Two sports. Two leagues. One athlete. But the most remarkable thing about Bo Jackson wasn’t the speed or the power. It was the refusal. He refused to reward dishonesty. He refused to let money erase what had been done to him. He chose a bus ride over millions because some things matter more than numbers. His career ended too soon — a devastating hip injury in 1991 changed everything. But his legacy didn’t. Bo Jackson remains the only athlete ever named an All-Star in both Major League Baseball and the National Football League. And that legacy began with a decision. A 22-year-old sitting on the ground in Auburn, his baseball season gone, choosing not to bend. He didn’t break. The world adjusted around him.
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Brandon Shipp
Brandon Shipp@Brandonshipp1·
@genegeng @fox4wx May I have permission to share your video on my weather page with credit to you?
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Gene Gengelbach
Gene Gengelbach@genegeng·
SE of Louisburg Cider Mill, around 8:30.
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Jackeline Luna
Jackeline Luna@jjluna17·
@genegeng @fox4wx Hi Gene, I'm a video journalist with The New York Times. Did you film this footage, and would we be able to publish it with credit to you?
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WeatherNation
WeatherNation@WeatherNation·
@genegeng @fox4wx Amazing capture. May WeatherNation be able to use your footage for on-air / socials giving you full credit?
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FOX Weather Desk
FOX Weather Desk@FOXWeatherDesk·
@genegeng @fox4wx Amazing shot! Do you fully own this video and all of the material in it? If so, can we have permission to use it on all Fox News Media and OutKick services and for all Fox News Edge affiliates across all platforms worldwide w/ courtesy to you? Do we need anyone else’s permission?
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Gene Gengelbach
Gene Gengelbach@genegeng·
SW of Louisburg, looking North
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Gene Gengelbach
Gene Gengelbach@genegeng·
1.4 inches near Louisburg. Jackpot!
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Conservative Thought
Conservative Thought@WordSmithGuy·
“I am a Republican, a black, dyed-in-the-wool Republican, and I never intend to belong to any other Party than the Party of Freedom & Progress.” ~ Frederick Douglass #FrederickDouglass #ConservativeThought
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Fran Fraschilla
Fran Fraschilla@franfraschilla·
It’s really hard to explain to people that college & NBA are two different sports. In many ways, it’s easier to score in the NBA. When @AJ_Dybantsa had only 13 vs. @TexasTechMBB, some people said he struggled. I was there. He had four guys hanging on him. #fpstate=ive&vld=cid:652bf297,vid:gjYPWNQdw9M,st:0" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">google.com/search?q=Luka+…
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Chris Williams
Chris Williams@ChrisMWilliams·
I don’t know if he’s playing, but Joshua Jefferson is out of a boot and very much alive!
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