Springtucky

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Springtucky

Springtucky

@OGSpringtucky

Just trying to make sense of all the nonsense going on. Less government! I block idiots 🤷‍♀️ No DMs

Tham gia Ocak 2023
6.1K Đang theo dõi1.7K Người theo dõi
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SkriptkeeperElect
SkriptkeeperElect@Skriptkeeper17·
Did you know that before chlorine became the gold standard, copper was the go-to for keeping water crystal clear? Long before modern filtration, ancient civilizations like the Egyptians, Greeks, and Romans recognized copper’s powerful antimicrobial properties. They used copper vessels to store water and even threw copper coins into wells to keep the water “sweet” and free from pathogens. 🏺 In the early days of swimming pools, copper ionization was the primary way to sanitize the water. It works by releasing positively charged copper ions that naturally destroy bacteria and algae on contact—a method that’s still used today in many eco-friendly, low-chlorine pool systems.🛡️ It’s a perfect example of how ancient wisdom often aligns with modern science to provide a cleaner, more natural way to live. Did you know? • The Egyptians: Used copper to sterilize drinking water as early as 2400 B.C. • The Science: Copper ions (Cu^{2+}) disrupt the cell walls of bacteria, effectively neutralizing them without the harsh chemical smell of chlorine.🦠 Credit Ronnie L FACEBOOK
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Alex M
Alex M@IonisedSkyWatch·
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Time Capsule Tales
Time Capsule Tales@timecaptales·
Chuck Norris held a 183-10-2 record and was a 6x world champion in full contact bare knuckle karate. On top of that, he beat heavyweight kickboxing world champion Joe Lewis 3 consecutive times and also had a brutal sparring match with undefeated kickboxing world champion, Bill Superfoot Wallace, that lasted an hour and a half. According to Wallace, they practically stalemated and "beat the crap out of each other". Chuck was trained in kickboxing/boxing by Benny The Jet Urquidez and was also trained in BJJ by the Gracies and Machados for 20 years. Even being able to submit Carlos Machado himself on occasion. Chuck had a 315 Ibs bench press at 180 lbs bodyweight and was said to have a grip back in the day that nobody could escape from because he was so strong. Even Jean Claude Van Damme said he'd never fight Chuck Norris, despite being a kickboxing world champion himself. Chuck held a 10th degree black belt in Chun Kuk Do, a 9th degree black belt in Tang Soo Do, an 8th degree black belt in Taekwondo, a 5th degree black belt in Karate, a 3rd degree black belt in Brazilian Jiu Jitsu and a black belt in Judo. Rest in peace, Chuck!
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Don Keith
Don Keith@RealDonKeith·
🤣This is a hilarious montage of Chuck Norris jokes. If you think about it, he really was the first 80’s action hero and pretty much started the genre of 80’s and 90’s action movies.
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Snakebite Hoffman
Snakebite Hoffman@NHoffman87616·
@MKWPublishing @DELTA9_DELTA9 @OGSpringtucky @IonisedSkyWatch @BonasoroMa52525 @dougmastriano @edon5 @RepThomasMassie @LegendreKristy @nogps1 @marietuggl72852 @MOCleanSkies @GeoWatchGallery @BGatesIsaPyscho Was blue. Warm. Now cold. Shouldn't it get warmer as the day grows ? O, my bad .. that's in the natural world run by the universe. Forgot. 🛩🚫☀️📡🌬🌫 Boycott air transit. Not clear skies folks. You can hear ... you can't see them. Can't track most today. Cloaked.
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West Virginia, USA 🇺🇸 English
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The Vigilant Fox 🦊
The Vigilant Fox 🦊@VigilantFox·
REPORT: Newly resurfaced CIA documents reveal the U.S. military didn’t just study the weather, they were actively working to control it, weaponize it, and reshape warfare itself. And if that sounds too far-fetched, the paper trail shows this wasn’t theory, it was already underway decades ago. Declassified CIA-era files outline plans to manipulate storms, trigger floods, and disrupt enemy infrastructure using the weather itself. By the late 1960s, programs like Project Popeye were already extending monsoon seasons in Vietnam to cripple supply lines. A later Air Force document goes even further, detailing a strategy to “own the weather” by 2025 and treat it as a full-spectrum weapon. Officials have long framed this as battlefield-only technology, but the scale and ambition behind these programs suggest far wider implications, including potential civilian impact that can’t be ignored. So how far did this actually go, and what’s still happening behind the scenes today? @zeeemedia's report connects the dots most people still haven’t seen. 👇 rumble.com/v77aybm-msm-ad…
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Alex M
Alex M@IonisedSkyWatch·
Good morning all 👋 😵😵😵
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Big Rock Insights
Big Rock Insights@BigRockInsights·
FUN FACT: Not only does the state of Utah manage the largest cloud seeding program in the United States, it also manages the largest remote seeding program in the world. The government uses planes, drones, and at least 190 remote-controlled generating stations across the state to spray silver iodide and other chemicals in clouds to pull more moisture out of them.
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Big Rock Insights@BigRockInsights

Cloud seeding and geo-engineering used to be one of the most commonly mocked “tinfoil hat” theories. Now they openly admit they’re doing it and that it’s actually beneficial. Utah spent $200,000 on spraying silver iodide in the air in 2022. That grew to $16 million in 2025.

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bitchuneedsoap
bitchuneedsoap@bitchuneedsoap·
USAA. Founded by Army officers. Built to serve military families. Laid off almost 600 American employees in a single round while posting a record $7.9 billion profit. The Heritage Foundation flagged USAA for hiring H-1B workers through outsourcing firms like Tata and HCL. Patriotism is the brand. Outsourcing is the business model.
Matt Forney@mattforney

EXCLUSIVE: an insider at USAA provides footage of the company's recent Diwali event. It looks like a Tim and Eric skit. Remember, while USAA throws parties for Indians, it ignores American holidays and its veteran employees are committing suicide from stress and layoffs.

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Concerned Citizen
Concerned Citizen@BGatesIsaPyscho·
The entire world is real realising more quickly than ever. The masses are gonna be so angry when they finally realise what’s happening to them, who doesn’t love the sun?
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BGimpl
BGimpl@b_gimpl1234·
This guy caught a timelapse of a weird aerosol cloud or plasma blob. Whatever it is... its def not a normal cloud floating by. The weather engineers are cooking up ever increasing weird stuff.
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Tony Seruga
Tony Seruga@TonySeruga·
💰 The $8 Billion Legal Black Hole: How Washington’s Lawfare Industry Bleeds the American Taxpayer Washington, D.C., has quietly birthed a shadow economy — one run not by lobbyists or bureaucrats alone, but by attorneys who litigate both sides of the same disputes, feeding off taxpayers in an endless cycle of lawsuits, settlements, and payoffs. Behind the veil of “accountability” and “regulation,” a vast legal infrastructure now consumes an estimated $8 – $10 billion every year—and delivers almost nothing tangible to the public in return. At the heart of this system is what insiders call weaponized lawfare—the strategic use of lawsuits to achieve political or ideological goals through the courts rather than Congress. Federal agencies like the EPA, HHS, and Interior churn out thousands of pages of dense regulations every year. Almost immediately, the same rules are challenged in court—sometimes by industry, often by well-funded nonprofit plaintiffs. But rather than fight to the end, the agencies typically settle. These “sue and settle” deals allow policy changes to be made behind closed doors, without public oversight or legislative approval. The process looks adversarial but is, in truth, a form of cooperative theater. Career government lawyers, NGO attorneys, and private firms wage symbolic battles where no one actually loses. The only real casualty is the taxpayer, who pays the salaries of government litigators, the fees of opposing counsel, and the “settlement reimbursements” that NGOs pocket under laws like the Equal Access to Justice Act (EAJA). These statutes were designed to help small citizens seek justice against the government — but in practice, they’ve become revenue streams for multimillion-dollar activist corporations. The Department of Justice’s Civil Division alone burns through roughly $1.5 billion per year in litigation defense. Add another $2 billion in legal staffing across major agencies, then another $4–5 billion in Treasury settlement payouts from the Judgment Fund — a special account that replenishes automatically, without congressional approval or itemization. Every year, that one fund quietly transfers billions to law firms, NGOs, and plaintiffs who sued the government, often on procedural technicalities or policy disputes. A small cadre of recurring players dominates this lucrative cycle. Groups like Earthjustice, the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), the Center for Biological Diversity, and the ACLU file hundreds of cases each year, pull in tens of millions in legal-fee reimbursements, and parade the settlements as moral victories. Many of their senior lawyers previously worked for the agencies they now sue — and later return to those agencies once the political winds change. This revolving‑door dynamic ensures continuity regardless of administrations; the legal machine keeps grinding, immune to elections. Private law firms play their part too. Names like Covington & Burling, WilmerHale, and Latham & Watkins act as outside counsel for agencies one year and opposing counsel the next. Combined, these firms absorb upwards of $700 million annually from federal contracts, settlements, and legal monitoring agreements. By monopolizing institutional knowledge and staff pipelines, they shutter out smaller firms while turning governmental litigation into a boutique industry of insiders managing perpetual motion. The result is a perverse incentive structure. Every major case becomes a fundraising and staffing event for both sides: NGOs expand teams, agencies justify larger legal budgets, and private firms secure future retainers. With no cap on the Treasury’s payouts and almost zero public accounting of who receives how much, the system sustains itself indefinitely. Oversight is cosmetic; the financial opacity is deliberate. Even watchdog groups have struggled for decades to extract itemized lists of recipients from the Judgment Fund. The opportunity cost is staggering. The money spent each year on bureaucratic lawfare equals the entire operating budget of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers or the total cost of America’s Mars exploration program—twice over. Redirected toward tangible needs, that $8 billion could rebuild 2,000 bridges, retrofit all public schools with clean water systems, or fund millions of trade apprenticeships. Instead, it evaporates in the capital’s legal bloodstream — producing neither justice nor infrastructure, only paperwork and precedent. Reform isn’t impossible but demands bold surgery. The Judgment Fund should require congressional approval for all large settlements. Every recipient of EAJA payments and fee-shifting awards should be listed publicly. “Sue and settle” arrangements should be barred without legislative review, and former agency lawyers must face long cooling-off periods before suing their old departments. These are not radical ideas; they’re the baseline of responsible governance. Until such reforms materialize, however, Washington’s legal‑industrial complex will keep humming. It’s a closed ecosystem — lawyers suing lawyers, funded by taxpayers, overseen by no one. The spectacle gives the illusion of civic action while masking a billion‑dollar drain on democracy itself: an endless courtroom carousel where process trumps progress, justice becomes a paycheck, and the rule of law is just another business model.
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Cary Kelly
Cary Kelly@CaryKelly11·
Important context to consider in the recent FDA allegation that Raw Farm’s raw cheese caused an e. Coli outbreak. -The FDA itself acknowledges no Raw Farm products from the relevant production period have tested positive for E. coli and no pathogens have been found in their cheese samples. -There have been zero complaints at the retail level. -Raw Farms refuses to voluntarily recall their products because no test has linked their product to the outbreak. They stand by their stringent standards for sanitation, regular testing and product safety. The Raw Farms spokesman doesn’t say it but I get the impression that he feels like something is not right and that something isn’t his cheese. What do you think?
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🚫👁️Drinks on Saturday🇺🇸
Viktor Schauberger was an Austrian naturalist, inventor, forester, and philosopher born in 1885 and died in 1958. He's popularly known as the "Water Wizard" for his lifelong observations of water in nature—especially how it moves in rivers, streams, and vortices—and his belief that modern technology harms water's natural vitality. Schauberger argued that water is alive and has special properties when it flows in spiral, vortex-like patterns (inspired by how trout swim upstream effortlessly or how water swirls in mountain streams). He claimed straight pipes, dams, and chlorinated/treated water "kill" its energy, while natural spiraling movement revitalizes it, increases its oxygen content, cleanses it, and even generates subtle energies (what he called "implosion" rather than explosion-based tech). His ideas blend keen natural observation with unconventional (and often pseudoscientific) claims about energy, levitation devices (like the Repulsine), implosion turbines, and free energy from water vortices. Mainstream science largely dismisses many of his more extreme inventions (e.g., anti-gravity or over-unity energy claims), but his biomimicry approaches to flow dynamics and water treatment have influenced permaculture, alternative water vitalization products, and some ecological engineering concepts today.
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Sayer Ji
Sayer Ji@sayerjigmi·
1/🚨 25 years ago Congressman Dennis Kucinich named the prohibition of 'Chemtrails' and other 'exotic weapons systems' into law (H.R. 2977) 10 years ago the DNC put my 'Chemtrail Conspiracy' research on a joke list. Today it's on the front page of the Daily Mail. This is the full arc — and it's not over. 🧵👇
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