Pity Kimball, NE population 2,200.
The article mentions as many as 3,200 workers to be housed in Kimball. A pleasant, old oil/agriculture town with many vacant storefront buildings, it has long had a dark side of drug problems. The residents have kept the place from total disrepair. The streets are in decent shape, the park is neat and well kept, there is a small hospital, and the streets are plowed in the winter.
From the folks who brought you wolves
They now want to introduce wolverines. They have identified three areas they believe will support a wolverine population. I have my doubts that, long term, wolverines can find enough food to keep from starving. The occasional individual, sure, and they do wander in from time to time. Many years ago I saw one near Steamboat Springs. A pack, or several packs; doubtful.Gag Me
Plant based eggs? Why?Environazi Victim
The arrogant bastards made mandates forcing hasty engineer solutions by the manufacturers. The people needing trucks to make a living turned to desperate measures. This family owned business responded to customer needs and the patriarch got hammered by our government.
5 comments:
I would introduce the wolverines in those trust fund enclaves... LOL And no, the .gov folks will NEVER pay a price for the s**t they do!
If they introduce wolverines, they will eventually be in the trust fund enclaves looking for food.
Recently our trash hauler was late picking up. His truck went into one of the automatic regeneration cycles while he was out on his route, and he was stuck on the side of the road for two hours, after which a mechanic had to come out and reset the system.
W.W.W. A common occurrence. The cost in time and loss revenue these systems cause is, to me, criminal.
Behind Closed Doors, a Smoke Free, Catered Room in D.c., a foundation boardroom, or maybe a “nonprofit strategy summit.” The language is polished, the schemes are not.
Someone named Chucky : Says Okay, team, crisis of the week—what’s it going to be? Climate? Democracy? Or “protecting the children”? (translation: which narrative spins fastest?)
Someone named Hakeem Let’s bundle all three. Fear sells best in bulk. (translation: panic = profits)
Someone named :Cory says “Perfect. We’ll draft a 70 page report” that no one reads, slap our logo on it, and leak it to friendly press. Instant narrative. (translation: fake news factory)
Donor Liaison: And we’ll need funding mechanisms. USAID can route some overseas contracts to our buddies. Domestic side? IRS will look the other way if we call it “voter engagement.” (translation: hush money and vote rigging)
Foundation Executive: Don’t forget the speech circuit. We’ll send out our “experts” to say this is all urgent. Throw in a few sob stories, sprinkle words like “justice” and “equity,” and boom—taxpayer cash starts flowing. (translation: sob stories = cash cows)
Cory says “And Accountability”
Consultant: (laughing) Cute. We bury everything under layers of partnerships, sub grants, and advisory boards. By the time anyone asks where the money went, it’s already funding next year’s campaign ads. (translation: smoke, mirrors, and reruns)
Hakeem says We’re not stealing—we’re investing.” We’re not power grabbing—we’re “protecting democracy.” (translation: lying with style)
Foundation Executive: Brilliant. Now, who wants wine and a taxpayer funded limousine to the after party? (translation: living large on your dime)
(Everyone laughs, because why not—it’s not their money.)
And that’s the bitter reality: the DOJ isn’t blind, it’s weaponized. The IRS isn’t fair; it’s targeted. USAID isn’t aid, it’s a slush fund. NGOs aren’t neutral; they’re partisan storefronts. Foundations aren’t charity, they’re laundering machines. Every lever of government and “civil society” has been twisted into a tool for power, control, and cash. And the rest of us? We’re stuck footing the bill while they Congratulate Themselves for “Saving Democracy.”
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