Punished Clossington
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I wrote a substack article, roughly the size of a novella, on the Whiskey Rebellion. Check it out here:
https://open.substack.com/pub/oldgloryclub/p/death-and-taxes
https://open.substack.com/pub/oldgloryclub/p/death-and-taxes
Substack
Death and Taxes
Shameless Promotion for Old Glory Club’s Mingo Creek Society
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Forwarded from The Porkchop Express
No way we got strategic battle maps of the chimp civil war before gta 6
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Forwarded from Working Men Memes (Wesla Johnkowski)
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Forwarded from Tabz - Alternative Media (Tabz)
During his unprecedented briefing in the White House Situation Room on February 11, Benjamin Netanyahu presented President Trump with a video montage and intel outlining a “near-certain victory” plan and possible post-regime leaders for Iran, including Reza Pahlavi, NYT reports.
Netanyahu and his team argued that Iran’s ballistic missile program could be crippled within weeks, that Tehran would be too weakened to close the Strait of Hormuz, and that retaliation against U.S. interests in the region would likely be limited.
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Dan Caine, repeatedly warned that securing the Strait of Hormuz would be extremely difficult and that Iran most likely would disrupt shipping there. But Trump largely dismissed that risk, believing Tehran would fold before it reached that point and expecting a short conflict.
Bibi and the Israeli team said Mossad's intelligence indicated that renewed street protests would erupt inside Iran again and that a sustained bombing campaign, combined with covert Israeli support for unrest, could help topple the regime.
Israeli officials even raised the possibility of Iranian Kurdish fighters crossing from Iraq to open a northern front.
Netanyahu and his team presented the video and intel with confidence, and it appeared to resonate with Trump, who said, “Sounds good to me."
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Forwarded from The Porkchop Express
Tabz - Alternative Media
Mr President please refrain from making your decision until after I’ve shown you my little dark age edit
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Forwarded from The Porkchop Express
I keep seeing all these articles from goystream media about how all the low level Republican staffers are groypers so why doesn’t one of you Mexicans catch trump coming out of the bathroom and show him some vril edits and bowden speech voiceovers or something if that’s all it takes
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Forwarded from Melon TheHobbit
YouTube
Pahlavi Iran: Persianate Postmodernism 1925 AD - 1941 AD with Hunger
https://findmyfrens.net/hunger/
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Forwarded from Wulfgar's Onion Fields 3: Fangorn Forest Forklift Fraternity and Floozy Fornication Fiesta
warrior caste niggas: "life is all about war actually"
thrall caste niggas: "life is all about working actually"
priest caste niggas: "life is all about being enlightened actually"
thrall caste niggas: "life is all about working actually"
priest caste niggas: "life is all about being enlightened actually"
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Forwarded from DoomPosting
A Pennsylvania farmer has rejected a $15 million offer from data center developers, choosing instead to permanently protect his family's land.
Mervin Raudabaugh has lived and worked his farmland in Silver Spring Township, Cumberland County, Pennsylvania, for more than 51 years. He milked cows there for decades, and the property holds deep personal meaning—his mother passed away in his arms inside the family barn.
To developers eyeing the land for a high-tech data center, it represented prime real estate near major infrastructure corridors. To Raudabaugh, every acre is an irreplaceable piece of family history.
Last month, he made a decision that surprised the local market: rather than accept the $15 million+ offer, he sold the development rights to his 261-acre property for about $2 million through a conservation easement held by the Lancaster Farmland Trust (with funding and support from Silver Spring Township's preservation program).
This legal agreement permanently restricts the land to agricultural use only—no data centers, no industrial development. The easement binds future owners as well, ensuring the farmland remains green forever.
The developers' pressure was intense; township officials reported aggressive approaches that led Raudabaugh's attorney to consider seeking a court injunction against harassment.
Silver Spring Township has long prioritized preservation. Since a 2013 voter-approved referendum dedicating a portion of earned income tax to farmland, open space, and forest protection (costing the average household roughly $120 per year), the community has preserved 21 properties totaling hundreds of acres.
Raudabaugh can still sell the land someday, but only as farmland—likely fetching far less than the data center deal would have paid. In total, his compensation will be a fraction of the $15 million on the table.
In an era when farmland is increasingly swallowed by digital infrastructure to power AI and cloud computing, his choice stands out as a deliberate stand for heritage, legacy, and community over maximum profit.
For Raudabaugh, the quiet certainty that his family barn and fields will endure outweighs any fortune a tech giant could provide—a powerful reminder that some values transcend dollars.
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Mervin Raudabaugh has lived and worked his farmland in Silver Spring Township, Cumberland County, Pennsylvania, for more than 51 years. He milked cows there for decades, and the property holds deep personal meaning—his mother passed away in his arms inside the family barn.
To developers eyeing the land for a high-tech data center, it represented prime real estate near major infrastructure corridors. To Raudabaugh, every acre is an irreplaceable piece of family history.
Last month, he made a decision that surprised the local market: rather than accept the $15 million+ offer, he sold the development rights to his 261-acre property for about $2 million through a conservation easement held by the Lancaster Farmland Trust (with funding and support from Silver Spring Township's preservation program).
This legal agreement permanently restricts the land to agricultural use only—no data centers, no industrial development. The easement binds future owners as well, ensuring the farmland remains green forever.
The developers' pressure was intense; township officials reported aggressive approaches that led Raudabaugh's attorney to consider seeking a court injunction against harassment.
Silver Spring Township has long prioritized preservation. Since a 2013 voter-approved referendum dedicating a portion of earned income tax to farmland, open space, and forest protection (costing the average household roughly $120 per year), the community has preserved 21 properties totaling hundreds of acres.
Raudabaugh can still sell the land someday, but only as farmland—likely fetching far less than the data center deal would have paid. In total, his compensation will be a fraction of the $15 million on the table.
In an era when farmland is increasingly swallowed by digital infrastructure to power AI and cloud computing, his choice stands out as a deliberate stand for heritage, legacy, and community over maximum profit.
For Raudabaugh, the quiet certainty that his family barn and fields will endure outweighs any fortune a tech giant could provide—a powerful reminder that some values transcend dollars.
🄳🄾🄾🄼🄿🤖🅂🅃🄸🄽🄶
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Forwarded from Disclose.tv
JUST IN - CENTCOM says U.S. Navy destroyers, USS Frank E. Peterson and USS Michael Murphy, transit to Hormuz Strait and start "setting conditions for clearing mines," to establish a safe pathway, with additional U.S. forces, including underwater drones, joining in the coming days.
Source: https://x.com/CENTCOM/status/2043005033600479516?s=20
@disclosetv
Source: https://x.com/CENTCOM/status/2043005033600479516?s=20
@disclosetv
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