“…and let me ask you somethin’, How many abortions have you got?”
The YouTuber here who goes by the handle “Parkergetajob” has a pretty entertaining approach of talking to Trump voters, and exploring their comprehension of national and international issues.
“Lot of turmoil the past couple days on our road to total victory. We have just won a major battle, folks. Alex and his gang of liars and scoundrels have been cast out into the street, they have lost InfoWars, InfoWars.com, and their various platforms,” Heidecker said in his pitch perfect Alex Jones impression.
“They have been cast out, ladies and gentlemen, and make no mistake, we will be the new InfoWars. Now we got to go through the machinations of the court, we’ve had some setbacks over past couple days, but that is not stopping us, that is not tempering our resolve. Over the next couple days or weeks, you will see much more coming out of this.”
Mocking Jones’ own celebration of the Texas court decision, Heidecker added, “This is merely a distraction by the courts. We knew this was gonna be coming, we prepared for it, we are continuing the fight. We have never been more resolved to seek restitution and justice for the Sandy Hook families.”
Jeff D. Opdyke is an American financial writer and investment expert.
He spent 17 years covering personal finance and investing for The Wall Street Journal, worked as a trader and a hedge fund analyst, and has written 10 books on such topics as investing globally and personal finance.
UPDATE: This piece above has gone viral, and was picked up for some further comment by Matt Randolph, aka “Mr Global”. Worthy extension to the discussion.
What James Talarico has to say about the oil and gas industry might surprise you, but he's right — and every Democrat should listen: pic.twitter.com/eJ1i4AzaB8
Can relate. I am constantly working, talking and interacting with Farmers and landowners from Deep Red rural Michigan. They know exactly who I am, and they know we probably don’t agree on a number issues, but they have come to know that I keep showing up, I do what I say I’m going to do, and I’m there to help them get that wind turbine, or solar field on their land. Talarico has a tall order, but he’s a talented guy, and has Texas Republicans running scared.
Democratic state Rep. James Talarico is leading both of his prospective Republican opponents in two new polls of Texas’ U.S. Senate race — though he falls short of the 50% mark in both surveys, suggesting the contest remains tight.
A poll conducted by Texas Public Opinion Research from April 17-20 and published Tuesday found Talarico leading Sen. John Cornyn by three percentage points, 44% to 41%. The Austin Democrat leads Attorney General Ken Paxton by a margin of five percentage points, 46% to 41%. Both results fell within the margin of error of +/-2.5 percentage points. The survey included 1,865 likely general election voters. TPOR labels itself as a nonpartisan public opinion research group; it is directed by Democratic strategist Luke Warford.
In a separate poll, the Texas Politics Project at the University of Texas at Austin found Talarico ahead of Cornyn by seven points, 40% to 33%, and of Paxton by 8 points, 42% to 34%. The Texas Politics Project surveyed 1,200 registered voters from April 10 to 20 and produced a margin of error of +/-3.3 percentage points.
No Democrat has won a statewide race in Texas since 1994, and in recent cycles, polls have routinely offered rosy projections for the minority party that are not borne out in November.
Not just an economic passage, it’s a deeply scarring psychological moment, globally. Behaviors and attitudes are changing in ways that will not change back.
Above, CNN report on how much gasoline prices are expected to rise, and who is getting the blame. Good analysis of global oil supply status. Catastrophe for the Republican Party and the fossil fuel industry. Heartland being hammered right now.
Below, Nobel Prize economist Paul Krugman on the price dominance of renewable energy.
he strongest El Niño in 150 years? That’s not hype, it’s the actual median forecast right now for the developing event later this year. It could rival — or even surpass — the legendary 1877 El Niño, the strongest on record, which was linked to widespread drought, monsoon failure, and global food crises in parts of Asia, Africa, and South America. But what does that mean today? It means a tremendous amount of excess ocean heat being released into the atmosphere – energy that can rearrange weather patterns around the world. That typically leads to:
Increased flood risk in some regions
More intense/ prolonged heatwaves, drought and fires
A shift in severe storm tracks
And often a suppressed Atlantic hurricane season, but boosted in the East Pacific. Since it’s so huge, when the Pacific talks, the atmosphere listens! But this isn’t 1877… forecasting, infrastructure, and global awareness are far better today. We’ll be better prepared.
Figures prominently in Project Hail Mary, which I just took a few hours to see. Well worth the time.
Version from the film is below, I have the video set to start after about a 3 minute talky intro. It’s an emotional and spiritual high point of a film which is full of them.
Facebook post from an anti-solar group near my home. Typically, portrays solar as the enemy of farmers and agrarian lifestyle, while totally ignorant of the facts, that farmer are desperate to add clean energy income to their increasingly inadequate revenue streams.
A little backstory. A local township here in central Michigan, Ingersoll, recently refused (without legal justification) to approve a permit for a solar farm, for which the developer, Michigan utility DTE, had met or exceeded all ordinance requirements. The Planning Commission did so under duress and harassment by well organized and poorly informed “antis”, who came out in force to recent meetings, egged on by fossil fuel coordinated messaging on social media. The issue will continue to percolate, and there will eventually be a solar farm – see the column further down.
When I came across the image above on their Facebook page, illustrating a naive and simple minded misunderstanding of the issues, I wrote this response.
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The farmer driving that Combine isn’t there for the “simple country life”.
His land is not his “vibe”, or his “lifestyle’ – it is HIS LIFE, and likely the life of his Father and Grandfather before him.
While you’re watching the sunset, drinking a margarita, and “vibing” – he’s working late into the night, again, because he has to make payments on that 400,000 dollar combine.
The price of a bushel of corn is not much higher than what his Dad was getting back in 1985, and his input prices keep jumping. He knows that diesel and urea are going to cost him 20,000 dollars more this planting season because of the war in Iran.
Speaking of wars, he’s worried about his son, who is on deployment in the Arabian Sea. He hasn’t heard from him in a week or so, and is a little anxious. He’s hoping junior will want to take over the farm, but with the economy the way it is, this way of life seems like a lot of work with not much security.