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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
6 w

End Biden’s Green Energy Scams Once and For All
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townhall.com

End Biden’s Green Energy Scams Once and For All

End Biden’s Green Energy Scams Once and For All
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
6 w

Airbnb's Attempts to Ignore its Shareholders May Cost Them
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townhall.com

Airbnb's Attempts to Ignore its Shareholders May Cost Them

Airbnb's Attempts to Ignore its Shareholders May Cost Them
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
6 w

FBI Says It’s Uncovered ‘Largest Health Care Fraud’ in American History
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www.sgtreport.com

FBI Says It’s Uncovered ‘Largest Health Care Fraud’ in American History

from The Epoch Times: Criminal charges, some including involvement in transnational crime groups, were filed against hundreds of health care workers across the United States. The FBI and Department of Justice (DOJ) on June 30 said that almost $15 billion was reported in losses in the “largest health care fraud” investigation in U.S. history, with […]
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
6 w

A Big Beautiful Bill for the Military-Industrial Complex
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www.sgtreport.com

A Big Beautiful Bill for the Military-Industrial Complex

by Ron Paul, Ron Paul Institute: The US Senate worked through the weekend on the “Big Beautiful Bill.” The goal was to pass it quickly to ensure the House will then pass it and send it to President Trump’s desk before the July 4th holiday. However, disagreements among Republican Senators over reductions in spending on […]
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
6 w

Elon Musk OUT FOR REVENGE Over the “One big Beautiful Bill”? Fake News At it Again?
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www.sgtreport.com

Elon Musk OUT FOR REVENGE Over the “One big Beautiful Bill”? Fake News At it Again?

from vivafrei: TRUTH LIVES on at https://sgtreport.tv/
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RetroGame Roundup
RetroGame Roundup
6 w

First Look: Echoes of the Unread
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www.oldschoolgamermagazine.com

First Look: Echoes of the Unread

Old School Gamer’s Patrick Hickey Jr. plays Echoes of the Unread on the NES from Mega Cat Studios.   The post First Look: Echoes of the Unread appeared first on Old School Gamer Magazine.
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
6 w

A Food-Growing Tradition Finds New Roots in the Mississippi Delta
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reasonstobecheerful.world

A Food-Growing Tradition Finds New Roots in the Mississippi Delta

Dorothy Grady pulled at a tuft of green fronds sprouting from one of an array of soil-filled buckets sitting in the driveway of her house. A plump carrot, five inches long and brilliant orange, popped out. Nearby, a sage shrub grew from another bucket, and scallions crowded a squat grow bag. In about three weeks, Grady would kick off the spring growing season on the land she cultivates around Shelby, Mississippi, including two plots at the now-closed middle school across the street, a small grove of peach and pear trees up the road, and five acres outside of town. She was ready to start planting eggplants, melons, tomatoes and a cornucopia of other produce that would soon end up in the homes of 127 nearby residents.  Dorothy Grady is one of almost a dozen local growers supplying produce to Delta GREENS. Credit: Elizabeth Hewitt Shelby, a few miles east of the Mississippi River, is surrounded by flat, fertile farmland. But Grady’s vegetables and fruit are some of the only crops around that make it to local plates. The vast majority of Mississippi Delta farms are devoted to commodity crops like soy and corn. Grady is one of almost a dozen local growers supplying produce to Delta GREENS, a collaborative research project that is delivering fresh ingredients to residents of Bolivar, Sunflower and Washington counties with diabetes and monitoring the health impacts. This “food is medicine” project is one of a number of initiatives that are supporting farmers and expanding the market for locally grown produce in this western Mississippi region. The benefits run in both directions: At the same time that community members are getting access to these nutritious ingredients, the small-scale farmers who grow them are getting a leg up. “What we’re trying to do is build cooperative development amongst the farms,” says Julian Miller, founding director for the Reuben V. Anderson Institute for Social Justice in Jackson, a co-principal investigator for Delta GREENS, and a long-time local food advocate in the Delta region. “Ultimately, we want to be able to give them the capacity to scale and capture the broader market.” The 200-mile-long Delta region, on the fertile floodplain sandwiched between the Mississippi and Yazoo rivers, has a rich agricultural history. Once known for growing cotton, today the area is dominated by ridged fields growing commodities that will be processed into animal feed or ethanol. In the past, many Delta residents cultivated fruits and vegetables, says Miller, yet over time, pressures like farming mechanization and loss of land eroded the practice. Miller, a fifth-generation Delta resident who grew up a few miles away from Shelby, never saw anyone with a vegetable garden. “That tradition was lost, as far as growing your food,” he says.  Today, despite the abundance of fertile land, very little of it is dedicated to edible crops. About 90 percent of the food people eat in this region is grown elsewhere and imported. “That’s the irony,” Miller says.
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
6 w

12 Stories About America’s Most Iconic River System
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reasonstobecheerful.world

12 Stories About America’s Most Iconic River System

The Mississippi River Basin begins in a little lake in northern Minnesota. But its many branches and tributaries sprawl across nearly half of the continental U.S., stretching from the sandstone cliffs of Montana to the shale fields of Western Pennsylvania, sustaining the lives and livelihoods of millions in between. Yet even this doesn’t fully capture how large the Mississippi looms. According to the Mississippi River Basin Ag & Water Desk, the region it spans produces more than 90 percent of America’s agricultural exports and a majority of its livestock. It’s also one of the most important transportation corridors on the planet, supporting a $400 billion shipping industry that ferries countless goods across the continent, from fertilizer to car parts. So many people rely on the Mississippi River Basin for their water supply that an exact count doesn’t even exist.  All of this usage sits in uneasy parallel with a vast and vital natural world: The rivers and their floodplains are home to over half of the continent’s migratory bird routes and one out of every four of its fish species. The Mississippi River Basin nurtures all of this wildlife despite being beset by a steady stream of industrial pollution, sewage discharge and agricultural runoff.  The fact that one of America’s most iconic natural features is also one of its most threatened makes it an ideal case study. Age-old questions of commerce versus conservation are integral to the Mississippi’s identity. So is the diversity of people and places the river touches, from Rust Belt cities to soybean farms. Its grandeur and its disrepair make it an irresistible metaphor.  This 12-story project, a special subset of our ongoing Waterline series, will explore the many challenges and the collaborative, forward-thinking solutions transforming the Mississippi River Basin today. We’ll examine efforts to eradicate invasive species, convert grazing land into wildlife habitat, and make the region’s farms more welcoming to migratory birds. We’ll hear from the people whose cities, economies and identities are inseparable from the river basin. And we’ll immerse ourselves in the region through vibrant imagery, interactive storytelling and a Mississippi River music playlist curated by RTBC founder David Byrne. To follow along, subscribe to our newsletter. This series is sponsored by the Walton Family Foundation. To learn more about our funder-supported content, read our Editorial Independence Policy. The post 12 Stories About America’s Most Iconic River System appeared first on Reasons to be Cheerful.
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
6 w

My Mississippi River Playlist
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reasonstobecheerful.world

My Mississippi River Playlist

For the next six months, Reasons to be Cheerful is exploring the Mississippi River Basin, home to some of the most pressing challenges in the United States. A symbol of America, the Mississippi River Basin connects a vast region of farms, cities, dams and natural habitats that support a range of biodiversity across hundreds of thousands of square miles. It is one of America’s greatest resources, providing energy generation, agricultural sustenance and transportation. These aspects make the river and the region a fascinating lens through which to view the country’s ecological, economic and cultural challenges — and their solutions. I made this playlist for the series with songs about the Mississippi — not the state, though that too, but more the giant river and its watershed. The post My Mississippi River Playlist appeared first on Reasons to be Cheerful.
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RSBN Feed - Right Side Broadcast
RSBN Feed - Right Side Broadcast
6 w News & Oppinion

rumbleRumble
WATCH: "We're going out to Alligator Alcatraz! It's an East Coast version" President Trump. - 7/1/25
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