The Skunk Sewer Skank Squad! Imagine the Cesspools that Elected these Skidmarks to Congress!
Drain The SWAMP! Build That WALL!
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from China
seen from China

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from South Korea
seen from Kyrgyzstan
seen from Russia

seen from Malaysia
seen from Maldives

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Spain

seen from Maldives
The Skunk Sewer Skank Squad! Imagine the Cesspools that Elected these Skidmarks to Congress!
Drain The SWAMP! Build That WALL!
A guy on Reddit just threw a temper tantrum and deleted his whole post because I want to spit acid in the face of catcallers.
He asked “What is one addition you’d like to make to the female physiology?”
I said “Acid sac, so we could have built-in defenses against catcallers or other people who want to do us harm.”
He said “Isn’t acid a little harsh for catcalling?”
I said, “Nope. Nobody forced you to open your mouth.”
And then he replied with “This whole place is fucking toxic. Later.”
Men are such fucking babies.
A bill being fast-tracked through the legislature that would shield the hog industry from nuisance lawsuits cleared the House Judiciary Committee this afternoon and could get a vote as early as tomorrow.
A bill being fast-tracked through the legislature that would shield the hog industry from nuisance lawsuits cleared the House Judiciary Committee this afternoon and could get a vote in the full House as early as tomorrow.
As the INDY reported last week, HB 467 is moving quickly despite concerns that it would affect pending litigation filed by hundreds of landowners against commercial hog farmers. The "Agriculture and Forestry Nuisance Remedies" bill would prevent those plaintiffs from recovering damages that aren't property-value-related, including health and nuisance damages resulting from hog waste. Under the bill, property owners would most likely only be able to collect a $7,000 cap in damages over a three-year period, and the bill would apply to any lawsuit pending at the time it goes into effect.
There are currently twenty-six pending federal lawsuits filled against Murphy-Brown, a subsidiary of Smithfield Foods. As we reported last week, the bill's sponsors, including Representative Jimmy Dixon, R-Wayne and Duplin, have gotten serious contributions from the pork industry over the years. According to campaign finance records, Dixon has received more than $115,000 in contributions from Big Pork over the course of his career, including $36,250 from donors associated with Murphy-Brown, the company facing more than two dozen federal lawsuits that the bill in question would essentially nullify.
These issues didn't go unnoticed at the hearing. Democratic Representative Robert T. Reives sought to add an amendment stating that the bill would not affect pending litigation. "I'm extremely uncomfortable with the legislature initiating something once a lawsuit has begun," Reives explained.
Unfortunately for Reives and the dozens of farmers suing Murphy-Brown, the amendment failed. And after a series of furious public comments from landowners who would be impacted by the legislation, HB 467 passed.
Don Webb, a former hog farmer from eastern North Carolina, was livid as he addressed the room.
"When I found out what I was doing to my neighbors, I got out of the hog industry," he fumed. "It was a feces and urine factory, and not a waste factory. I'm a human being. I'm an American. And an American should not have to smell someone else's feces and urine. And that's what they want to force with this bill. You want to play with my constitutional rights to not be able to sue. You want to take away because I'm not a millionaire. You want to take that right away from me, and other people. You've got no right to do it, and you know it. I'm telling the truth! You know you're wrong."
https://t.co/G3dzvURky2
— Erica Hellerstein (@E_Hellerstein) April 5, 2017
Meanwhile, just like last week's deliberation, the meeting was held in a small room with no streaming audio.
Op-Ed: Talk Warns of Harm From Nitrogen in Water
“Restore Our Waters,” was the title of the invitation. Its subtitle, “Learn How to Switch Out Your Septic to Remove The #1 Threat to Groundwater: Nitrogen from Our Septic Systems with Tax-Free Grant Funds.” Some 100 people packed into the auditorium of the Southampton Cultural Center two weeks ago for a “public education event” to learn about an issue that has deeply impacted Suffolk County—the…
Letter: Suffolk's Future Is In Your Hands With Prop 2
On Election Day, voters will be casting their votes for President, US Senate, Congress and state legislators. In Suffolk County, voters also have a once-in-a-generation chance to safeguard the future of Suffolk County’s surface and groundwater in Proposition 2. The proposition allows Suffolk County to begin the arduous process of bringing our wastewater infrastructure into the 21st Century.…
Election 2024: Proposition 2 Supports Water Quality Projects
In addition to selecting candidates for a variety of offices, voters will be asked to decide in November on a small Suffolk County tax increase to fund water quality improvements. Proposition 2 would increase the sales tax one eighth percent, until the year 2060. The tax increase would fund efforts to restore clean water by creating a fund to finance septic system replacements and wastewater…
'Reopen' Facebook Groups Never Shut Down. Now They're Cesspools Of Conspiracies.
‘Reopen’ Facebook Groups Never Shut Down. Now They’re Cesspools Of Conspiracies.
At the height of nationwide protests over coronavirus lockdowns, Facebook groups with names like Reopen Alabama and Michiganders Against Excessive Quarantine collectively accumulated hundreds of thousands of members and widespread mainstream media coverage as followers of those groups took to the streets to protest social distancing requirements.
Many of the lockdowns they protested have now…
View On WordPress