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🌾 True Conservation Starts on the Ground
I grew up on this land with cattle and horses. My family has been here for decades, and today it still looks exactly the same.
That’s true conservation.
The visual evidence is irrefutable.
That’s true stewardship — taking absolute responsibility for everything around you: your land, your livestock, your water.
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That is saving the environment through actions every single day, left in the hands of people who truly understand the land. The dedication is unquestionable: taking pride in providing for humanity with great compassion and care.
Since 1903 and for generations, we have taken it upon ourselves to diligently maintain the highest standards — always evolving, improving, and progressing to the best of our capabilities.
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And yet, government overreach and corporate gouging have made it so difficult that we can barely make a living for our own families. Endless farms have gone bankrupt, cattle herds have been reduced because of the skyrocketing costs of machinery, fuel, fertilizer — everything it takes. Most of us would rather die trying than quit. And I mean that in every sense of the word.
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We are true, honest, good people. We live on the prairie; we live off the land. We remain true shepherds of the land, and we don’t do it just for ourselves. We do it for the whole world. Here on the prairie, we are the best in the world, and there is proof and data to back that up.
You don’t understand the people who live in real-time, life-and-death situations every single day — be it human or animal — across the prairie provinces of Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba. Because you’ve never taken the time to get to know us or even ask the questions that truly matter. You don’t even try to understand what we do for you, for your family, for every city and town across this country and around the world. Isn’t it time to ask?
People cannot continue to blindly believe a bunch of guys in suits who couldn’t even grow a potato themselves. We are all individuals and equals who should not be divided against one another. We should all act like civil human beings toward one another. We all share the same common goal: to live.
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Always considering and knowing full well that one day someone in the world will be healthier and stronger because of what you do — impacting human life without ever even meeting that human being. That’s true humanity. That is agriculture. People in agriculture take great care in knowing so well that human lives absolutely depend upon what we do every day — ethically, morally, and responsibly — so that we can contribute to each and every single life that exists on this earth.
It’s being selfless and knowing there is no other choice if you want to help people across the world eat well on healthy, clean diets.
Never let anyone tell you different.
Anything else is a lie.
#RanchLife #TrueStewardship #LandAndLegacy #AgricultureIsHumanity #PrairieStewards #GenerationalFarming
I used to believe that Donald Trump was simply an exceptional president.
But then, I watched in real time as the Mainstream Media (mainstream media), the FBI, intelligence agencies, the CIA, Big Tech, and the entire Washington establishment joined forces in an unprecedented campaign to destroy a single man.
The numerous lawsuits, the two impeachments, the endless hoaxes including the Russia one, the Mar-a-Lago raid, the gag orders, the efforts to remove him from the ballot, the attempts to bankrupt him and throw him in prison... all of that was aimed at preventing him from returning to power. Two attempts on his life followed.
With 92% of media coverage being negative toward him while 78% of that for Kamala was positive, he managed to secure a convincing victory in the last election. How do you explain that?
That's when it became undeniable for me: no one faces this level of coordinated and hysterical opposition unless they represent a true existential threat to the system... The system we all know is corrupt and broken. Ordinary politicians don't trigger this kind of coordinated panic.
At that moment, I stopped thinking of him as a great president.
He is the greatest of all time.
@Trump47News I knew it all along there was no way Rudy wasn't telling the truth! The mayor for the people is exactly who and what he has always been! 💓 from Alberta!
🚨🚨BREAKING President Trump just took a moment to say that Rudy Giuliani has been right about everything 🔥
He looked at Rudy’s son, Andrew, and told him:
“His father is Rudy. The greatest mayor in the history of New York…
They treated him very, very unfairly. You go back and tell your father, all of the things that have come out over the last couple of months through Tulsi and through all of the people, Kash, everybody.
They’ve proven your father 100% correct. His father was treated so unfairly. Your father has been 100% correct. And tell him we all love him, okay?”
Is the public about to learn the truth about the 2020 election? 👀
Rudy was instrumental in exposing the 2020 election.
FOLLOW ME, THE NEXT DROP WILL BE SHOCKING
1/ After 28 days (going on 29) in a Calgary hospital, I finally figured it out this morning while looking south out my window. A Canadian flag was flying to the west, gentle breeze on the sunny east side, rainstorm rolling in from the west and a bit south. That’s a true Alberta day. 🇨🇦
2/ I’m surrounded by immigrant nurses. Very few were actually born here. They don’t carry the same understanding of what it means to live in Alberta as a Canadian. That got me thinking about what “nice” really means when we talk about Canadians.
3/ Being a nice Canadian isn’t about being weak or a pushover. We’re not selfish. We take others into consideration. We don’t need to be better than everyone else — that’s not what drives us. We want everyone to be happy, to have opportunity, and to share in the gifts this country gives us. We lead with compassion and empathy. We put people first.
4/ Our parents taught us manners and kindness from the time we were babies. They instilled values, ethics, and morals deep in us. That’s why, in war or anywhere in the world, the Canadian military puts others first — even themselves last — and still succeeds no matter the obstacles. We drag people to safety, kicking and screaming if we have to.
5/ Saying “no” when you have the means to help just isn’t in most of us. We’ll step into a bad situation right beside you so you don’t face it alone. Stuck in a ditch in the snow or smashed up in a wreck? A Canadian-born farmer, rancher, or trucker will almost always stop and help. That’s who we are.
6/ Many immigrants come from cutthroat places — survival of the fittest, fight-or-flight every single day, sometimes life or death for their families. They bring that old baggage here. You can’t blame them; it’s all they’ve known. But it’s up to us to gently teach them the Canadian way: generous, honest, kind, funny, forthcoming, willing, and compassionate — not just for our own families, but for everyone we meet.
7/ Canadians see value in every single human being. Dignity and human rights are non-negotiable. Hurting, discriminating, slandering, or harming another person is as un-Canadian as it gets. We’re thoughtful about everyone around us. We care about the quality of every life. We believe there’s a solution to everything — without overreacting, without harming people, without making things so complex you can’t even understand them anymore.
8/ That’s why I’ve been picking up garbage and throwing it away for 29 days straight. We care about our land too and never take it for granted. Prairie-raised Albertans get it: community responsibility for everyone, not just ourselves. We’re all people of the land.
9/ So if this is what being a true Canadian feels like, then I’m 100% Alberta-born and Alberta is my home. Give us our anthem back the way it was meant to be — because that is who we are. And governments at every level should be doing everything they can to protect and pass on these values.
End of thread. Proud to be in Alberta, Prairie girl. ❤️🇨🇦
1/ After 28 days (going on 29) in a Calgary hospital, I finally figured it out this morning while looking south out my window. A Canadian flag was flying to the west, gentle breeze on the sunny east side, rainstorm rolling in from the west and a bit south. That’s a true Alberta day. 🇨🇦
2/ I’m surrounded by immigrant nurses. Very few were actually born here. They don’t carry the same understanding of what it means to live in Alberta as a Canadian. That got me thinking about what “nice” really means when we talk about Canadians.
3/ Being a nice Canadian isn’t about being weak or a pushover. We’re not selfish. We take others into consideration. We don’t need to be better than everyone else — that’s not what drives us. We want everyone to be happy, to have opportunity, and to share in the gifts this country gives us. We lead with compassion and empathy. We put people first.
4/ Our parents taught us manners and kindness from the time we were babies. They instilled values, ethics, and morals deep in us. That’s why, in war or anywhere in the world, the Canadian military puts others first — even themselves last — and still succeeds no matter the obstacles. We drag people to safety, kicking and screaming if we have to.
5/ Saying “no” when you have the means to help just isn’t in most of us. We’ll step into a bad situation right beside you so you don’t face it alone. Stuck in a ditch in the snow or smashed up in a wreck? A Canadian-born farmer, rancher, or trucker will almost always stop and help. That’s who we are.
6/ Many immigrants come from cutthroat places — survival of the fittest, fight-or-flight every single day, sometimes life or death for their families. They bring that old baggage here. You can’t blame them; it’s all they’ve known. But it’s up to us to gently teach them the Canadian way: generous, honest, kind, funny, forthcoming, willing, and compassionate — not just for our own families, but for everyone we meet.
7/ Canadians see value in every single human being. Dignity and human rights are non-negotiable. Hurting, discriminating, slandering, or harming another person is as un-Canadian as it gets. We’re thoughtful about everyone around us. We care about the quality of every life. We believe there’s a solution to everything — without overreacting, without harming people, without making things so complex you can’t even understand them anymore.
8/ That’s why I’ve been picking up garbage and throwing it away for 29 days straight. We care about our land too and never take it for granted. Prairie-raised Albertans get it: community responsibility for everyone, not just ourselves. We’re all people of the land.
9/ So if this is what being a true Canadian feels like, then I’m 100% Alberta-born and Alberta is my home. Give us our anthem back the way it was meant to be — because that is who we are. And governments at every level should be doing everything they can to protect and pass on these values.
End of thread. Proud to be in Alberta, Prairie girl. ❤️🇨🇦
That’s one thing, I’ll take a hard pass on as long as the liberal is still in government! Ever! Never ever again! my family arrived here in 1902 all from Missouri the United States to establish where I live in southern Alberta! I am Albertan and I am North American! I want nothing to do with what the Canadian government has become!
@RedCrow1534@MrCrumbsbody@Martyupnorth You are an entirely misinformed individual! However, we are honest and truthful people! And very hard-working! And we don’t put up with anybody’s bullshit! So take your lies somewhere else!
🚨 WOW —Tumors literally liquefied by sound waves No scalpel. No chemo. No radiation. None of those horrible side effects
This is histotripsy: focused ultrasound blasts destroy cancer cells mechanically in minutes sparing healthy tissue completely
FOLLOW ME FOR MORE INTEL DROPS
1/ After 28 days (going on 29) in a Calgary hospital, I finally figured it out this morning while looking south out my window. A Canadian flag was flying to the west, gentle breeze on the sunny east side, rainstorm rolling in from the west and a bit south. That’s a true Alberta day. 🇨🇦
2/ I’m surrounded by immigrant nurses. Very few were actually born here. They don’t carry the same understanding of what it means to live in Alberta as a Canadian. That got me thinking about what “nice” really means when we talk about Canadians.
3/ Being a nice Canadian isn’t about being weak or a pushover. We’re not selfish. We take others into consideration. We don’t need to be better than everyone else — that’s not what drives us. We want everyone to be happy, to have opportunity, and to share in the gifts this country gives us. We lead with compassion and empathy. We put people first.
4/ Our parents taught us manners and kindness from the time we were babies. They instilled values, ethics, and morals deep in us. That’s why, in war or anywhere in the world, the Canadian military puts others first — even themselves last — and still succeeds no matter the obstacles. We drag people to safety, kicking and screaming if we have to.
5/ Saying “no” when you have the means to help just isn’t in most of us. We’ll step into a bad situation right beside you so you don’t face it alone. Stuck in a ditch in the snow or smashed up in a wreck? A Canadian-born farmer, rancher, or trucker will almost always stop and help. That’s who we are.
6/ Many immigrants come from cutthroat places — survival of the fittest, fight-or-flight every single day, sometimes life or death for their families. They bring that old baggage here. You can’t blame them; it’s all they’ve known. But it’s up to us to gently teach them the Canadian way: generous, honest, kind, funny, forthcoming, willing, and compassionate — not just for our own families, but for everyone we meet.
7/ Canadians see value in every single human being. Dignity and human rights are non-negotiable. Hurting, discriminating, slandering, or harming another person is as un-Canadian as it gets. We’re thoughtful about everyone around us. We care about the quality of every life. We believe there’s a solution to everything — without overreacting, without harming people, without making things so complex you can’t even understand them anymore.
8/ That’s why I’ve been picking up garbage and throwing it away for 29 days straight. We care about our land too and never take it for granted. Prairie-raised Albertans get it: community responsibility for everyone, not just ourselves. We’re all people of the land.
9/ So if this is what being a true Canadian feels like, then I’m 100% Alberta-born and Alberta is my home. Give us our anthem back the way it was meant to be — because that is who we are. And governments at every level should be doing everything they can to protect and pass on these values.
End of thread. Proud to be in Alberta, Prairie girl. ❤️🇨🇦
I am curious as to how and why you think any Albertan is going to listen to you of all people! Albertans know, good and well everything that you have stood for against the people of Alberta all along. So do us all a favor and stop acting like we really care about what do you have to say! You are just another snake in the grass, not worth listening to! We have done with people who have no consideration common decency for the public and the people. Your membership as a WEF member speaks volumes! So go sit in Carney’s corner right where you belong!
Let me break down the entire Alberta referendum situation for those of you who cant seem to comprehend what it is all about.
The PRODUCERS of wealth are tired of paying for the PARASITES which feed upon the wealth that they create. It is that simple.
You are either a PRODUCER of wealth or a leech upon the wealth that they generate.
The question is not are you a Federalist or a Separtist, the question is are you a PRODUCER or a PARASITE?
For the love of God, let's have the vote while there are still more PRODUCERS than PARASITES!
The ⏰️ is ticking!