They may want you to think that regenerative farming is not happening, but have a look at this farm map! We don't need chemical inputs and synthetic GMO foods!
https://t.co/5izre2lydI
Bravo, Texas, going after Bayer and PepsiCo! Every state Attorney General should be investigating glyphosate contamination - protecting their citizens:
https://t.co/XdlznXKbhb
Forest spraying in my backyard, the pristine Tomales Bay in Northern California. Nope, we are calling, writing, and showing up. Signed this petition today:
https://t.co/XwqxCEvmDs
They don't want us to know about the wins.
1. Nottingham
A proposed data center was withdrawn in 2026 after intense community opposition, petitions, and concerns about environmental impacts, water use, noise, and changes to the town's rural character. More than 25,000 signatures were reportedly gathered against the project.
2. Monterey Park
Residents organized a grassroots campaign against a large data center proposal. After rallies, petitions, and public pressure, the city enacted a moratorium and the project was halted. The community's concerns focused on diesel generators, air pollution, noise, and strain on local infrastructure.
3. Peculiar
Residents mobilized against a proposed data center, formed advocacy groups, attended hearings, and pressured local officials. The city moved toward banning data centers, and the project was effectively shut down.
4. Chesterton
A proposed data center project was withdrawn after residents quickly organized, educated neighbors, and persuaded town officials to oppose the development.
5. Warrenton
Citizen groups challenged zoning approvals, organized politically, and successfully pushed the local planning commission toward removing provisions that allowed data centers. Litigation and local activism significantly delayed Amazon-related projects.
6. Prince William County
Perhaps the most influential example in the country. After years of lawsuits, citizen organizing, environmental advocacy, and historic preservation efforts, the massive "Digital Gateway" project (37 data centers on roughly 2,100 acres) was ultimately abandoned in 2026 when county officials ended their appeals.
7. St. Charles
Local officials enacted a one-year moratorium on data center construction following public concerns over water supplies and infrastructure impacts.
8. Coachella
The fight is ongoing, but residents packed city meetings and generated sufficient opposition that city leaders moved toward a moratorium and legal review of a proposed 450-acre technology campus.
Common themes from successful campaigns:
The communities that have had the most success generally did four things:
1. Organized early, before final permits were issued.
2. Focused on water, electricity, noise, diesel emissions, and land use rather than technology itself.
3. Built coalitions across political lines (farmers, environmentalists, homeowners, preservationists, parents).
4. Used local zoning, environmental review laws, and historic preservation statutes rather than relying solely on public comments.
5. My 2 cents on how they hurt children since I've practiced for 45 years - no one is talking about it! https://t.co/au24v1cpLy
@LL_PATRIOT@TrueOnX@RosettaAtchley5 Children's health? A disaster. Oh, yes, correct. America doesn't care about her children. Have a read and what to do to stop the centers. There are wins across the US but they don't want you to know about them:
https://t.co/eHQzeUCdPS
Get retired lawyers in your area who can work pro bono. Ask: Can you disclose the manufacturers of the equipment being installed, whether any components originate from foreign adversary nations, and what security reviews have been conducted (China)? Here is an article I wrote - they are toxic to our children's well-being. Class action lawsuit. https://t.co/au24v1cpLy
@TrueOnX The question no one discusses and is undeniable is the effect of these massive monstrosities on our children's health! I wrote this article with how to create wins. Retired lawyers: pro bono work? Please step in the fight!
https://t.co/eHQzeUCdPS
I caught this happening at Sprouts. When I asked about it, an employee told me to buy a vegetable wash to get it off.
Consumers buy organic produce to reduce chemical exposures, not to have undisclosed substances sprayed on their food at the point of sale. This is a transparency issue. If you're spraying it on my food, tell me what it is and give me a choice.
Exactly. Ecosystems are complex, interconnected networks, not engineering projects. Mosquitoes serve as food for fish, birds, bats, amphibians, and countless other species. History is filled with examples of unintended consequences when humans attempt to eliminate a species without fully understanding its ecological role. The lesson is not that every intervention will fail, but that humility, rigorous oversight, and long term ecological assessment must come before large scale genetic releases. Stupidity coupled with recklessness is dangerous.
A scene from a bad movie on repeat. We fought this in California and won...so we thought. Here we go again. Why does a search engine have carte blanche to release genetically modified mosquitoes, the food chain for so much wildlife. What could go wrong?
Getting some great ink in this book review from @patricia_l3078 on my new book, Making Our Children Well. Purchase a copy for your pediatrician or your kids!
@TownsendLetter
https://t.co/pTFp8NwrqU
What's happening with our food supply? Billionaires are all on the same page, buying land, killing off the meat supply, forcing consumers to eat lab-made industrial foods, and injecting real beef with potato starch. Stand up! Do not comply!
https://t.co/WLcKJorfw9
@Bobby63461@ChildrensHD Agree. It won’t happen since they don’t want us to know. I think everyone should watch Del Big Tree’s movie, An Inconvenient Study.
https://t.co/bX20iYXtcL