🚨 WOW! LA mayoral candidate Spencer Pratt just unleashed this MIC DROP
"The number one question everybody has for me when they hear my plan is, how can we do that Spencer? We don't have the money.' WE HAVE THE MONEY. IT'S JUST BEING STOLEN."
Elect this man! 🔥🔥
"You pay countless tax dollars. You're taxed on your income. You're taxed on your gas. You're taxed on your property. You're taxed out the every single expensive transaction you endure is taxed."
Potholes, public safety, homeless? "WE DO HAVE THE MONEY, IT'S JUST BEING STOLEN"
"Karen Bass and Nithya Raman have sunk billions of dollars into the homeless problem, but it's all being wasted on dubious NGOs that increase drug use, hand out needles, and crack pipes, and actually give drugs to the addicts on the streets of LA."
"A developer bought a property for homeless housing, had $11 million. Days later, the city paid him $27.3 million, a $16 million flip. No new carpets, no pool addition, just straight up fraud."
🚨 California’s $24,000,000,000.00 failure exposed.
In the last 5 years, the Golden State dumped $24 BILLION into “solving” homelessness.
Result? Homeless population up ~73,000 despite the insane spending spree.
That’s not compassion. That’s incompetence on steroids!
Billions vanishing into bureaucracy, NGOs, and failed programs while tent cities explode and streets turn into open air asylums.
California Democrats fought to ensure you needn’t show ID when you vote.
While it would be wrong to come to Los Angeles and vote, it would certainly be ironic.
An 18-year-old just did what billion-dollar water companies couldn't.
Meet Mia Heller.
A high school junior from Warrenton, Virginia who built a water filter in her garage that strips out 95.5% of microplastics from drinking water.
That's better than most government treatment plants, which sit somewhere between 70% and 90%.
Her secret weapon? Ferrofluid. A magnetized liquid made of oil and powder that latches onto microplastic particles. Then a magnet yanks them out. No membranes. No constant filter replacements. No endless maintenance bills.
The ferrofluid even gets recycled, around 87% of it, in a closed loop.
The spark for all of this wasn't a classroom project. It was a local newspaper article warning that her town's tap water was loaded with PFAS and microplastics, and that nobody was coming to fix it.
So she watched her mom swap out filter after filter and thought, there has to be a smarter way.
She built the prototype herself. Tested it with a homemade turbidity sensor. Then walked into the Regeneron International Science and Engineering Fair and walked out with a special award from the Patent and Trademark Office Society.
Up against nearly 1,700 students from 62 countries.
She's now eyeing a household version that sits under your kitchen sink.
The future of clean water might not come from a lab in Silicon Valley. It might come from a teenager's garage in Virginia.
Source: Smithsonian Magazine
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