Texas big cities are turning into mini-Mamdani disasters!
Austin property taxes up 158%, San Antonio 76%, Dallas 102%, El Paso 80%, all while families get crushed.
Same reckless spending before revenue BS you see from socialists like Mamdani in NYC.
Governor Abbott is fighting for real tax relief and guardrails. Keep Texas affordable, stop the blue city tax-and-spend insanity!
Texas First!
American bought his home and the monthly mortgage payment has been $3,741.72
His property tax just got reassessed and has been sent his new monthly bill in the mail
His payment is now $4,536 per month because of the property tax increase
“This is how people aren't able to stay in their houses forever and lose their houses. Crazy”
This should be federally illegally. Property tax increases are such a scam and straight extortion
Abolish property taxes
McDonald’s is testing new drive thru AI technology that has facial recognition that can recognize you when you pull up
They are also equipped with license plate readers
The demo shows future capabilities like facial and license plate recognition to greet repeat customers by name and recall “usual” orders
This isn’t just a concept, it’s live and being used right now
It’s testing at 5 U.S. locations right now and has already processed over 1 million transactions, with 90% handled completely without human intervention
I don’t want McDonald’s to have my biometric and license plate data
BREAKING: I took legal action as part of a sweeping investigation into corporate giants, including Bayer, for poisoning Texans through glyphosate contamination in food.
Jane Nelson to Step Down as Texas Secretary of State #txlege
TX GOP sued Nelson's office for declining to implement the party’s proposed closed-primary system.
30 yrs in office & this is all she will be remembered for. Absolute waste.
https://t.co/gwLHwKV07O
There is a new scam going on in this home inspection industry
- Large corporations are buying up all the small home inspection companies
- They don’t care about making money off inspecting homes, they want the data
Why? This is where it gets borderline criminal
Home inspections are supposed to be confidential, but what they’re doing is buying all the companies to own the data
Then they are going to sell that data to insurance companies and lenders
Now with this new information the insurance company finds out, they're going to start charging you $3,000 (or whatever) extra a year to insure that house
Here’s what I’ve found
Large corporations and private equity firms are aggressively consolidating the home inspection industry primarily by buying inspection software platforms like Spectora, HomeGauge and larger inspection companies
A home inspection report contains highly detailed property specific information like roof age and condition, electrical and plumbing issues, foundation problems, HVAC status, environmental hazards
This is extremely valuable for:
- Insurance companies (risk assessment and underwriting).
- Lenders (property valuation and loan risk).
- Home warranty providers, contractors, and data brokers
Home inspections are supposed to be confidential between the buyer, inspector, and sometimes the real estate parties.
However, many inspection software companies’ terms of service allow data aggregation and sharing
That’s the loophole they found. That’s the scam
If you claim to be a "principled conservative" and your "principles" mean constantly handing political power on a silver platter to the left without ever asking them to compromise even a little ever, then your "principles" mean absolutely nothing.
THE REALITY OF THE HOFFMAN CASE: The Political Hit Job on Ken Paxton Exposed: 🧵
Establishment politicians like Rep. Jeff Leach are currently running a fraudulent, highly emotional smear campaign against Texas AG Ken Paxton.
They are weaponizing a horrific child abuse case purely to score cheap political points.
But as an independent journalist, I don’t care about political theater. I look at the hard LEGAL records.
Let's break down the facts the RINO opportunists are desperately trying to hide from you:
.@kevinolearytv is right that China is trying to convince America to stop building AI data centers while building tons of its own. That's China's plan to win the AI race and control the next century.
But that DOES NOT mean data centers should just drain public power. I'm dead set against any data center that has a SINGLE line feeding them power from the grid. But some are generating their own power and giving the excess TO the grid. Those are two very different scenarios.
Thankfully, Kevin O'Leary has said his data center project in Utah will generate its own power. THIS IS A MUST.
Just like railroads, factories, oil, and electricity powered previous generations, the future will run on AI computing, powered by massive amounts of energy. We need both to stop China from dominating the world. China knows this and is trying to turn data centers into a boogeyman.
There’s evidence out now from the Bitcoin Policy Institute that foreign influence networks are actively feeding this anti-data center movement in the United States. They traced several overlapping campaigns, all aimed at slowing American AI infrastructure down, directly to China.
Strong countries build infrastructure. Weak countries fear it. We can't fall for their trap. But we must also build strategically without sacrificing public resources.
Bypassing the 60 vote cloture threshold in the Senate will not “destroy the institution” of the Senate.
But you know what will?
Taking a two week Spring vacation while the Department of Homeland Security remains unfunded.
Protect the institution. Bypass the filibuster.
Other states are already pushing these AI data centers out because they know the cost.
If the Land of 10,000 Lakes says they don’t have the water for them, Texas leaders need to wake up fast.
We have the right to protect our water and our future.
Sign our petition and stop the AI data center takeover >>
https://t.co/A5XzTq37JP
#Texas #AIDatacenters #Water #PeopleOverProfits
A small pocket in Kansas just made a move that shocked America, unanimously voting to ban data centers in favor of farmland.
These Kansas Counties are sitting atop some of the most fertile agricultural soil in the United States.
At the same time, the AI data center boom is grasping for that same land.
But driven by secret land purchases, non-disclosure agreements, fears about water depletion, and the loss of generational farmland, communities across south-central Kansas unanimously voted to ban or pause data center development.
The most prominent example is when Sedgwick County where residents and the Board of Commissioners has repeatedly imposed bans on development.
In Harvey and Saline County, they imposed one of the longer bans we have seen nationwide at 3 years.
70% of Americans oppose the development of AI data centers in their local area, and Kansas is at the heart of that protecting their agriculture.
If we want to help keep these small farmers alive, support them directly.
It’s unbelievable that needs to be said but we have now reached a point where there is a genuine fight between food production and some of the biggest companies in the World.
Big Tech is taking over useful land and we have the opportunity to help shut it down.
My dad handed me two clothespins. “This,” he said, “is the story of everything.”
In one hand: a clothespin from the 1960s. Solid hardwood, smooth from decades of use. It still works perfectly, some 60 years later.
In the other: a clothespin from 2025. Lighter, paler wood, brittle. The spring is thin and unstable. Marketed as “extra durable,” my dad just raised an eyebrow.
At first glance, it’s just two clothespins. But they tell a bigger story — the shift from durability to disposability, from craftsmanship to cost-cutting, from stewardship to constant consumption. This is planned obsolescence in action.
Products are designed to fail so we must keep buying. Slowly, subtly, they break. Frayed wires, cracked hinges, brittle springs. Not because we want more, but because the old was never built to last.
The costs are everywhere. Landfills overflow. Wallets empty. And maybe most quietly, our spirits grow accustomed to impermanence, to the idea that nothing is meant to endure.
What if this philosophy extends beyond objects? What if it shapes how we treat relationships, communities, homes, even the Earth — as temporary, replaceable, disposable?
It doesn’t have to be this way. That 1960s clothespin reminds us another path is possible. That we once made things to last, and we can again. That quality, care, and intention matter. That we can design for repair, for continuity, for meaning.
The story in my palm is about more than laundry. It’s about the choices we make and the world they create.
Science says we need four basic elements to survive:
- Food
- Water
- Air
- Light
Now here's what Jesus says:
- I am the bread of life
- I am the living water
- I am the breath of life
- I am the light of the world
Science was right, we all need Jesus.