I love my family, wish the world was a better place for them, surviving here in Fuck-U-Fornia.โค๏ธ๐๐ป๐ง๐ผโโ๏ธ๐ฃ๐ฅ๐โณ๏ธ๐๐ผ๐๐บ๐ธ
@RealJamesWoods No one told anyone to straighten their hair. Itโs your choice to live your life based on beauty trends. I have stick straight hair and look like a wet dog when I swim. I donโt care, I want to swim. Would also like to have curly hair. So #eil5
@Hunter_Eagleman Hey voters please vote yes on Measure ER it will pay for homeless, who already have $953 million allocated for them. Estimated at $1 billion annually added to city of LA GENERAL SLUSH FUND which can be misappropriated to other costs at the whim of the politicians in charge. ๐คฆ๐ปโโ๏ธ
Farmers across California are warning that the Golden Stateโs agricultural heritage is facing growing pressure from rising costs, foreign imports, rapid development, and the steady loss of farmland.
Across California, more farmers are speaking out and encouraging residents to support California-grown products instead of relying heavily on food imported from overseas.
Many say the issue goes beyond economics.
Because once farmland disappearsโฆ it rarely comes back.
One California farmer put it simply:
โWe can build more subdivisions. We can build more warehouses. But we can't replace productive farmland once it's paved over.โ
California is known for its:
vegetable farms
strawberry fields
nut orchards
vineyards
cattle ranches
family farms
rural communities
and agricultural traditions that stretch back generations
From the vast farmland of the Central Valleyโฆ to the cattle ranches of Northern Californiaโฆ to the orchards, vineyards, and family farms scattered across the stateโฆ
Agriculture remains one of Californiaโs most important industries and a major part of the state's identity.
But farmers say the challenges continue growing:
rising fuel costs
expensive equipment and supplies
competition from imported products
drought and extreme weather
water shortages and regulations
labor shortages
and development steadily consuming farmland
Many Californians now say protecting local agriculture means protecting:
farmland
family farms
water resources
rural communities
California-grown food
and future generations of California farmers
Because Californiaโs farms don't just produce food.
They help preserve open space, support local economies, protect rural communities, and keep a piece of old California alive.
๐ด SUPPORT CALIFORNIA FARMERS.
๐ฅฌ BUY CALIFORNIA GROWN.
๐ PROTECT CALIFORNIA FARMLAND.
Because once it's gone... it's gone.
@ValerieAnne1970@DarrelTrump Once the rain passes below 500โ above your land itโs your space and whatever enters that space and lands on your property is owned by you. Possession is 9/10th of the law.