Portland city councilor Tiffany Koyama-Lane (i.e. Teacher Tiffany!) is obviously using some of that sweet city and public union money to put out some propaganda about how she engages “collaborative governance.”
The “Year One” statement sounds eerily similar to the murderous Cambodian - the Khmer Rogue - communists’ “Year Zero.” Of course, TKL had to mention her oppression credentials, referencing her being the first (half) Asian-American on the city council and referencing her great-grandparents WW2 incarceration. Of course, there was no mention of the Japanese treatment of Korean comfort women or the Nanking Slaughter - basically stuff that would give the chills to a Nazi - but I guess those historical whoopsies don’t count when it comes to the Oppression Olympics.
TKL is up for election in November in District 3. She has raised the most money due to her connections to the teacher’s union. Remember on Election Day to say “never again, Satan!” and don’t rank her.
Lucy is home & Brendan Jones is asking that we help Save Snuggles, who belongs to a veteran & his wife in Arizona. Please read this & get it around Twitter. The judge has ordered the dog be put down. Please retweet.
"An Open Letter to the Surgeon Who Removed My Breasts.
I have lived every day for the last seven years with the physical and psychological wreckage you left behind. When I was fourteen years old, you took a scalpel to my healthy body and amputated my breasts.
I didn’t have the capacity to understand the permanence of what you were doing to me."
A heart rending read by Claire @burnyourbinder We are immensely grateful she chose to courageously share her vulnerability with us.
https://t.co/0nh0rwMtEQ
Right here @Hawkesbay69 is truly one of a kind. One of those people who reminds you why communities even exist. The kind who brings people together, supports others, and makes you want to follow back and connect.
If you’re not following already… what’s wrong with you? Go fix that. Stronger together
God bless
Breaking News: The California Supreme Court has denied the State of California's petition for review and request to stay the Palisades Fire Litigation. The Supreme Court denied the State's request to overturn the trial court's order overruling the State's demurrer to the plaintiffs' Master Complaint. This means that the fire victims' case against the State can proceed towards trial. Discovery has just begun. Justice is coming for the Palisades Fire victims. @spencerpratt@Hotshot_Movie@JeremyCom@LeonardFiles@AleneTchek
Lucy’s home!!! Praise God!! Thank you EVERYONE for your support. From the bottom of my heart.
What a ride…
More information to come SOON. For now, going to enjoy a weekend with our girl ♥️
Special thanks to @LoneStarChica, @SaraGonzalesTX, @TomiLahren, @seanhannity, @buckleycarlson, @catturd2, @RealLindellTV, @byrnanation, @MasonWillett20, so many others who supported us and kept us going for the past two months. We owe you everything.
#savelucy #savesnuggles
https://t.co/eqWvtjZYLv
I'm too spent to offer much of an update, but she's home. She's where she needs to be. There was one final twist, which I will tell you about later. It might be meaningful down the road and it is mingling my relief with a sense of disquiet. But she's home. Thank God.
Service Dog's Final Flight Home 🥺🇺🇸🦮🫡 #shorts https://t.co/UWWdpYbCiM via @YouTube#Veterans#military#PTSD - Kaya’s final flight after helping over 350 veterans with PTSD (Kaya has cancer 😥😥😥)
Pls RT bc recently the Trump admin changed the laws to exclude emotional service dogs to NOT be allowed service dogs. As everyone knows I am a huge Trump supporter but when they are wrong we need to call them out. Veterans will now lose housing if landlords are no longer forced to accept emotional service dogs as ‘service dogs’. Pls RT far & wide so we can get this reversed ASAP b4 people lose their dogs or rental homes. Military are the reason you are SAFE. Pls stick up for them
This broke TODAY — June 10, 2026. From News5Cleveland and the Ohio Capital Journal. Confirmed by the Ohio Farm Bureau. Backed by documents obtained directly from the Ohio Statehouse.
And what is being proposed in Columbus right now — quietly, while every eye in America was on Nashville’s 26-1 vote — is the most frightening piece of legislation that Ohio farmers have ever faced.
Because if this proposal becomes law — a data center company could take your farmland. Before a court decides what it is worth. Before you receive a single dollar. While construction begins on what used to be your family’s fields.
🌾 WHAT IS ACTUALLY BEING PROPOSED — IN PLAIN ENGLISH
The Ohio Business Roundtable — a powerful trade group that lobbies at the Statehouse — recommended in a document obtained by News5Cleveland that lawmakers change eminent domain law, and “should extend possession authority to energy infrastructure projects once public use and necessity have been established.” 
Eminent domain. That is the legal power that allows governments to take private property for public use. Roads. Schools. Hospitals. Public utilities. Things that serve the public.
Now — according to documents obtained directly from the Ohio Statehouse — the Ohio Business Roundtable is pushing to extend that power. To energy infrastructure projects. The same infrastructure that AI data centers need to operate.
“We are aware of efforts to further erode the limited protections that landowners have, allowing for quick take of property without first paying for the property and determining a landowner’s rights and compensation through a court of law,” the Ohio Farm Bureau’s Evan Callicoat said. 
Quick take. Without first paying for the property. Those four words should terrify every farmer, every landowner, and every property owner in Ohio — and every state watching what Ohio does next.
😤 “FARMERS COULD LOSE THEIR LAND — AND NOT GET PAID FOR MONTHS OR YEARS”
Data center companies do not hold the power of eminent domain, but Callicoat says that this version could eventually allow for it. “Many of the services and utilities that they require do hold that authority,” he said. He fears that with this proposed idea, it’s broad enough that farmers could lose their land to data centers, not getting paid for it for months or years. 
Months or years. Without payment. While construction begins on your land.
Let that sink in. A farmer who has worked the same fields for decades — whose children grew up on that land, whose family cemetery might sit at the edge of those fields — could be forced to watch a data center go up on his property while a court slowly determines what compensation he deserves.
Right now, eminent domain law allows for federal, state and local governments to take property for public use. If a court sides with the utility company, deeming it necessary to take, the appraised value of the land is given to a court account. However, the owner can appeal this decision to fight for more money. While this court battle is going on, construction is not allowed to begin. 
That last sentence is the critical protection that Ohio farmers currently have. While your court battle is going on — construction cannot begin. Your land cannot be touched until the legal process plays out.
The proposal being pushed by the Ohio Business Roundtable would eliminate that protection. Construction could begin while you are still fighting in court. While your family’s land is still legally in dispute. While the compensation for what was taken has not been determined.
🏛️ AND THE OHIO STATEHOUSE IS FIGHTING BACK — BUT THE OUTCOME IS NOT GUARANTEED
The Ohio Farm Bureau is not the only voice opposing this. Ohio lawmakers — responding to months of community pressure — are pushing their own legislation in the opposite direction.
The measure explicitly bars the use of eminent domain to acquire property for a data center project. “At this point,” Workman said, “we’re just making sure that we preserve farmland and individual property.” 
Preserve farmland. Preserve individual property. Those are the exact words of the Ohio lawmaker introducing the protective legislation. The direct opposite of what the Ohio Business Roundtable is pushing for.
Two bills. Moving simultaneously through the Ohio Statehouse. One that would protect Ohio farmers from losing their land to data centers. One that could — according to the Ohio Farm Bureau — eventually allow data center infrastructure to take property before compensation is determined.
The Ohio Farm Bureau’s 2026 Action Plan specifically calls for leading efforts for additional landowner protections, including eminent domain reform, streamlined judicial procedures, and agricultural easement program enforcement. The bureau also calls for engaging with the Ohio General Assembly on tax incentives that encourage the development of farmland such as data centers, warehouses, and business facilities. 
The Ohio Farm Bureau — the organization that represents hundreds of thousands of Ohio farm families — named data centers specifically in its 2026 action plan as a threat to farmland. Not as an abstract concern. As a documented, named, active threat that requires legislative action to address.
📜 AND THE SWEEPING NEW DATA CENTER LEGISLATION INTRODUCED TODAY ADDS ANOTHER LAYER
Ohio lawmakers introduced sweeping new data center legislation on June 10, 2026 — the same day that Ohio farmers expressed fears about the eminent domain proposal. 
Same day. Two simultaneous legislative battles. Ohio farmers waking up on June 10, 2026 — the same morning Nashville’s council voted 26-1 for a moratorium — to discover that their Statehouse is considering legislation that could give data center infrastructure companies the power to take their land before paying them.
This is not a coincidence. This is the pattern that communities from Ohio to Louisiana to Utah to Virginia have been documenting for two years. While communities fight visible battles — petitions, council votes, celebrity Instagram posts — the less visible battles happen inside Statehouse committee rooms. With trade group lobbyists. With documents obtained only because a journalist filed a public records request.
🌍 WHY OHIO IS THE MOST IMPORTANT BATTLEGROUND IN AMERICA RIGHT NOW
Ohio is not just any state. It is the state where two Ohio moms told the Washington Post that data centers will be the first thing on their minds when they vote in November. The state where Amazon Web Services broke ground on a campus stretching from a residential playground to a neighborhood elementary school. The state that has been called the Midwest’s fastest-growing data center market.
Data centers are Ohio’s newest land use controversy. With concerns ranging from water use to electricity prices to loss of farmland, the rapid onset of data center development has generated many questions and conflicts across the state. In response, members of the Ohio legislature have introduced several bills on data center development. 
Several bills. Moving through committee simultaneously. Some protecting farmers. Some potentially threatening them. And a powerful trade group lobby — the Ohio Business Roundtable — pushing for changes that the Ohio Farm Bureau says could amount to allowing quick take of property without first paying the owner.
Data center opponents gave Ohio lawmakers an earful at the Statehouse on June 3, 2026. And on June 10 — the same day Nashville voted 26-1 — Ohio farmers found out about the eminent domain proposal. Their reaction was immediate. 
🗣️ “THE FARM BUREAU ISN’T OPPOSED TO DATA CENTERS — BUT THEY ARE OPPOSED TO A VIOLATION OF PROPERTY RIGHTS”
This is the most important nuance in the entire Ohio story. And it is the nuance that makes it reach across every political divide.
The Farm Bureau isn’t opposed to data centers, but they are opposed to a violation of property rights, Callicoat said. 
This is not an anti-technology fight. This is not a fight against economic development or job creation or the AI industry.
This is a fight about one of the most fundamental rights in American law. The right to own property. The right to not have that property taken before you are paid for it. The right that the Founders wrote into the Fifth Amendment of the Constitution — “nor shall private property be taken for public use without just compensation” — specifically to protect ordinary Americans from exactly this kind of power being exercised against them.
Ohio farmers are not fighting data centers. They are fighting the idea that a company — backed by a powerful trade group lobby — can use the legal infrastructure of the state to take their land without compensation while construction begins.
That fight — the fight for property rights against corporate power — is not a left fight or a right fight. It is an American fight.
Here is what every Ohio landowner, every Ohio farmer, every Ohio property owner needs to understand right now:
The Ohio Business Roundtable has filed a document with Ohio Statehouse recommending changes to eminent domain law that — according to the Ohio Farm Bureau — are broad enough that farmers could lose their land to data center infrastructure before being paid for it.
That proposal is being considered in Columbus today. While the entire country is watching Nashville. While Erin Brockovich is mapping data center reports from 49 states. While 360,000 people are celebrating a 26-1 council vote in Tennessee.
The battle for Ohio farmland is happening right now. In a committee room. With lobbyists. With documents that had to be obtained through public records requests.
And the only thing standing between Ohio’s farm families and this proposal becoming law is the Ohio Farm Bureau, a handful of protective bills, and the attention of Ohio voters who are paying attention to what their Statehouse is doing in their name.
Are you paying attention?
Are you an Ohio farmer or landowner? Did you know this proposal existed before reading this post? Tell us your county. Tell us your reaction. The Ohio Farm Bureau needs to know how many people are watching this fight.
The Fifth Amendment was written for exactly this moment.
SHARE THIS with every Ohio farmer, every rural landowner, every property rights advocate, every Republican and Democrat who believes that what a man owns cannot be taken from him without fair and immediate compensation. This fight is happening TODAY in Columbus. They need to know.
we are covering the Ohio Statehouse data center fight in real time, alongside Nashville, New York, Utah, and every other community and state where the fight for America’s land, water, and property rights is happening simultaneously. Do not let this one get buried while everyone watches Nashville.
📌 SOURCES:
News5Cleveland — Ohio Farmers Fear New Proposal Would Allow Data Centers to Take Property (June 10, 2026)
Ohio Capital Journal — Ohio Lawmakers Introduce Sweeping New Data Center Legislation (June 10, 2026)
Ohio Capital Journal — Data Center Opponents Give Ohio Lawmakers an Earful (June 3, 2026)
Ohio Capital Journal — Ohio Lawmakers Begin Hearings on Data Centers (May 29, 2026)
Ohio Capital Journal — Ohioans Are Getting Fed Up With Data Centers, State Lawmakers Are Starting to Notice (March 12, 2026)
Ohio Farm Bureau — The Ohio Agriculture and Rural Communities 2026 Action Plan (February 19, 2026)
Ohio State University Farm Office — What to Do About Data Centers? New Bills Offer Some Solutions (February 20, 2026)
Ohio State University Farm Office — Ohio Eminent Domain Bill Meets Resistance (2023 — referenced for legal background)
🎩 The Stoic Way
🚨 JUST IN: A judge has REFUSED to block President Trump's White House UFC Freedom 250 fight that's taking place on Sunday, it can PROCEED as planned
LMAO, Democrats tried SUING over this? Pathetic losers!
The show goes on! 🔥🔥
So I’m continuing my scroll thru the very earliest days of my follows on X/Twitter.
Highlighting today one of my mutuals with one of the coolest user names I've seen.
‘Infidel Castro’ 😎👊🔥🥃😝
You can find him here:
@CincyDave1
Give him a follow 😎🫡🇺🇸
🚨 LES LINGETTES POUR BÉBÉS SONT PLEINES DE "CHIMIE ÉTERNELLE"
💥Pour la première fois dans l’histoire, des lingettes pour bébés ont été testées positives aux **PFAS** (les "forever chemicals").
❗Le pire coupable ?
Les **Kirkland Baby Wipes** de Costco.
😱Chaque lingette contient **plus de 25 000 fois** la limite légale autorisée.
Et ce n’est même pas du coton.
C’est du **polyester** (du plastique) filé en feuilles, pressé à chaud, puis imprégné de fluorocarbones — la même famille de substances liée aux cancers chez l’humain.
On vous les vend comme "douces", "sûres" et "parfaites pour la peau fragile de bébé".
En réalité, on vous donne un chiffon en plastique toxique pour essuyer la peau de votre enfant plusieurs fois par jour.
Et le plus grave ?
Plus de 60 % des lingettes pour bébés du marché ont été signalées comme présentant un risque PFAS.
Ils vous ont dit que c’était de l’hygiène.
C’était du poison lent.
🚨 Fire Erupts at Pacific Palisades Building Housing Spencer Pratt’s Office
A suspicious fire broke out late Thursday night at a Pacific Palisades building that housed Spencer Pratt’s discreet office and the former Cosa Nostra restaurant. The site was under renovation with tenants still present.
LAFD arson investigators are on the scene. Witnesses reported seeing two men running out just before the flames started.
The cause remains under investigation, with minimal damage reported so far.
Lunatics are trying to kill Spencer Pratt for speaking the truth. Pray for his safety. Too much evil out there. 🙏❤️
@spencerpratt