Fan of werewolves and the name Wereshnefer, whose sarcophagus currently resides at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC.
"Horrifying Thing" by @lostleanore
People of Eternia! @mastersmovie is finally here!
I couldn't resist to paint a little tribute. It started as a #skeletor portrait, but I just couldn't avoid adding more and more villains😅
I had a blast painting this, I hope you like it.
⚔️💀
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#noAI#mastersoftheuniverse#heman
@SicSexSix@dreadnoxreviews First acquisition to woo my wife 3 decades ago was to secure a complete Zartan with the skier and the original card (before they changed his diagnosis).
Oddly shes not interested in the new classified skier despite having classified Zartan 🤷♂️
06-04 is Killdozer day.
“Sometimes reasonable men must do unreasonable things.”
Marvin Heemeyer, a USAF veteran, bought the land in 1992 and built a shop.
The town annexes the area where his land is.
Typically, along with annexation, city utilities such as sewage lines are extended.
It didn't, and Heemeyer was asked to instead build out the sewage pipeline himself, which would have cost him over 80k USD. A cheaper septic tank option was also available, but he refused both options and was fined $2500 in 2001. He paid the check with “Cowards” written on it.
The concrete plant rezoning happened where the Docheff family wanted to build a concrete batch plant next door to Heemeyer's shop. Heemeyer did not want to sell his land.
After the town rezoned the land in 2001, the concrete plant went up, and the noise, dust, and traffic ruined his business. The only access road was also blocked.
Heemeyer asked permission to build an additional road to his shop for easier access, which was easy to do because he had a bulldozer and was going to do it himself. The City denied him.
Appeals, lawsuits... everything got rejected, and intrusive elements ended up built around his shop, practically encircling it.
With his back against the wall and no option left, he secretly started building an armored plating cover for the bulldozer. Audio tapes, recordings, and documentation were all curated and sent to his brother before he started his rampage.
In the 2-hour rampage, he didn't hurt anyone.
He destroyed 13 buildings, all connected to those who wronged him, including the town hall. After it was done, he took his own life inside the killdozer and became a legend.
All the evidence then came out, implicating the city for the insane bureaucracy that drove a reasonable person to do unreasonable things.
It all started because the government's land-use power allowed a bigger player to develop right next door, destroying his life.
Property should mean something, and when zoning is rigged against the little guy, it is exactly the kind of 12 year slow-motion injustice that turned a reasonable welder into the Killdozer guy.
The story inspired movies like Leviathan (2014), and documentaries like Tread, along with multiple songs.
RIP Marvin Heemeyer