Elon Musk tells Tesla executives to fully return to in-person work — or resign: According to a report from Bloomberg, Musk sent a Tuesday email addressing his aversion to working from home or in a hybrid capacity. "Anyone who wishes to do remote work must be in the office for a minimum (and I mean *minimum*) of 40 hours per week or depart Tesla," the message read. "This is less than we ask of factory workers." Musk on Wednesday responded to a screenshot of the message, which was captioned, "[H]ey elon a lot of people are talking about this leaked email, any additional comment to people who think coming into work is an antiquated concept?" The Tesla and SpaceX CEO wrote, "They should pretend to work somewhere else." Bloomberg reported that Musk sent a follow-up message confirming the policy. The message read, "The more senior you are, the more visible must be your presence. That is why I lived in the factory so much — so that those on the line could see me working alongside him. If I had not done that, Tesla would long ago have gone bankrupt." The message concluded, "Tesla has and will create and actually manufacture the most exciting and meaningful products of any company on Earth. This will not happen by phoning it in." Co-host on 'The View' blames 'rise in violent Christian nationalism' for mass shootings: Tara Setmayer, who was previously a Republican, made the comments while discussing the motivations behind the shooter in the horrific elementary school shooting in Uvalde, Texas. "It’s part of the Christian nationalism, this rise in violent Christian nationalism, that we have seen, which is also disturbing. They use biblical principles, they pervert them to justify this," Setmayer said. "Which is another problem, particularly in Texas, this is a growing movement," she continued. "It’s God, guns, and Trump. Or God, guns, and whatever. It’s a part of their ethos." John Hinckley, who shot Reagan, to get unconditional release from prison: Judge announces that attempted Reagan assassin John Hinckley will be released from prison on June 15 after four decades behind bars. U.S. District Judge Paul Friedman said, "If he hadn’t tried to kill a president he would have been released unconditionally a long time ago." Hinckley also shot and wounded police officer Thomas Delahanty and Secret Service agent Timothy McCarthy, while critically wounding press secretary James Brady. Hinckley’s gunfire indirectly hit Reagan, seriously wounding him. California Spills Water into Ocean rather than letting Farmers Grow Rice: Colusa County in Northern California is the top producer of rice in the Sacramento Valley. Colusa County historically produces more than 150,000 acres of rice in a normal year. But in 2022, Colusa officials say they will only be able to produce a fraction of their usual rice crop, costing rice farmers, workers, and suppliers hundreds of millions of dollars. The first 50% of California’s water flows out to the Pacific Ocean for fish and environmental purposes – something the Public Policy Institute of California verified in 2019: “Water in California is shared across three main sectors. Statewide, average water use is roughly 50% environmental, 40% agricultural, and 10% urban.” The Green World Order: Efforts to Cease the Use of Crude Oil Could Be the Greatest Threat to Civilisation’s Eight Billion People: Life Without Oil is NOT AS SIMPLE AS YOU MAY THINK. World leaders make no mention that the entire pharmaceutical industry, chemical industry, materials science, energy, transportation, heating, etc. are dependent on the same fossil fuels that they want to rid the world of. Attempting to attain a decarbonised world like the one that existed in the 1800s and before, could result in billions of fatalities for the eight billion on earth from disease, malnutrition, and weather-related deaths, versus the projections of millions of fatalities from changes in climate. Surprisingly, the fossil fuels infrastructure may be less invasive than the mining for exotic minerals and metals in developing countries that are directly destroying the planet through environmental degradation. . . . Everything that needs electricity, from lights, vehicles, iPhones, defibrillators, computers, telecommunications, etc., are all made with the oil derivatives manufactured from crude oil. There would be nothing to power in a world without fossil fuels! https://expose-news.com/2022/06/01/the-green-world-order-threat-to-8-billion/ Tesla Owner Exposes Dark Secret About Electric Cars: Forbes contributor Brad Templeton told a story about his electric car eating through expensive tires at breakneck speed. “The doozy was needing new tires at around 28,000 miles,” Temple writes in “Electric Vehicle Maintenance Is Super-Cheap, But The Dark Secret Is Tires” from last month. Furthermore, emerging research indicates that tiny bits of plastic shed from tires and other household and industrial products are likely to become the next environmental crisis, contaminating water and wildlife. A study conducted by John Weinstein, a professor of physiology at The Citadel in Charleston, South Carolina, found that microplastics get embedded in shrimp gills and guts, leading to devastating outcomes. “It doesn’t die immediately,” Weinstein remarked. “There are these chronic long-term effects that really haven’t been studied,” he said, suggesting that they could pose a threat to the food supply and perhaps even cause health problems. We now realize that the pollution emitted from mining and disposing of the lithium batteries required for these vehicles is a greater concern than the original problem the batteries were supposed to solve. “Somehow, one of these is frowned upon (tar sands), but the other three- cobalt, nickel, and lithium mines (necessary for EV batteries) are “green?” Author Patrick De Haan wrote of the deadly bargain greenies have made with batteries made from land-scarred processes. https://republicbrief.com/tesla-owner-exposes-dark-secret-about-electric-cars/ North Korea conducts ballistic missile test as concern grows it may be prepping for nuclear test: North Korea test-fired a salvo of eight short-range ballistic missiles toward the sea on Sunday, South Korea's military said, extending a provocative streak in weapons demonstrations this year that U.S. and South Korean officials say may culminate with a nuclear test explosion. Possibly setting a single-day record for North Korean ballistic launches, the missiles were fired in succession over 35 minutes from the Sunan area near the capital, Pyongyang, according to South Korea's Joint Chiefs of Staff. South Korea's military didn't immediately say how far the missiles flew but noted it has heightened its monitoring in case the North fires more missiles. https://www.cbsnews.com/news/north-korea-ballistic-missile-test-concern-over-nuclear-test/ Food Processing Plants Burning Down All Over the World, as Europe, Australia Prepare for Fuel Rationing: Food processing plants and distribution centers are now burning to a crisp in rapid succession, a peculiar trend that has been growing since 2021. Just in the last weeks, the U.S. has seen Taylor Farms, a packaged salad plant in Salinas, California, burn to a crisp; and the Azure Standard headquarters, “the nation’s premier independent distributor of organic and healthy food,” also was burned to smithereens. “With regard to food shortages, yes, we did talk about food shortages. And it’s going to be real,” Biden said at a press conference last week in Belgium after attending meetings of NATO and G7 leaders. WinePress News, PJ Media, Israel365 News Other recent fires in the US - A Partial List: Editor’s note: The Biden administration announces it will pay farmers not to farm - May 2, 2021. California appropriates $3 billion to pay farmers not to farm - March 31, 2022. AND … Another fire in Minnesota … this time to an Agricultural Equipment Dealer Separate Fires Destroy Two Pieces of Minnesota Agricultural Infrastructure The Tennessee Star A Minnesota barn containing 200,000 chickens and an agricultural equipment dealer both burned down recently in two separate fires. The chicken barn belonged to Forsman Farms, a major egg producer that sells three million eggs per day. The specific building that was destroyed sat on the company’s Howard Lake farm and was described by a spokesperson as a “substantial facility.” The spokesperson said tens of thousands of chickens were killed, at the very least. Fortunately, Forsman Farms can keep operating other buildings on site and maintains five separate locations around the Midwest that will not experience any interruptions. Further, they say they won’t be laying off any employees as a result of the fire, which occurred May 28. Officials do not think foul play is involved in the chicken fire, but an investigation is ongoing. A Minnesota Valley Irrigation facility also burned down in Wadena last week. Minnesota Valley Irrigation provides the massive irrigation systems that keep fields watered during periods of insufficient rain. The blaze resulted in a total loss. Although these two losses both occurred in the agriculture sector and similar incidents have garnered media attention around the U.S., fact-checkers are sure there’s nothing to be worried about. B-) “There’s been no significant increase in fires at food production facilities so far in 2022,” reassures factcheck . Org. 😉 The site has taken aim at Tucker Carlson for having a guest on his show in April who discussed a high-profile string of destructive events at food processing plants. A Minnesota Valley Irrigation facility also burned down in Wadena last week. Minnesota Valley Irrigation provides the massive irrigation systems that keep fields watered during periods of insufficient rain. The blaze resulted in a total loss. - Fair Use - California Shuts Off Water To Farmers To Save Fish :negative: Per TechnocracyNews As a former rice farmer in northern California, I can testify to the stupidity and insanity of environmentalists who favor obscure fish over humans. Colusa County in Northern California is the top producer of rice in the Sacramento Valley. Colusa County historically produces more than 150,000 acres of rice in a normal year. But in 2022, Colusa officials say they will only be able to produce a fraction of their usual rice crop, costing rice farmers, workers and suppliers hundreds of millions of dollars. “In April 2022, the water districts serving Colusa County were given their final allocation for the 2022 growing season – 0.4-acre feet per acre,” Colusa County officials said in a statement. “This allocation is not enough to support rice production, and estimates show that the Sacramento Valley will fallow 370,000 of 450,000 acres in the Sacramento River Settlement Contractors service area, primarily in Colusa and Glenn Counties. Currently, less than 7,000 acres are estimated to be planted in Colusa County, resulting in a direct financial loss to growers in excess of $270 million.” - Fair Use -
Approximately 200,000 chickens are dead after a massive fire tore through a Minnesota egg farm over the long Memorial Day weekend. They delivered approximately 3 million eggs a day to large retailers.
• Maid-Rite Steak Company (Pennsylvania)
• Food Processing plant in San Antonio, Texas
• Cargill-Nutrena (Los Angeles, CA)
• Van Drunen (Illinois)
• Potato plant in Maine
• Potato plant in Washington state
• Harpers’ Market (Ontario, Canada)
• Perdue Farms ( North Carolina)
• Mauston Meat Processing Plant (Wisconsin)
• Bonzana Meat Company (El Paso, Texas)
• Sheorers Foods (Oregon)
• Nestle Hot Pockets plant (Arkansas)
• Walmart distribution center (Indiana)
• Rio Fresh Onion facility (Southern Texas)
• East Conway Beef & Pork (New Hampshire)
• Deli Star (Illinois)
• Tyson poultry plant (Kentucky)
• Tyson feed ingredients (Alabama)
• Meat provider in Georgia
• JBS meat plant (Nebraska)
• Smithfield Foods plant (North Carolina)
• Fertilizer plant in North Carolina
• Wisconsin River Meats
• Louis Dreyfus – largest soy processing plant in U.S. (Indiana)
• Maricopa Food Pantry (Arizona)
• Patak Meat Production company (Georgia)
June 6, 2022
By Kyle Hooten
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