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780

The cities can FUCK themselves. Violently with something that is either toxic or going to electrocute them.

Stop putting priority on cities over farmers/ranchers. This is where your food comes from you fucking morons. We need to put some laws in to keep agro land from being rezoned for residential/business.

I don't fucking care if you want to live in one of those cities. Build houses/businesses on shit land that is not useful for production.

You do not need a fucking lawn that is dumb as all hell.

Archive: https://archive.today/br6eM

From the post:

>Spring burst across the Lower Arkansas River Valley in late March, sending farmers and their crews in this swath of southeastern Colorado hustling to prepare for another growing season. Just-turned fields filled the air with the rich scent of dirt, mixing with the tart smokiness from workers burning weeds in irrigation ditches, preparing for the return of water. Early crops of alfalfa and winter wheat peeked from the ground, hinting at the fields of green to come. As a worker maneuvered a massive leveler in the fields behind their house, Alan and Peggy Frantz pondered the future of their Rocky Ford farm — and their larger agricultural community strung along the Lower Arkansas River east of Pueblo.

The cities can FUCK themselves. Violently with something that is either toxic or going to electrocute them. Stop putting priority on cities over farmers/ranchers. This is where your food comes from you fucking morons. We need to put some laws in to keep agro land from being rezoned for residential/business. I don't fucking care if you want to live in one of those cities. Build houses/businesses on shit land that is not useful for production. You do not need a fucking lawn that is dumb as all hell. Archive: https://archive.today/br6eM From the post: >>Spring burst across the Lower Arkansas River Valley in late March, sending farmers and their crews in this swath of southeastern Colorado hustling to prepare for another growing season. Just-turned fields filled the air with the rich scent of dirt, mixing with the tart smokiness from workers burning weeds in irrigation ditches, preparing for the return of water. Early crops of alfalfa and winter wheat peeked from the ground, hinting at the fields of green to come. As a worker maneuvered a massive leveler in the fields behind their house, Alan and Peggy Frantz pondered the future of their Rocky Ford farm — and their larger agricultural community strung along the Lower Arkansas River east of Pueblo.

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