>GQQD MQRNING
Thank you Baker.
A Baker BABE just for you.
Never forget, spring is coming.
>>638760
>to the Moon Anonymous
playlists.net/to-the-moon-alice
< en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alice_Springs
Alice Springs /ˌælɪs ˈsprɪŋz/[3][4] (Arrernte: Mparntwe) is the third-largest town in the Northern Territory of Australia.
Popularly known as "the Alice" or simply "Alice", Alice Springs is situated roughly in Australia's geographic centre.
The area is known as Mparntwe to its original inhabitants, the Arrernte, who have lived in the Central Australian desert in and around what is now Alice Springs for tens of thousands of years. The name Alice Springs was given by surveyor William Whitfield Mills after Alice, Lady Todd (née Alice Gillam Bell), wife of the telegraph pioneer Sir Charles Todd.
During World War II Alice Springs was the location of RAAF No.24 Inland Aircraft Fuel Depot (IAFD), completed on 20 May 1942 and closed in November 1944. Usually consisting of four tanks, 31 fuel depots were built across Australia for the storage and supply of aircraft fuel for the RAAF and the US Army Air Forces at a total cost of £900,000 ($1,800,000).[20]
>Post World War II
During the 1960s Alice Springs became an important defence location with the development of the
>US/Australian Pine Gap joint defence satellite monitoring base, home to about 700 workers from both countries.
>>612782
KEK is watching.
< wkyufm.org/post/rand-paul-big-government-needs-back-hemp
Farmers say regulations are the 'biggest problem' and much of that has to do with its listing as a federally-controlled substance.
Paul said regulations and 'big government' need to 'get out of the way' of the country's burgeoning hemp industry.
He expressed dismay when farmers told him hemp couldn't be used as livestock feed.
"I don't like the idea that we would have to ask somebody in Washington for permission to feed the root of the plant to a chicken or a cow. I think things that God gave us and that grow on Earth really the government shouldn't be preventing you from feeding them to your livestock," Paul said.
Farmers handed Paul a bag of edible hemp seeds for humans imported from Canada and suggested with fewer regulations similar products could be produced in Kentucky.
Paul says hemp restrictions make the U.S. less competitive and will seek to address issues in the next farm bill.
>Hemp seeds are basically a superfood.
Agree.
>They should be a cheap staple and instead they are an expensive specialty crop.
And why is that?
Thanks. Good catch.