Don't be pushed around by the fears in your mind. Be led by the dreams in your heart.
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🚫DM’s🚫
LyndaGood
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Nature has a habit of reminding humans that ignoring small problems rarely makes them disappear. Sometimes the most dangerous invaders aren’t dramatic at all they’re tiny, persistent, and happy to exploit complacency.
If your argument depends on playground nicknames like “Os(jerk!) off” instead of actual policy differences, maybe the insults are doing more work than the facts.
Calling Jon Ossoff “somebody nobody knows” is an odd strategy considering he already won a statewide Senate race and has spent years under the national spotlight.
Parasites don’t care about politics, campaign slogans, or cable news debates. They simply take advantage of gaps in preparedness.
And promising “Big TRUMP Rallies” as if they’re a substitute for qualifications says a lot. Elections are decided by voters, not by who can type the most words in ALL CAPS.
The frustrating part is that these outbreaks are often treated as background noise until they become impossible to ignore. By the time headlines start appearing, farmers and veterinarians have usually been sounding alarms for months.
This isn’t some distant problem affecting only ranchers livestock diseases have a way of becoming everyone’s problem through higher food prices, economic losses, and costly emergency responses.
Containing screwworm infestations early is far cheaper and easier than trying to chase them after they’ve expanded.
This shouldn’t be a partisan issue. Protecting livestock, supporting surveillance programs, and investing in prevention are basic responsibilities.
The fact that screwworm cases are spreading beyond the original contamination zones should concern anyone who cares about food security and agriculture.
Twelve animal cases have been confirmed so far among cattle, goats, sheep and a dog in Texas and New Mexico