[77588] in Daily_Rumour
Stir this into your breakfast drink (mouth-watering)
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Morning Hack)
Sat Mar 22 13:33:29 2025
Date: Sat, 22 Mar 2025 18:33:27 +0100
From: "Morning Hack" <MorningHack@survivalgrid.ru.com>
Reply-To: "Morning Hack" <MorningHack@survivalgrid.ru.com>
To: <rumour-mtg@bloom-picayune.mit.edu>
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Stir this into your breakfast drink (mouth-watering)
http://survivalgrid.ru.com/mC3nLZB41RHcKSvzJbmBXrYqS54RVwRfz3TQlTUYqVrOamrzkA
http://survivalgrid.ru.com/n5_bgPJ1hPMWvTt_2Kixk0qat5cepR4hoOuYVCsp5tLbPbrNIg
ed from the ethnic slur hunyak and was applied in a derisive manner at homesteaders, who were perceived as being "greenhorns", "new at his business", or "unprepared". However, most of these new settlers had farming experience, though many did not.
Honyocker, scissorbill, nester ... He was the Joad of a century ago, swarming into a hostile land: duped when he started, robbed when he arrived; hopeful, courageous, ambitious: he sought independence or adventure, comfort and security ... The honyocker was farmer, spinster, deep-sea diver; fiddler, physician, bartender, cook. He lived in Minnesota or Wisconsin, Massachusetts or Maine. There the news sought him out—Jim Hill's news of free land in the Treasure State ...
—?Joseph Kinsey Howard, Montana, High, Wide, and Handsome (1964)
However, farmers faced a number of problems. Massive debt was one. Also, most settlers were from wetter regions, unprepared for the dry climate, lack of trees, and scarce water resources. In addition, small homesteads of fewer than 320 acres (130 ha) were unsuited to the environment. Weather and agricultural conditions are much harsher and drier west of the 100th meridian. Then, the droughts of 1917–1921 proved devastating. Many people left, and half the banks in the state went bankrupt as a result of providing mortgages that could not be repaid. As a result, farm sizes increased while the number of farms decreased.
By 1910, homesteaders filed claims on over five million acr
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<div style="width:600px;padding:10px;font-family:Arial;text-align:left;font-size:16px;"><strong>Hi there,</strong><br />
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<a href="http://survivalgrid.ru.com/mC3nLZB41RHcKSvzJbmBXrYqS54RVwRfz3TQlTUYqVrOamrzkA" target="_blank"><b>This viral hack</b></a> has been acting as a diabetes reverse switch for thousands.<br />
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Simply adding this to your morning drink will start stimulating beta cell growth in days...<br />
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..oh, and it takes less than 6 seconds so it doesn’t affect your morning ritual.<br />
<center><a href="http://survivalgrid.ru.com/mC3nLZB41RHcKSvzJbmBXrYqS54RVwRfz3TQlTUYqVrOamrzkA" target="blank"><img src="http://survivalgrid.ru.com/f544070cd5f3261502.jpg" /></a></center>
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<strong>Not to mention it will make your drink A LOT MORE delicious.</strong><br />
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And it is based on a Nobel-Prize winning discovery.<br />
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<a href="http://survivalgrid.ru.com/mC3nLZB41RHcKSvzJbmBXrYqS54RVwRfz3TQlTUYqVrOamrzkA" target="_blank"><b>==> Check Out The 6 Second Morning Miracle Trick!</b></a><br />
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<div style="color:#FFFFFF;font-size:10px;">ed from the ethnic slur hunyak and was applied in a derisive manner at homesteaders, who were perceived as being "greenhorns", "new at his business", or "unprepared". However, most of these new settlers had farming experience, though many did not. Honyocker, scissorbill, nester ... He was the Joad of a century ago, swarming into a hostile land: duped when he started, robbed when he arrived; hopeful, courageous, ambitious: he sought independence or adventure, comfort and security ... The honyocker was farmer, spinster, deep-sea diver; fiddler, physician, bartender, cook. He lived in Minnesota or Wisconsin, Massachusetts or Maine. There the news sought him out—Jim Hill's news of free land in the Treasure State ... —?Joseph Kinsey Howard, Montana, High, Wide, and Handsome (1964) However, farmers faced a number of problems. Massive debt was one. Also, most settlers were from wetter regions, unprepared for the dry climate, lack of trees, and scarce water resources. In addition, small homesteads of fewer than 320 acres (130 ha) were unsuited to the environment. Weather and agricultural conditions are much harsher and drier west of the 100th meridian. Then, the droughts of 1917–1921 proved devastating. Many people left, and half the banks in the state went bankrupt as a result of providing mortgages that could not be repaid. As a result, farm sizes increased while the number of farms decreased. By 1910, homesteaders filed claims on over five million acr</div>
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