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Posts by Nolan Hahn

It's not Iran, it's some kids in Iraq "supporting" Iran

2 hours ago 0 0 0 0

In wildfire prone areas, it is also literal arson

5 hours ago 0 0 0 0

Explains why Marin County doesn't like him, they hate tall things

15 hours ago 2 0 1 0

How tall is Scott??

15 hours ago 1 0 1 0

Yes but shortening to "Colorado" instead of "Colorado River" is unnecessarily confusing

19 hours ago 0 0 1 0

My college isn't even on the list and it has more than all these

19 hours ago 1 0 0 0

Nolans need to step their game up

20 hours ago 0 0 0 0

The train to Santa Monica should have gone all the way to the pier, then turned south

20 hours ago 1 0 1 0
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Hey I wanted to hop back on this real quick to bring you guys some actual data from our first day back — we are rocking towards $400,000 in a single day, and so far 60% of those donations are less than $100. 92.5% of today’s donations are under $500.

21 hours ago 171 34 3 7
Apr 14th, 2025
20:07
Holly
we're gonna fuck around and hit 200k by midnight what the hell

Apr 14th, 2025 20:07 Holly we're gonna fuck around and hit 200k by midnight what the hell

3h ago
15:23
Holly
So there's a very real chance we break
$300k today

3h ago 15:23 Holly So there's a very real chance we break $300k today

RAISED SO FAR
$373,449
OUR GOAL
$1,000,000
TOTAL DONORS
1097

RAISED SO FAR $373,449 OUR GOAL $1,000,000 TOTAL DONORS 1097

A #CharitibundiBowl triptych: last year/ this morning / this evening

21 hours ago 117 9 5 4

Idk, that's only 3 yards, we'll need to break 1 mil tomorrow for that first down

21 hours ago 0 0 0 0

Obviously we should get rid of the A-10.... and start the process for design and procurement of the A-14, the next Gen attack aircraft. My new company Glamdring will...

22 hours ago 35 0 3 0

Explains why Auburn is doing so poorly in the #charitibundibowl

23 hours ago 0 0 0 0

Folks who have been, if you could live in one city in Australia, which would you choose?

23 hours ago 0 0 0 0

Correlation doesn't equal causation, but the fact that all the Gaza fundraiser hacker spam disappeared more or less simultaneously alongside Molly Shah deleting her account sure does raise my eyebrows a bit.

1 day ago 433 68 14 9
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Sea level rise means Britain is only getting further away from Europe sadly. Doggerland is not coming back any time soon

1 day ago 1 0 0 0

This is a runningback who got lost and showed up in the wrong sport

1 day ago 0 0 0 0

Woah, accessory commercial units!

1 day ago 0 0 0 0
Orca with speech bubble saying “Apartments are fine actually”

Orca with speech bubble saying “Apartments are fine actually”

1 day ago 188 27 1 0

Man, the smell that will be unleashed when one of those finally hits the ground...

1 day ago 2 0 0 0

Wait so that extra egg is a year old one that didn't hatch?

1 day ago 0 0 1 0

For clarity, is this Colorado River water or Colorado water? Can you clarify in the article when you are discussing the full system and when you are just talking about the one state?

1 day ago 0 0 1 0

Citizens United? Didn't their CEO get killed by a Nintendo character?

1 day ago 1 0 1 0

I used a bike rack this weekend that exists because I complained about it not existing.

You can make things better, even just a little.

1 day ago 1128 121 22 15
It’s in keeping with the basic idea of the original Colorado River Compact, which was to manage the basin’s water through some negotiation and compromise, rather than strictly following the letter of the law. But the legal foundation of prior appropriation hamstrings negotiations at every turn. Farmers account for the overwhelming majority of Colorado water use—almost a third goes to cattle feed alone—and thanks to how the system was initially designed, their prices are absurdly subsidized. One recent study found that while municipal districts pay an average of $512.01 per acre-foot, agricultural irrigation districts paid an average of $30.32 per acre-foot. Fully a quarter of all Colorado water diversions, all to farmers, cost nothing at all. Such a subsidy is difficult to unwind.

It’s in keeping with the basic idea of the original Colorado River Compact, which was to manage the basin’s water through some negotiation and compromise, rather than strictly following the letter of the law. But the legal foundation of prior appropriation hamstrings negotiations at every turn. Farmers account for the overwhelming majority of Colorado water use—almost a third goes to cattle feed alone—and thanks to how the system was initially designed, their prices are absurdly subsidized. One recent study found that while municipal districts pay an average of $512.01 per acre-foot, agricultural irrigation districts paid an average of $30.32 per acre-foot. Fully a quarter of all Colorado water diversions, all to farmers, cost nothing at all. Such a subsidy is difficult to unwind.

TIL that while Colorado basin municipal water districts pay an average of $512 per acre-foot, irrigation districts pay an average of $30--and fully a quarter of all water diversions, all going to farms, pay nothing at all prospect.org/2026/04/17/w...

1 day ago 565 97 10 22
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Denethor is the name of my startup that protects your tomato plants

1 day ago 3 0 1 0
New American Pathways receipt

New American Pathways receipt

51-18 scoreboard!

51-18 scoreboard!

@edsbs.bsky.social $51.18 (plus fees) to celebrate Hanover College's dominant victory over those jamokes up at Franklin College. Woody Harrelson would never have gone to Franklin #2026charitybundibowl

1 day ago 1 0 0 0

How bout that

1 day ago 0 0 0 0

Please get this and use it for interviews

1 day ago 1 0 1 0

Same, I took over mine after they fought against affordable housing, now I'm the president

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