Feeding The Carry

Feeding The Carry




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Feeding The Carry
Matt Agorist is an honorably discharged veteran of the USMC and former intelligence operator directly tasked by the NSA. This prior experience gives him unique insight into the world of government corruption and the American police state. Agorist has been an independent journalist for over a decade and has been featured on mainstream networks around the world. Agorist is also the Editor at Large at the Free Thought Project. Follow @MattAgorist on Twitter, Steemit, and now on Minds.
Dallas, TX — Feeding and clothing the homeless in the land of the free has now become a revolutionary act. Luckily, however, there are still good people willing to carry that act out.
In December 2014, the Dallas city council enacted Ordinance No. 29595, which makes it illegal to serve food to the homeless without jumping through a statist myriad of bureaucratic hoops, including a fee, training classes, and written notices.
One should not need to file multiple forms and pay a fee to obtain a permit to give food to those in need who are willingly ready to accept it. The folks at Don’t Comply know this.
Over the weekend, the aptly named organization, Don’t Comply , and dozens of volunteers from children to adults alike took to the streets of Dallas to hand out food, sleeping bags, clothing, and tents to the area’s less fortunate.
As TFTP has reported on numerous occasions, often times, police will swoop in and shut down those who would dare defy the authority of the state and conduct charity without a permit. However, most organizations aren’t like Don’t Comply.
As they took to the streets this weekend, many of the members of the organization open carried their weapons. This was done—not out of an act of intimidation—but merely to assert rights as well as protect them.
The resultant heavily armed group of do-gooders effectively staved off any attempts by police to shut down the charitable efforts.
We spoke to one of the participants, who also happens to be a good friend of mine, Luis Fernando Mises who explained why the group carries weapons.
“When the system makes it illegal to feed people without a license, the unintended consequences are that we become criminals when we feed homeless people in the street,” he said. “What we do then, is get on an equal playing field with this system and we demonstrate that we can still help people. And, we do it peacefully…with guns.”
Success, and just like that, good people disobeying bad laws, while being well armed, had a positive effect on the world. Those in need were given supplies that may ultimately save their lives over the harsh winter and all of it was done in spite of “the law.”
As TFTP has reported at length, the war on the homeless, as well as the war on those who want to help them, is relentless. Previously, during Thanksgiving, a group giving out food in Atlanta was shut down by police because they failed to pay the state for permission to give food to voluntary recipients.
TFTP also reported on a law in Kansas—which appears to be a trend across the country—that allows police to fine and even arrest people not for feeding the homeless but for simply giving them money.
Sadly, the state’s endless desire to generate revenue and oppress rights has led to a system which requires permits for just about every activity not just feeding the homeless. This permitting process acts as a stranglehold on those trying to make a living—keeping them in a perpetual state of poverty.
In 2017, the Alameda County Sheriff’s department posted a photo of a deputy arresting a man for selling fruits and vegetables on the roadside and attempted to justify the arrest. When people read the department’s justification, they lashed out — peacefully — to let them know what they were doing is wrong.
In June, a 38-year-old homeless man was attempting to earn some honest money by providing a much-desired service of bicycle repair to the residents of Kennewick, Washington when he was threatened with extortion and arrest by the local police department, which effectively ended his enterprise.
After the Kennewick Police Department threatened the homeless man and prevented him from making a living, they took to Facebook to shamelessly brag about it. The man was told that while it was illegal for him to fix bicycles, he could certainly beg for money.
Reprinted from the Free Thought Project .
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Nazifa and her 10 children walked for a week before arriving at the refugee camp in Yida, South Sudan.
They are among the thousands fleeing the violence in the Sudanese states of South Kordofan and Blue Nile, targeted by their own government.
Her 4-year-old daughter, Waida, weighed only 14 pounds when the family arrived at Yida. She became one of the dozens of patients at the Samaritan’s Purse stabilization center for severely malnourished children, where we are providing 24-hour care for boys and girls who are on the brink of starvation.
We opened the center in October. The number of patients increased steadily before spiking over the past two months. Forty-four children were admitted one day in early June, the highest number yet. That night’s bed count was 73, also a new record.
Nazifa said that Waida has been sick with vomiting and diarrhea for over a month. She had nothing to eat because their village in Sudan has no food. Some people were forced to eat leaves, or the remainder of their sorghum seed if they had any.
People have been unable to cultivate crops because of aerial bombardment by the Sudan Armed Forces. Nazifa said people were always running for protection from the bombing, causing widespread famine in their village.
Those fleeing the violence are walking without food or water, and people are dying along the way.
Thousands are arriving at the camps in Yida and Doro—where Samaritan’s Purse also is helping—seeking refuge. In addition to working with malnourished children, our staff is distributing weekly food rations. In June, we provided food for over 55,000 people and about 2,500 pregnant and lactating women at the two camps.
We also are doing health and hygiene training, and our staff is working to transport water, sanitation and hygiene items—soap, jerry cans, and mosquito nets—to families. We have been driving the supplies in, but soon the roads will be impassable due to heavy rains and we will need to airlift supplies.
In addition to feeding tens of thousands of people and providing clean water and other necessary supplies, doctors are performing surgeries at our hospital in Doro, which has over 90 patients.
But the most urgent need remains food for the hungry people who arrive at the camps daily.
They are people like Shomalia and her children, who lived in a cave in the Nuba Mountains in Sudan for a year before leaving for Yida.
“The bombing is serious,” she said. “There is no food. There is nothing.”
Shomalia said she and her four children lived off leaves and tree bark in the mountains for many months. It took a week to reach Yida on foot, but they were not able to bring anything with them because everything they owned had been burned. Her 3-year-old daughter, Manas, weighs 10 pounds and is also a patient in the Samaritan’s Purse stabilization center.
Hallem, a mother of seven children, was also at the clinic with her 3-year-old son, Kamis Kafi. He had a nasal-gastric tube running though his nose and each hand was taped down on a flat board so that he could not take it out. Kamis cannot take food through his mouth, and milk formula is pumped through the tube into his stomach.
Hallem left Sudan because of the famine and the bombing and came to Yida seeking food and protection. She said she saw five people die of starvation on the journey, and two more died from eating the leaves from a bad tree. She will not go home until peace comes again.
As much as they have suffered, the refugees remember those they left behind, whose suffering is now greater than theirs.
“People are hurting in Nuba,” Shomalia said. “They are scattered and suffering because of war. Can someone help them?”
Monthly food distributions ease the burden for hungry families.
As a local church provides hot meals and tutoring, physical and spiritual needs are met.
Families in the Philippines receive help from food and cash voucher project.
When food runs out, hope is scarce. It’s a situation often seen in countries where people are left to starve because of natural disasters, war and genocide, and widespread poverty. Samaritan’s Purse is committed to reaching out to the hungry with both physical and spiritual nourishment. Often, we focus on feeding large groups of people in emergency situations. Other times, we address a chronic lack of food or nutrition. We also provide daily meals through school feeding programs to promote attendance, improve performance, and nourish growing bodies.
It only costs $10 to provide a Bible or Christian literature for a family in need through the Christmas catalog.
It only costs $6 to provide lesson books and a Bible for a boy or girl participating in this discipleship program by Samaritan’s Purse.

The Language of Crows: The crows.net Book of the American Crow.
Includes the CD, "An Introduction to the Language of the American Crow."
Everything you ever wanted to know about crows, including how and what to feed them.
For more information and/or to order, click here:

The Language of Crows
Crows are remarkably adaptable birds that will feed on a wide variety of foods, both natural and manmade, although some foods are favored over others and individual crows may have individual preferences. Some of the foods they have been observed to eat are as follows.
All of the following are listed in various publications quoted in "The Life Histories of North American Jays, crows, and Titmice", Brent 1946: Insects (primarily beetles and their larvae and grasshoppers, locusts and crickets), spiders, millipeds, crustaceans, snails, reptiles, amphibians, wild birds and their eggs, poultry and their eggs, small mammals and carrion,May beetles, wireworms, caterpillars, grubs, cutworms, earthworms, clams, scallops, mussels, sea urchins, dead fish, marine invertebrates, dead seal, dead trout, , garbage, road kills (including dogs, cats, chickens, opossums, pigs and skunks) snakes, slaughter house waste, corn, sorghums, wheat, apples, almonds, beans, peas, figs, grapes, cherries, various wild fruits (including sumach, poison-ivy, poison-oak, bayberry, dogwood, sour gum, wild cherries, wild grapes, Virginia creeper, and pokeberry), meadow mice, star-nosed moles, short-tailed shrews, cranberry, juniper berries, smilax winterberry, nightshade berries, barley, corn, buckwheat, pumpkin or squash seeds.
More recently, urban crows will enjoy feeding at garbage dumps, dumpsters at fast food restaurants, picnic areas, and any place where human food waste is available. I have personally observed a crow flying by overhead with an entire slice of pizza in its beak. (MJW)
Crows are most comfortable feeding on the ground and generally, if you want to attract them, all you have to do is scatter food around in an open location. It’s helpful if it is highly visible food that crows will recognize, and the simplest and most easily obtainable item is peanuts in the shell. If you scatter these around, if there are crows in the neighborhood, sooner or later they will arrive to feed on them.
The most likely scenario is, that before crows show up, blue jays (or other local jays) will discover the peanuts and will quickly carry off them off. Jays are much less cautions than crows and will zoom in to snatch up food long before crows make their appearance known. You may have to throw out peanuts for a few days before the crows are attracted by all the jay activity, check out the area for hidden hazards, and finally, carefully approach the food supply. Once they have decided the area is safe, you should have regular visits from crows whenever you put out food.
A regular schedule of feeding helps. Crows seem to most actively feed early in the morning and then again in the afternoon, with a kind of casual foraging in between. The other thing to note is that crows love water. They need to drink a lot and they love dunking food in shallow water and bathing in it in good weather. If you locate a birdbath near your feeding station, you are likely to see a lot more crow (and other bird) activity, particularly if there is no other water source in the immediate vicinity.
There a few things you will soon notice once you begin feeding crows. One is that they can eat an amazing amount of food and, what they can’t eat, they will carry off and cache (hide). Its best if you set a limit on how much you are going to feed the crows each day and stick to it…which, of course, you won’t. The next thing you’ll notice is that no matter what you choose to feed the crows, something else will come along to join in the feast. Blue jays will rob you blind of peanuts and other seeds. Squirrels will join in the party. Cats will show up if you put out kibbled cat or dog food, which is one of the best and cheapest of crow foods. And small birds of all sorts will also get in the act.
Although it’s not their first choice, crows will take food from a raised, open platform. I’ve found that a thin, smooth, round metal pole will generally frustrate squirrels and cats, particularly if you grease the pole! Currently I am using a 13 inch round feeding tray made by “Droll Yankee”, mounted about six feet off the ground. I have one of those old style concrete birdbaths set just a few feet away. I’ve found that its wise to have a very heavy saucer part on the bath, because cats will like to jump up on it for a drink and fat urban kitties can easily upset light ceramic baths.
It’s particularly important to keep your birdbath ice free in winter, particularly in long cold dry spells without snow on the ground. There are birdbath heaters that you can buy or you can defrost the bath in the morning with a watering can filled with hot water. If you keep a consistent supply of water available throughout the winter, the birds will thank you with their presence.
As for what you should feed crows, that’s the easiest part of the whole business. As I mentioned, kibbled cat or dog food (pea sized chunks) is cheap and provides complete nutrition for the omnivorous crows. Meat scraps are always a hit as is cheese and egg yolk. Sunflower seeds, peanuts, in or out of the shell, and just about anything that a teenage boy would love. Unless you provide so much food that the crows don’t ever have to forage for themselves, you really don’t have to worry about ruining their diet.
Oh, and some folks will call the crows in one way or another, a crow call or whistle or bell or whatever, when they feed them. The crows generally become quickly accustomed to the feeding signal and quickly appear when they are called.
In the spring, however, when the crows are laying their eggs and have young in the nest, you might want to be more particular about providing nutritious foods, particularly egg yolk and dog or cat food, to help ensure healthy fledglings.
And that’s about it. We’d be happy to hear your experiences with crow feeding or answer any questions you might have at info@crows.net.
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In early May 2000, I personally observed a crow flying overhead carrying a garter snake that was about a foot long in its beak.
A resident of an assisted living facility reported (May 2000) that the crows were eating all the fish out of their pond. Exactly how they did their fishing was not reported.
YOUR OBSERVATIONS OF CROW FOOD CHOICES AND FEEDING BEHAVIOR ARE VERY WELCOME. Please sent observations to crows.net@gmail.com . Unless you indicate otherwise, your observations will be published on the website with your name included.
(This section will be added to on a continuing basis. Your comments and suggestions are welcomed. Other parts of the site are also under construction. This site will be continually expanding as the Crows.net Project grows.)
© Copyright 1999 - 2012 Michael J. Westerfield. All Rights Reserved.
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Crows.net
Food and Feeding Habits of the American Crow, Corvus brachyrhynchos.



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