Thursday, May 14, 2026

ALEX FASULO: When the panels aren’t useful in 10-years (it’s actually sooner than that in a commercial arrangement), why do these companies need the land for another 3 decades?

Who is she?

Alexandra Fasulo (also known as Alex Fasulo).  She’s a farmer, activist, and founder/president of the American Land Rescue Fund, focused on opposing large-scale solar/wind projects (especially foreign-owned ones) on U.S. farmland in New York and elsewhere. She frequently discusses topics like ORES (Office of Renewable Energy Siting) permits, regulatory issues, data centers, and what she calls the “Trojan horse” pipeline of renewables leading to industrial development. 

She writes,

These final permits are SELLABLE ASSETS. The permits run with the land. The companies will sell, transfer, and dissolve the LLCs they made for these projects . . . many times before there’s ever a shovel in the ground. ORES awards final permits 100% of the time, regardless of expert testimony, environmental studies, public comments, and letters from town officials. This is known as regulatory capture. ORES is captured by the industry it claims to regulate. Why does ORES issue final permits 100% of the time? That’s the deal they’ve struck with these foreign renewable developers. The contracts the landowners signed are for 35+ years. When the panels aren’t useful in 10-years (it’s actually sooner than that in a commercial arrangement), why do these companies need the land for another 3 decades? What comes after the solar panels? Look this up! It’s happening nationwide.

GREG BOVINO: Chief Banks and I are both 'mass deportations' people... And we're all no longer employed by the Department of Homeland Security. What does that tell you? ... There's a lot of swamp creatures . . .

Border Patrol Chief Mike Banks.  

DEAD WRONG HISTORY: Sam Kinison was an ordained Pentecostal preacher before he became a comedian. He debuted this at Rodney Dangerfield's HBO special in 1985.

ALEX FASULO: Who’s stuck remediating the superfund site? The landowners who sold out in the first place. It’s baked right into their contracts.

Wheatfield, Indiana (Jasper County / nearby Starke County), specifically the Dunns Bridge Solar I and II facilities. 

Diana West reminds us that Red China manufactures 80% of solar panels

from Alex Fasulo

This is now a superfund site. Forever chemicals (PFAS), lead, cadmium, zinc, microplastics, and glass shards have destroyed the soil below them for centuries. 

The solar installer will have filed bankruptcy or sold the LLC multiple times by now. They’re no longer on the hook for cleaning up this mess, nor do they plan to spend the millions.

Who’s stuck remediating the superfund site? The landowners who sold out in the first place. It’s baked right into their contracts.

You won’t hear that from them, though. They signed gag orders when they took their foreign renewable money. 

And when the landowners can’t even afford it… it falls on the town. It falls on the local taxpayers.  

HEATHER MACDONALD: The reason that people are not being put in jail today is because nobody wants to, as a recent crime victim said "put another black man in jail." As a result, we are putting everybody at risk.

FULL INTERVIEW HERE.

Murder homicide data is the gold standard in the criminal justice system because you really can't hide the bodies, and it looks like there has been a significant decrease across the country this year.  But on the other hand, that doesn't mean that we have an acceptable level of crime. Two things can be true. Violent crime can have decreased from the post George Floyd race riot hysteria high, but we can be moving back towards the mean.  At the same time, we we have a level of anarchy in New York City, in Los Angeles, in Philadelphia, yes, in Washington DC that is simply unacceptable.  I would argue that in some senses crime today is worse than it was in the 1960s because you have a completely different element at this point.  You have these mentally ill psychotics who have criminal records the length of 6 ft that are still out there pushing people into subways, pushing them down Subway stairs, as we saw recently to their deaths, that are not being confined all because of this conceit of disparate impact.  The reason that people are not being put in jail today is because nobody wants to, as a recent crime victim said "put another black man in jail."  As a result, we are putting everybody at risk. And this type of crime committed by repeat offenders that should either be locked away after their second offense, as far as I'm concerned, or put in a mental institution involuntarily is something that we have not seen at this level ever.