Secret Government Surveillance Camera Deepens Private Property Lawsuit
| | | | | Is it Too Late to Control Tar Spot Now Spreading in Your Fields? Purdue Expert Provides Answers | | Unlike the early tar spot problems farmers experienced in 2021, the disease wasn't first reported in Indiana until Aug. 15 this year. Darcy Telenko with Purdue University says the yield hit that some growers saw in 2021 continues to haunt their management decisions. "We've shown tar spot at least overwinters for one year in plant debris," Telenko says. "I've been in fields here in Indiana where we really had a widespread epidemic, where the field had tar spot in the previous corn in a soybean–corn rotation. So, it survived at least a couple years before the disease ramped up and caused yield losses." | | | |
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| | Big Brother: Secret Government Surveillance Camera Deepens Private Property Lawsuit | Without warrant or probable cause, at the federal level and sometimes at the state level, government officials claim the power to enter private property, install secret cameras and record at will — all without accountability or oversight. In December 2021, Punxsutawney and Pitch Pine, adjacent hunting clubs in Clearfield County, Penn., launched a lawsuit against Pennsylvania Game Commission, alleging warrantless searches of private land. Farm Journal's Chris Bennett digs into the details. | Read More |
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