- Joined
- Jan 31, 2015
Because they want to fuck & groom teensa YOUTH group, and not people their own age?
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Because they want to fuck & groom teensa YOUTH group, and not people their own age?
A bit late, but where I come from at least a butcher will break down a carcass sent to them by a farmer. In some remote areas a butcher will even go to the farm and kill, hang and butcher a beast from start to finish, right then and there, and even have miniature cranes to hang the carcass and everything.How hard is it to butcher a sheep? I know nothing about it but it feels like it would be a bit too intensive for anyone on the tranch.
He hunts mushrooms. He tweets about it a lot.What do those mushrooms mean in a name?
I'd bet just about anything that kevin got some sort of pleasure from killing that calf
Even sending a carcass to a local butcher would be to much work for the tranch. There's no way that they did that. Especially not without tweeting about it, as twitter addicted as they are there's no way they'd not say anything before they slaughtered any animal.A bit late, but where I come from at least a butcher will break down a carcass sent to them by a farmer. In some remote areas a butcher will even go to the farm and kill, hang and butcher a beast from start to finish, right then and there, and even have miniature cranes to hang the carcass and everything.
Now that you mention it, that does sound right.I'm willing to bet that meat came from the local supermarket and they're just pretending it's from the tranch.
So much for my previous speculation that it died of "natural" causes.![]()
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In Custer County, Owners Of Tenacious Unicorn Ranch Pack Heat And Build A Fence In The Face Of Harassment
An alpaca ranch seeking to be a safe haven for transgender people has exposed some cultural tensions in deep red Custer County.www.cpr.org
The locals don't like that the Tranchers talk shit about them behind their back, who would have thought.“I feel saddened that anyone, I don’t care — race, color, creed, religion, lifestyle — I don’t care, would live in Custer County and feel that they are in jeopardy,” said Custer County Sheriff Shannon Byerly.
Yet, Byerly said he does think the unicorns have made disparaging comments about county residents in some of the recent articles about the ranch.
“In my mind, that doesn’t sound like you’re wanting to be part of something or be inclusive,” Byerly said of the ranchers. “I don’t think they did themselves any favors by taking that approach.”
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In Custer County, Owners Of Tenacious Unicorn Ranch Pack Heat And Build A Fence In The Face Of Harassment
An alpaca ranch seeking to be a safe haven for transgender people has exposed some cultural tensions in deep red Custer County.www.cpr.org
There’s a six-foot fence going up around the Tenacious Unicorn Ranch in Custer County. The people who live there say they need it. They say they’ve been the target of harassment since they relocated the trans-friendly ranch there in 2020.
Soon, likely within the next month, the perimeter fence will add security to the ranch, one that also has newly installed security cameras. There’s a tension here around the ranch, so much so that co-owner Penny Logue and fellow owner Bonnie Nelson, both transgender women, carry sidearm pistols at all times. One wall of the communal geodesic dome ranch house is stocked with various assault weapons.
“There’s some degree where we want that [militaristic] perspective,” Nelson said. “All we want is to be left alone.”
The 40-acre property, apart from its status as a working sheep and alpaca ranch, also serves as “a trans and queer haven” southeast of the small mountain town of Westcliffe. Nine people live on the site currently, less than half of the planned occupancy long-term. Logue and Nelson hope to build a sustainable and scalable business not only through selling their agricultural products; they also want to one day establish properties in multiple rural places where trans people can feel safe, welcome and isolated from the discrimination they face in the traditional, cisgendered world.
[Picture: "Tenacious Unicorn Ranch co-owner Penny Logue prepares dinner for her housemates on April 27, 2021."]
The Tenacious Unicorn Ranch has been the source of a cultural flashpoint since relocating to deep red Custer County last year. A number of articles from regional and national news outlets have detailed allegations of the ranchers facing severe online threats, multiple instances of local harassment and even armed trespassing on the property itself. Logue said she believes much of the local antagonism comes from conservative militia groups in the county, who she said have threatened the ranchers at Tenacious.
“Look, we get made fun of all the time,” Logue said. “That's not even interesting to us. It's when you come onto my property with firearms, after threatening to burn my house down, that’s different.”
Yet some, including readers of the unabashedly conservative Sangre de Cristo Sentinel, say the ranch is exaggerating their claims of persecution in order to bring in large amounts of cash through online fundraising efforts.
“Long before the Tenacious Unicorns came to this valley there were hard-working ranchers living humbly and quietly asking nothing from others," said a letter to the editor published in the paper under the name Lisa Frank, Rural Custer County, CO. The letter was also dismissive of concerns from the ranchers that they have been harassed.
[Picture: "Various assault weapons and flags adorn the wall leading up to the ranch house’s second floor on April 27, 2021."]
Transgender people across the nation regularly experience harassment. A national survey from 2011 of transgender people found 53 percent of respondents reported being verbally harassed or disrespected in a place of public accommodation. And 90 percent of those surveyed reported experiencing harassment or discrimination on the job. Some of them also hid who they were in order to avoid such discrimination or harassment.
In Custer County, others, including county officials, say they just want the residents of their communities to get along, no matter what their background is.
“I feel saddened that anyone, I don’t care — race, color, creed, religion, lifestyle — I don’t care, would live in Custer County and feel that they are in jeopardy,” said Custer County Sheriff Shannon Byerly.
Yet, Byerly said he does think the unicorns have made disparaging comments about county residents in some of the recent articles about the ranch.
[Picture: "Tenacious Unicorn Ranch owners Bonnie Nelson and Penny Logue discuss heightened security measures on their property with ranch member J Stanley on April 28, 2021."]
“In my mind, that doesn’t sound like you’re wanting to be part of something or be inclusive,” Byerly said of the ranchers. “I don’t think they did themselves any favors by taking that approach.”
Byerly added that building the high fence around their property only adds to that perception.
Logue countered that the unicorns have engaged in a number of community-focused projects in Westcliffe, from local recycling efforts to providing local handy work to starting a community garden. The Unicorns have tried to show their affection for the people of Custer County, she said, it’s just that a small group of people make life difficult for the county’s LGBTQ residents.
[Picture: "Alpacas lounge at the Tenacious Unicorn Ranch as weather rolls in over the Sangre de Cristo Mountains on April 27, 2021."]
“This county is stuffed full of downright amazing people, and that has nothing to do with politics. We have a lot of friends who are conservatives, but we don’t have any friends that are Nazis,” Logue said.
As for the assertion that their harassment claims are a fundraising ploy, Logue called it a “straw man argument.”
“That’s classic abuser speak is to be like, ‘Oh, well, the problem is not the abuse, but it’s that they went public with the abuse,’” Logue said. She said the recent fundraising efforts have paid for their security upgrades and farming implements like their new tractor.
She said the ranch’s goods and services have always brought in more income for the organization than their fundraising. Logue said she thinks it’s entirely appropriate to ask for online support to upgrade their facilities so members there feel more secure.
She said it’s the unicorns right to shut their front gate and leave the world behind, just like anyone else.
God this entire article is a great little font of knowledge.![]()
In Custer County, Owners Of Tenacious Unicorn Ranch Pack Heat And Build A Fence In The Face Of Harassment
An alpaca ranch seeking to be a safe haven for transgender people has exposed some cultural tensions in deep red Custer County.www.cpr.org
They're not even talking about the Earthship. They're planning to fit 18+ folks on the Tranch? That septic system is going to explode into a shit geyser to put the alpaca's to shame.Nine people live on the site currently, less than half of the planned occupancy long-term.
It turns out that Rural folks aren't gonna just take shit from a bunch of trans people for fear of backlash? Who woulda thunk it.“I feel saddened that anyone, I don’t care — race, color, creed, religion, lifestyle — I don’t care, would live in Custer County and feel that they are in jeopardy,” said Custer County Sheriff Shannon Byerly.
Yet, Byerly said he does think the unicorns have made disparaging comments about county residents in some of the recent articles about the ranch.
“In my mind, that doesn’t sound like you’re wanting to be part of something or be inclusive,” Byerly said of the ranchers. “I don’t think they did themselves any favors by taking that approach.”
Byerly added that building the high fence around their property only adds to that perception.
This is the real reason I decided to write this post. More money from goods and services? Are you having a fucking giggle? You really expect me to believe that the grimy ass etsy yarn they've been selling has exceeded 100k? Not a chance in hell, no way. Not with the unsold skeins they have stacked up all over the place.She said the ranch’s goods and services have always brought in more income for the organization than their fundraising. Logue said she thinks it’s entirely appropriate to ask for online support to upgrade their facilities so members there feel more secure.
Then get off twitter and stop begging to the internet about every little thing, get in the world or get out. Shit or get off the pot.She said it’s the unicorns right to shut their front gate and leave the world behind, just like anyone else.
It's funny that Penny works out on the ranch all the livelong day and still has to come home and cook dinner because Kevin won't get of his amhole to contribute to the household. Doesn't cook, doesn't clean, doesn't do any stereotypical female activities—just consooms.
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In Custer County, Owners Of Tenacious Unicorn Ranch Pack Heat And Build A Fence In The Face Of Harassment
An alpaca ranch seeking to be a safe haven for transgender people has exposed some cultural tensions in deep red Custer County.www.cpr.org
They're probably going to fence in an area around the dome and have that as their little compound. They're too cheap to fence off everything.They're not even at the edge of their property, so I don't know what they're defending themselves against. The forthcoming troon civil war? The pleb uprising? Are they already getting ready to concede half their land?
Like the "completely passing trans friends who have no mental problems or regrets from bottom surgery" that we occasionally hear about in the Kevin Gibes thread, I don't think they exist.But I'm curious who the "conservative friends" are given a majority of the tranch have expressed fear, disgust, or even violent thoughts towards conservatives on their Twitter pages
You're probably in a block chain.
You're probably in a block chain.