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#brazos — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #brazos, aggregated by home.social.

  1. I used to be a nice dom. If you're wondering where that went, thank all the shitty simps that came before you. #brazos #loser #beta #abuse #drain

  2. I like going for walks in the Texas summer heat. How sweaty do you think my armpits and feet get? #cnc #brazos #farts

  3. Incels, join my server if you want to see the state of the dating market:
    discord.gg/Atk6trmuBR
    #sissified #brazos #shoes #austin

  4. Arguing with your dom on politics is cringe. Betas agree with their dom's shit takes. #locked #brazos #scatfetish

  5. Hype for the Future 137H: Brazos County, Texas

    Overview Brazos County is located within the southeastern portion of the State of Texas and is home to the communities of Bryan and College Station within the county limits. The City of Bryan serves as the county seat, though the City of College Station to the southeast is home to the largest public state or territorial university by enrollment in the United States—Texas A&M University “the Aggies.” Immediately off campus is the George, part of the Valencia Hotel Collection associated […]

    novatopflex.wordpress.com/2026

  6. Hype for the Future 137H: Brazos County, Texas

    Overview Brazos County is located within the southeastern portion of the State of Texas and is home to the communities of Bryan and College Station within the county limits. The City of Bryan serves as the county seat, though the City of College Station to the southeast is home to the largest public state or territorial university by enrollment in the United States—Texas A&M University “the Aggies.” Immediately off campus is the George, part of the Valencia Hotel Collection associated […]

    novatopflex.wordpress.com/2026

  7. Hype for the Future 137H: Brazos County, Texas

    Overview Brazos County is located within the southeastern portion of the State of Texas and is home to the communities of Bryan and College Station within the county limits. The City of Bryan serves as the county seat, though the City of College Station to the southeast is home to the largest public state or territorial university by enrollment in the United States—Texas A&M University “the Aggies.” Immediately off campus is the George, part of the Valencia Hotel Collection associated […]

    novatopflex.wordpress.com/2026

  8. Hype for the Future 137H: Brazos County, Texas

    Overview Brazos County is located within the southeastern portion of the State of Texas and is home to the communities of Bryan and College Station within the county limits. The City of Bryan serves as the county seat, though the City of College Station to the southeast is home to the largest public state or territorial university by enrollment in the United States—Texas A&M University “the Aggies.” Immediately off campus is the George, part of the Valencia Hotel Collection associated […]

    novatopflex.wordpress.com/2026

  9. Hype for the Future 137H: Brazos County, Texas

    Overview Brazos County is located within the southeastern portion of the State of Texas and is home to the communities of Bryan and College Station within the county limits. The City of Bryan serves as the county seat, though the City of College Station to the southeast is home to the largest public state or territorial university by enrollment in the United States—Texas A&M University “the Aggies.” Immediately off campus is the George, part of the Valencia Hotel Collection associated […]

    novatopflex.wordpress.com/2026

  10. texasobserver.org/brazos-river

    >What’s more, Dow-Freeport is operating with a wastewater permit that expired in 2019 but has been “administratively continued” by TCEQ, according to an agency spokesperson. That means Dow is allowed to follow outdated rules while a TCEQ review of the facility’s new draft permit drags on.
    >
    >“It is concerning that this is coming up on five years, which is, frankly, the length of time a new permit would have been,” said Josh Kratka, a senior staff attorney at the National Environmental Law Center. While Kratka doesn’t know what’s transpiring between Dow and TCEQ specifically, he explained that many companies try to convince regulators that they can’t reasonably comply with pollution limits in order to delay enforcement. “Rather than really crack down, enforcing a solution quickly, the regulators just give them more time,” he said.

    This article was written in 2023. So far as I can tell, the permit in question, WQ0000007000, was originally granted in 1978. Its latest "approval date" is from 2016, and its latest "expiration date" is... STILL 2019. And yet the permit is still "active" rather than expired.

    You can check at: www6.tceq.texas.gov/wqpaq/inde

    Put in "WQ0000007000" for the State Permit No., click Add, then click Search.

    (Sidenote: still using ColdFusion? In 2025? Damn).

    Ouch.

    #TexasObserver @TexasObserver #BrazosRiver #Brazos #Brazoria #Texas #TCEQ #FreePort #CleanWaterAct #CleanWater

  11. texasobserver.org/brazos-river

    >What’s more, Dow-Freeport is operating with a wastewater permit that expired in 2019 but has been “administratively continued” by TCEQ, according to an agency spokesperson. That means Dow is allowed to follow outdated rules while a TCEQ review of the facility’s new draft permit drags on.
    >
    >“It is concerning that this is coming up on five years, which is, frankly, the length of time a new permit would have been,” said Josh Kratka, a senior staff attorney at the National Environmental Law Center. While Kratka doesn’t know what’s transpiring between Dow and TCEQ specifically, he explained that many companies try to convince regulators that they can’t reasonably comply with pollution limits in order to delay enforcement. “Rather than really crack down, enforcing a solution quickly, the regulators just give them more time,” he said.

    This article was written in 2023. So far as I can tell, the permit in question, WQ0000007000, was originally granted in 1978. Its latest "approval date" is from 2016, and its latest "expiration date" is... STILL 2019. And yet the permit is still "active" rather than expired.

    You can check at: www6.tceq.texas.gov/wqpaq/inde

    Put in "WQ0000007000" for the State Permit No., click Add, then click Search.

    (Sidenote: still using ColdFusion? In 2025? Damn).

    Ouch.

    #TexasObserver @TexasObserver #BrazosRiver #Brazos #Brazoria #Texas #TCEQ #FreePort #CleanWaterAct #CleanWater

  12. texasobserver.org/brazos-river

    >What’s more, Dow-Freeport is operating with a wastewater permit that expired in 2019 but has been “administratively continued” by TCEQ, according to an agency spokesperson. That means Dow is allowed to follow outdated rules while a TCEQ review of the facility’s new draft permit drags on.
    >
    >“It is concerning that this is coming up on five years, which is, frankly, the length of time a new permit would have been,” said Josh Kratka, a senior staff attorney at the National Environmental Law Center. While Kratka doesn’t know what’s transpiring between Dow and TCEQ specifically, he explained that many companies try to convince regulators that they can’t reasonably comply with pollution limits in order to delay enforcement. “Rather than really crack down, enforcing a solution quickly, the regulators just give them more time,” he said.

    This article was written in 2023. So far as I can tell, the permit in question, WQ0000007000, was originally granted in 1978. Its latest "approval date" is from 2016, and its latest "expiration date" is... STILL 2019. And yet the permit is still "active" rather than expired.

    You can check at: www6.tceq.texas.gov/wqpaq/inde

    Put in "WQ0000007000" for the State Permit No., click Add, then click Search.

    (Sidenote: still using ColdFusion? In 2025? Damn).

    Ouch.

    #TexasObserver @TexasObserver #BrazosRiver #Brazos #Brazoria #Texas #TCEQ #FreePort #CleanWaterAct #CleanWater

  13. texasobserver.org/brazos-river

    >What’s more, Dow-Freeport is operating with a wastewater permit that expired in 2019 but has been “administratively continued” by TCEQ, according to an agency spokesperson. That means Dow is allowed to follow outdated rules while a TCEQ review of the facility’s new draft permit drags on.
    >
    >“It is concerning that this is coming up on five years, which is, frankly, the length of time a new permit would have been,” said Josh Kratka, a senior staff attorney at the National Environmental Law Center. While Kratka doesn’t know what’s transpiring between Dow and TCEQ specifically, he explained that many companies try to convince regulators that they can’t reasonably comply with pollution limits in order to delay enforcement. “Rather than really crack down, enforcing a solution quickly, the regulators just give them more time,” he said.

    This article was written in 2023. So far as I can tell, the permit in question, WQ0000007000, was originally granted in 1978. Its latest "approval date" is from 2016, and its latest "expiration date" is... STILL 2019. And yet the permit is still "active" rather than expired.

    You can check at: www6.tceq.texas.gov/wqpaq/inde

    Put in "WQ0000007000" for the State Permit No., click Add, then click Search.

    (Sidenote: still using ColdFusion? In 2025? Damn).

    Ouch.

    #TexasObserver @TexasObserver #BrazosRiver #Brazos #Brazoria #Texas #TCEQ #FreePort #CleanWaterAct #CleanWater

  14. texasobserver.org/brazos-river

    >What’s more, Dow-Freeport is operating with a wastewater permit that expired in 2019 but has been “administratively continued” by TCEQ, according to an agency spokesperson. That means Dow is allowed to follow outdated rules while a TCEQ review of the facility’s new draft permit drags on.
    >
    >“It is concerning that this is coming up on five years, which is, frankly, the length of time a new permit would have been,” said Josh Kratka, a senior staff attorney at the National Environmental Law Center. While Kratka doesn’t know what’s transpiring between Dow and TCEQ specifically, he explained that many companies try to convince regulators that they can’t reasonably comply with pollution limits in order to delay enforcement. “Rather than really crack down, enforcing a solution quickly, the regulators just give them more time,” he said.

    This article was written in 2023. So far as I can tell, the permit in question, WQ0000007000, was originally granted in 1978. Its latest "approval date" is from 2016, and its latest "expiration date" is... STILL 2019. And yet the permit is still "active" rather than expired.

    You can check at: www6.tceq.texas.gov/wqpaq/inde

    Put in "WQ0000007000" for the State Permit No., click Add, then click Search.

    (Sidenote: still using ColdFusion? In 2025? Damn).

    Ouch.

    #TexasObserver @TexasObserver #BrazosRiver #Brazos #Brazoria #Texas #TCEQ #FreePort #CleanWaterAct #CleanWater

  15. Rail bridges across Brazos, Day 2 walk in #Waco ☝️

    Plenty of opportunity to see, enjoy, and photograph reflections, which I love, if you can't tell by now. 😀

    Pics 1 and 2 are two different but parallel bridges. They're about a block apart which made the last picture possible, but took me a while to capture: angle, location, lighting, traffic, trial & error...

    Again, thankful for my wife's patience. ❤️

    #photography #amateur #travel #tourism #Brazos #history #bridge #Texas #railroad #reflections

  16. Washington Avenue Bridge, Day 2 walk in #Waco ☝️

    The first picture is from the river trail that goes under the bridge. The other pictures are on Washington Ave looking towards N. University Parks Dr. (risking traffic in both directions).

    #photography #amateur #travel #tourism #Brazos #history #bridge #Texas

  17. Pictures of the historic Suspension Bridge from Day 2 walk in #Waco ☝️

    The Waco Suspension Bridge is the first ever bridge built across Brazos River, and was completed in 1870. It was part of the historic Chisholm Trail.

    #photography #amateur #travel #tourism #Brazos #history #bridge

  18. Even more pics from Day 2 in #Waco ☝️

    Chisholm Trail: Somehow, seeing actual #longhorns and the historic trails gives me goosebumps. ❤️

    IMHO understanding the #cattle-drives of 1860-1890 is to truly understand #Texas grit. That and the Alamo siege plus the Mission Trail in San Antonio.

    I highly recommend & hope everyone has/takes opportunity to experience these sites. Take these pics are my way of goading you. 😉

    thc.texas.gov/public/upload/ch

    #photography #amateur #travel #tourism #Brazos #history

  19. More pics from Day 2 walk in #Waco ☝️

    Branding the Brazos: Oversized sculptures of cattle-drive across Brazos River. The sculptures are so huge and elaborate that pics either capture breadth and lose detail, or capture parts in detail but lose context. These pics are a combo. I especially love 1 & 4.

    1, 2: Vaquero & Longhorn
    3: Trail Boss & Longhorn
    4: Strays [wish I could show how big they really are]

    waco-texas.com/Departments/Par

    #photography #amateur #travel #tourism #Texas #Brazos #Longhorns

  20. Lisa's essay for us is in response to @delger Erdenesanaa's feature story from the most recent issue of our magazine, Dow's River, about the toll the petro-giant's had over the historic #Brazos river: texasobserver.org/dow-brazos-r

    #news #politics #USPol #rivers #water #environment #OilAndGas #Energy #GulfCoast #ClimateChange

  21. ”Unfortunately, some Texans instead continue to ignore foreseeable flood impacts and create avoidable future destruction.”

    Lisa Gossett, chair of the environmental management program at the University of #Houston-Clear Lake, has some very personal thoughts on the future of the #Brazos in the hands of Dow Chemical: texasobserver.org/brazos-flood

    #Essays #news #politics #USPol #rivers #water #environment #flood #disaster #safety #OilAndGas #Energy #GulfCoast #ClimateChange

  22. “Why must we wait until we have irreparable damage to do something?”

    When it comes to the historic #Brazos river, one company reigns supreme—as the top polluter—of this vital waterway. As her final contribution as our staff writer, @delger takes us down the "The River of the Arms of God" and looks at the damage done by #Dow: texasobserver.org/dow-brazos-r

    From the May/June issue of our magazine.
    (📸#Photography by Meridith Kohut)
    #rivers #water #pollution #plastics #ClimateChange #news #Texas