we do not have enough money. 361 filling the economy is officially in a recession as they continue struggling with something else that is beyond doubt, inflation. democrats saying this is exactly why we need more spending but would that make potentially even worse? we are on top of it all in the rescue and recovery still going on in kentucky. the death toll they re climbing to 25 after this devastating flash flood s. where going to the very latest in the state s governor, andy beshear. welcome everyone i am at cavuto. to you. it has been a turbulent week at this far, among the growing concerns on the state of the economy. recession and doubting instills the case as with the ministration is saying. and inflation, no one doubting that is alive and well. we are on top of both in how the administration is responding to be go to david s pond with the latest. hi neil good morning. president here at the white house. if you use the word recession here on these grounds officials h
fox news medical contributor joining us in a few moments on what this means. talk to us about this so-called rebound infection. first let s go to david live on the north lawn at the white house. hi. clearly not something we expected today. i don t think anyone expected this. he was going to go to wilmington delaware tomorrow. the white house announced the trip to michigan on tuesday. both of those events have been canceled. delaware and michigan because of this rebound positivity test. we have a letter from the president position, he says after testing negative on tuesday evening, wednesday morning, thursday morning and friday morning, the president tested positive saturday morning by antigen testing. this represents rebound positivity. the president has expensed no reemergence of symptoms and continues to feel quite well. there was no reason to reinstate treatment at this time. we will continue close observation. the president tweeting out to his millions of followers, i
Knox and Mason County, Missouri Farmland Sells at Auction for $7,560,000
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A 1,471± acre property with multiple homes in Knox and Mason County, Missouri sold at auction for $7,560,000, an average of $5,139 per acre. The auction was co-managed and marketed by Ken Nofziger of Kander LLC and Scott Shuman of Hall and Hall Auctions on behalf of Cordes & Company as general receiver and seller of the property.
The property is primarily comprised of 1,249± acres of productive, tillable farmland with the balance in recreational timber. It includes several country homes with outbuildings and grain storage.
“Our ability to use a simultaneous online and live format made this auction a great success,” said Nofziger. “To have almost 100 bids placed during the online-only portion of the auction and 200+ bids placed during the live auction is a pretty remarkable feat that exceeded everyone’s expectations.”
don t talk george bush blowing up the hev vies. this one did in illinois. result is 200 square miles of missouri farmland has been wrecked. fertile top soil washed away costing $100 million this year alone. according to the missouri farm bureau, some farmers are going to take a generation to recover. also in missouri, back to the tornadoes. we are focusing as we should on loss of lives. but we haven t heard of the destroyed farm land there or thought about the economy and we haven t talked about it with texas. texas has been ravaged by fires. april wildfires caused estimated $20.4 million in farm losses alone. destroying the fences, buildings, pasture. cattle have been killed.
don t talk george bush blowing up the hev vies. this one did in illinois. result is 200 square miles of missouri farmland has been wrecked. fertile top soil washed away costing $100 million this year alone. according to the missouri farm bureau, some farmers are going to take a generation to recover. also in missouri, back to the tornadoes. we are focusing as we should on loss of lives. but we haven t heard of the destroyed farm land there or thought about the economy and we haven t talked about it with texas. texas has been ravaged by fires. april wildfires caused estimated $20.4 million in farm losses alone. destroying the fences, buildings, pasture. cattle have been killed.