We don't get 4 feet of snow in 24-48 hours. Ever. We've had 2 mega snow storms in the 12 years I've owned this place. This one doesn't qualify.Oh wow. A whole foot. In an area that usually gets 4x more than that. Such horrors.
Fake News Kamala!The controversial location?
The Milwaukee Public Library
Local news is really catering to the hysterical right wing weirdos these days, huh?
GREEN BAY, Wis. (WBAY) - A 65-year-old man known both locally and internationally as “Uncle Fester” is now in jail facing drug charges.
City and county SWAT teams executed a search warrant at a home on the 800 block of Baird Street Friday morning. According to Brown County land records, a man named Stephen Preisler owns that property. He’s been booked into the Brown County Jail on three felony drug charges, including the manufacture of amphetamine and maintaining a drug house. That house became the focus of an all-day drug investigation.
"Three hundred nineteen grams of methamphetamines, 114 grams of cocaine," Lemkuil said. "The value of the meth located in his house was between $49,000 and $65,000. And the value of the cocaine was approximately $11,437."
"These charges are mistaken -- I think misidentified materials," Preisler said. "The only chemistry I have running in my basement is an amino acid-derived experiment. I ran that experiment myself several times, which you might have mistaken for something else."
He lives in the middle of downtown Green Bay in a middle-class, residential neighborhood. By day, he’s an industrial chemist. After work, the single dad takes charge of his two children.
All of this makes it hard to believe that Preisler has been called the most dangerous man in America.
Under the name of Uncle Fester, Preisler writes books like “Home Workshop Explosvies” and “Silent Death,” which Preisler describes as “a how-to manual of chemical warfare.”
Preisler denies wanting to kill people; he say she just likes “the thrill of writing a book that skirts the edge and then maybe beyond, a book that offends.”
He claims his books are of little use to real-life terrorists. “Maniacs generally do not have too much between the ears,” he says. “They can pick up a book and they don’t get past the table of contents.”
At least one terrorist group did get past the table of contents. In 1995, members of a Japanese cult used sarin gas to kill 12 people in the Tokyo subway. In the investigation that followed, Uncle Fester’s book, with its chapter on sarin gas, was found amid the cult’s research materials.
“I’m rather sad that that happened,” says Preisler, who gets email from all over the world, “but I don’t feel responsibility for what they did. They’re the ones who did it.”
Shame I didn't date my neighborhood psycho. Imagine the thread I would have written.