Natasha Owens sings the Somali Walz
https://www.yout-ube.com/watch?v=LCqL8_9NOxg
Starring the b******-f*****, Easy Ilhan.
To: an amused spectator
To: an amused spectator
Their HQ has not moved, from what I can tell.
3 posted on
01/27/2026 9:36:53 PM PST by
ConservativeMind
(Trump: Befuddling Democrats, Republicans, and the Media for the benefit of the US and all mankind.)
To: an amused spectator
Transcript SummaryThe transcript is a narrative video script (likely from a conservative commentator or similar source) criticizing Minnesota's business climate, using Cargill as a prime example of a historic Minnesota company shifting investment and jobs away from the state due to high taxes and regulations.Key points from the transcript:- Cargill's history and importance: Founded in 1865 in Iowa, moved HQ to Minnesota in the 1870s. It's the largest private U.S. company, with ~160,000 employees in 70 countries, ~$154-160 billion annual revenue (figures vary slightly by year), and world HQ in Minnetonka/Wayzata, Minnesota. The Cargill family owns ~90%. It supports Minnesota agriculture by buying massive amounts of corn/soybeans from local farmers and paying hundreds of millions in wages.
- Recent investments in Minnesota: $60 million HQ renovation and $35 million in research centers (noted as older investments).
- Job cuts in Minnesota: 555 total in 1 year — 475 (announced Dec 2024, effective early 2025) + 80 (announced Oct 2025, effective Dec 2025) at the headquarters/office center. These are part of a global 5% workforce reduction (8,000 jobs worldwide) amid restructuring, lower commodity prices, and missed earnings goals. The transcript frames them as targeted cuts in Minnesota while growth occurs elsewhere.
- Shifting investments: Cargill built a new corn syrup refinery in Fort Dodge, Iowa; moved its protein group HQ to Wichita, Kansas; and expands operations in other states. Broader pattern: Minnesota companies (including Cargill) invested $4.6 billion in states like Florida, Indiana, Colorado, and Texas (2020-2022), contributing to a $6.6 billion net investment deficit (per Minnesota Chamber of Commerce report, based on fDi Markets data showing more outbound than inbound projects/jobs/capital).
- Blamed causes: Minnesota's 9.8% corporate income tax rate (highest in the U.S., per Tax Foundation rankings, where Minnesota ranks near the bottom for corporate taxes and overall business climate). High regulations, mandated programs, and 2023 tax increases (~$10 billion over 4 years despite surplus). Competitors like Iowa (cut to 5.5%), North Carolina (to 2.5%), and states with no corporate tax (e.g., Texas, Florida) are more attractive.
- Broader context: Cargill's CEO testified on competitiveness issues. Similar trends with other MN companies (e.g., Target, Best Buy, 3M layoffs; Medtronic HQ move). Site selectors reportedly avoid Minnesota for new projects due to taxes, labor issues, and climate.
Factual alignment (based on recent reports): The job cut numbers (475 + 80 = 555) match verified announcements from Cargill to Minnesota authorities, tied to industry-wide ag slump (low crop prices, etc.), not explicitly to taxes. The Chamber's 2023 report confirms the $6.6 billion deficit and outbound investments. Minnesota's corporate tax is indeed 9.8% (top marginal, highest or near-highest nationally in recent rankings). Some Cargill expansions (e.g., Iowa refinery in 2022, Kansas moves) are documented, though many U.S. investments span multiple states for operational reasons.
Overall message: The script argues Minnesota's high-tax, high-regulation policies are driving away homegrown success stories like Cargill, costing local jobs and investment, despite the company's continued presence and profitability. It portrays this as a policy failure harming workers and agriculture, contrasting with states that cut taxes to attract business.
To: an amused spectator
Medtronic and Seagate moved their HQs to Ireland. Honeywell, Burger King and Purina did so long ago.
But they still have Target.
7 posted on
01/27/2026 9:57:03 PM PST by
bigbob
(We are all Charlie Kirk now)
To: an amused spectator
just require they do not bring any dems to texas
17 posted on
01/28/2026 12:53:22 AM PST by
sten
(fighting tyranny never goes out of style)
To: an amused spectator
Panics? I doubt it. Just like the “panic” headline of an earlier Walmart closing 250 stores in California. I doubt anyone in state government is panicking.
22 posted on
01/28/2026 4:07:53 AM PST by
ripnbang
("An armed man is a citizen, an unarmed man, a subject.")
To: an amused spectator
So when will 3M move and what will they do with one of the Ms?
To: an amused spectator
“Mayor of Minneapolis PANICS After 155-Year-Old Company CHOOSES Texas Over Minnesota! [Cargill]”
more totally fake news ... seem to be a trend lately by the trolls on FR ... fake news posts should bring automatic 30-day timeouts ... more than one should lead to IBZ ...
24 posted on
01/28/2026 4:37:20 AM PST by
catnipman
((A Vote For The Lesser Of Two Evils Still Counts As A Vote For Evil))
To: an amused spectator
If the Moron, who was elected to govern, not to lead protesters and tell ICE they are UNWELCOME, maybe they would tell him that we'll be staying.
But, if you were Cargill, or any company, would you stay where you might get vandalized?
To: an amused spectator
Cargill is HUGE.
That’s gonna leave a mark.
30 posted on
01/28/2026 7:17:07 AM PST by
Uncle Miltie
(No American Blood for censorious socialist islamophiles!)
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