90 Miles From Tyranny

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Monday, July 8, 2013

Courage...


I Am Homeland Security...


Corrupt To The Core...


Morning Mistress


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Sunday, July 7, 2013

Blogs With Rule 5 Links



These Blogs Provide Links To Rule 5 Sites:


American Power has:

The Other McCain has:

The Pirate's Cove has:

Proof Positive has:

The Daley Gator has:

The Conservative Hideout 2.0 has:

The Reaganite Republican has:



DID I MISS YOUR RULE 5 LINK AROUND?
EMAIL YOUR LINK AROUND TO: 90NINETYMILES THIS WOULD BE AT GMAIL.
PROGRESSIVES WILL NEVER BE ABLE TO FIGURE THIS OUT.

What Do These Companies Have In Common?


Confronting Cowards...


British SAS back from a three month long patrol of North Africa, January 18, 1943


An Irrefutable Truth...


The Fabian Window

Fabian Window


The Fabian Society window was commissioned by George Bernard Shaw as a statement of intent. It shows him and Sidney Webb hammering the world into their chosen shape by manipulating the The Left At the bottom is Shaw thumbing his nose at the fools worshipping books on Socialism. They are Lenin's Useful Idiots The clearest pointer to Shaw's evil is the Wolf in Sheep's Clothing

QUOTE

This is the stained-glass window from the Beatrice Webb House in Surrey, England, former headquarters of the Fabian Society. It was designed by George Bernard Shaw and depicts Sidney Webb and Shaw striking the Earth with hammers to "REMOULD IT NEARER TO THE HEART'S DESIRE," a line from Omar Khayyam. Note the wolf in sheep's clothing in the Fabian crest above the globe. The window is now on display at the London School of Economics (LSE), which was founded by Sydney and Beatrice Webb.
"The window was subsequently stolen from the house in 1978," says LSE's archivist, Sue Donnelly. "It surfaced in Phoenix, Arizona, soon after, but then disappeared again until it suddenly resurfaced at a sale at Sotheby's in July 2005." Blair at windowThe window was purchased by the Webb Memorial Trust and now is on loan to the LSE where it is displayed in the schools Shaw Library. In April of 2006, the window was officially unvieled [ sic ] by a ceremony attended by British Prime Minister Tony Blair, who is a member of the Fabian Society. [1]
The Fabians originally were an elite group of intellectuals who formed a semi-secret society for the purpose of bringing socialism to the world. Whereas Communists wanted to establish socialism quickly through violence and revolution, the Fabians preferred to do it slowly through propaganda and legislation. The word socialism was not to be used. Instead, they would speak of benefits for the people such as welfare, medical care, higher wages, and better working conditions. In this way, they planned to accomplish their objective without bloodshed and even without serious opposition. They scorned the Communists, not because they disliked their goals, but because they disagreed with their methods. To emphasize the importance of gradualism, they adopted the turtle as the symbol of their movement. The three most prominent leaders in the early days were Sidney and Beatrice Webb and George Bernard Shaw. [2] A stained-glass window from the Beatrice Webb House in Surrey, England is especially enlightening. Across the top appears the last line from Omar Khayyam:
Dear love, couldst thou and I with fate conspire
To grasp this sorry scheme of things entire,
Would we not shatter it to bits, and then
Remould it nearer to the heart's desire!
Beneath the line Remould it nearer to the heart's desire, the mural depicts Shaw and Webb striking the earth with hammers. Across the bottom, the masses kneel in worship of a stack of books advocating the theories of socialism. Thumbing his nose at the docile masses is H.G. Wells who, after quitting the Fabians, denounced them as "the new Machiavellians." The most revealing component, however, is the Fabian crest which appears Between Shaw and Webb. It is a wolf in sheep's clothing!

Can it be any plainer? The BBC manages not to know or, more likely not to tell but then it is run by CommunistsTraitors, and Fabians.
File:Wolf sheeps clothing barlow.jpg
The Wikipedia version is from a woodcut by Francis Barlow, 1687; the end of "The Wolf in Sheep's Clothing"