90 Miles From Tyranny

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Wednesday, August 12, 2020

Winning In The Supermarket....



My YouTube Channel:

Girls With Guns


Problem? What Problem?



When An Endorsement Tells You Everything Your Need To Know...


The Name Of Death And Destruction.

When No-one Knew Who You Were Until You Got On Your Knees...


Sittin' like a princess perched in her electric chair...




When I think of those east end lights
Muggy nights the curtains drawn
In the little room downstairs
Prima donna Lord you really should have been there
Sittin' like a princess perched in her electric chair
And it's one more beer and I don't hear you anymore
We've all gone crazy lately
My friend's out there rolling 'round the basement floor


Knife-Wielding Man Arrested In Stabbing Reported To Be Suspect In Berkeley Assault On Conservative






  • Zachary Greenberg, 30, allegedly stabbed a man riding his bike in Princeton, California on Sunday.
  • The suspect is reported to be the same man who was arrested for assaulting a conservative activist last year.
Authorities in California arrested 30-year-old Zachary Greenberg on Sunday, who, as one local newspaper reported, is also the man accused of punching a conservative activist in the face on the campus of the University of California-Berkeley in 2019.

According to the San Mateo County Sheriff's Office, Greenberg allegedly stabbed a man because he was riding his bike on the sidewalk.

The victim suffered multiple stab wounds by the time police arrived at around 6:40 p.m. and arrested Greenberg.

The San Mateo County Sheriff's Office said it found a four-inch folding knife at the scene, which they believe was the weapon used in the attack.

Greenberg has been charged with assault with a deadly weapon.

A mugshot provided to Campus Reform by the San Mateo County Sheriff's Office appears to be the same man who was arrested last year for punching former Leadership Institute Field Representative Hayden Williams in the face while he was at the University of California-Berkeley helping conservative students recruit members for their Turning Point USA chapter.

The Half Moon Bay Review reported the stabbing suspect is the same man who punched Williams at Berkeley last year.

Greenberg's trial for the incident at UC-Berkeley is ongoing.


Williams' attorney, Harmeet Dhillon, responded to the news on Twitter, calling out Alameda County District Attorney Nancy O'Malley.

"If @NancyOMalleyDA1’s office had actually pursued @HaydenTWilliams’ attacker last spring after charging him, would he have been free to stab this bicyclist? Zackery [sic] Greenberg attacked someone again yesterday (in Half Moon Bay) & is already out on bail."

The San Mateo County Sheriff's Office said it was not aware of Greenberg's previous charges and did not confirm whether Greenberg is currently...

The Changing Crime Rate In Democrat Cities...



When You Flee The Crime Rate, Understand That YOU Caused This By Voting For Democrats.

The death of New York? Business leaders warn of downward spiral as chains like JC Penney, Neiman Marcus, Le Pain Quotidien and Subway permanently close Manhattan branches after mayor's pandemic bungling sees mass exodus



  • Business leaders warn that NYC is facing a crisis of historic proportions
  • Pandemic, lockdowns and soaring crime have prompted mass exodus
  • Many retail chains have permanently closed branches in Manhattan
  • Job listings in the city have plunged 36% from last year, and rents are falling
  • Hundreds of thousands have left the city as remote work stretches into months
  • Many say they will never return, and there are fears recovery could take years

An ongoing mass exodus of residents and businesses from New York City has led some to suggest that the damage to the city's economy could last for years or decades to come.

'There's no reason to do business in New York,' said Michael Weinstein, the chief executive of Ark Restaurants, which owns Bryant Park Grill & Cafe in Manhattan and 19 other restaurants, in an interview with the New York Times.

After months of harsh lockdowns and amid soaring violent crime in the city, Weinstein said he will never open another restaurant in New York.

'I can do the same volume in Florida in the same square feet as I would have in New York, with my expenses being much less. The idea was that branding and locations were important, but the expense of being in this city has overtaken the marketing group that says you have to be there,' he said.

People wearing face masks are seen at Times Square amid the coronavirus pandemic on Sunday in New York. There are increasing signs the city is in a downward spiral

Though precise numbers are hard to come by, hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers have moved out of the city since the pandemic erupted there in mid-March.

Though the viral spread has slowed to a snail's pace in the city, the exodus continues, as lockdown restrictions strip much of the joy out of big city life, and continuing remote work makes relocating feasible for white collar workers.

Violent crime has also soared, with shooting incidents across the city up 177 percent in July compared to last year.

Murders were up 59 percent for the month, burglaries rose 31 percent, and auto thefts increased 53 percent.

The city that never slept is now an eerie ghost town after dark, the empty streets of lower Manhattan punctuated by caravans of NYPD vehicles racing from one incident to the next.

Subway trains, which for decades ran 24-hours, now shut down at...

The Sweet Little Willie...



Way past one and feeling alright
'Cause with little Willy 'round they can last all night
Hey down, stay down, stay down down


New State memos disclose relentless pressure by Hunter Biden-connected Ukrainian firm









Key Senate chairman vows subpoena after documents provided to Just the News under FOIA, but not Senate investigators.

The Ukrainian natural gas firm that appointed Vice President Joe Biden's son Hunter to a lucrative board seat relentlessly pressured the State Department throughout the 2016 election in an effort to get corruption allegations against it dropped and its badly damaged reputation rehabilitated, newly released government memos show.

"They keep trying through every channel they can," a State Department official lamented in summer 2016, describing a nonstop lobbying campaign by Burisma Holdings and its American representatives.

The memos, released to Just the News under a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit assisted by the Southeastern Foundation, add new significance to a long-running Senate investigation into the Bidens' activities and perceived conflicts of interest in Ukraine.

For instance, they show far more contact between Burisma and the U.S. embassy in Kiev than was acknowledged by witnesses during President Trump's impeachment proceedings earlier this year. One issue in that trial was the more than $3 million Hunter Biden's firm collected from Burisma while his father supervised Ukraine policy for President Obama.

The memos obtained by Just the News also were withheld from Senate investigators, who learned of their existence from...

A riddle, wrapped in a mystery, inside an enigma, surrounded by dementia...