90 Miles From Tyranny

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Thursday, November 27, 2014

Bug Out Location Porn




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1912, Franz Reichelt fell to his death after jumping off the Eiffel Tower in order to test his parachute.


This just in, the parachute did not open due to Climate Change. Oh the humanity.

More Amazing Animated Gifs HERE

Remember Purple Penguins, Never Use The Term "Looter", They Are Undocumented Shoppers..


If we just give them unlimited EBT cards, this would not happen.

The Stupidity Is Strong With This One...


Empowerment Series: Women With Weapons #14


Empowerment Series: Women With Weapons #13

Two New York Times Reporters Posted Darren Wilson’s Home Address. Look Here To See THEIR Home Addresses.

Since the Grand Jury verdict in Ferguson, there have been riots, looting, assaults, guns fired and cars and businesses burned to the ground. Meanwhile, all the criminals and thugs doing this are baying for policeman Darren Wilson’s blood because they don’t like the fact he had his day in court and evidence wasn’t strong enough to bring the case to trial. So, in this violent environment, when the life of Darren Wilson and his new wife are in danger, the New York Times is attempting to impose the death penalty on him via newspaper by publishing his home address.

It was a disgusting, despicable, immoral act and the two reporters responsible, Julie Bosman and Campbell Robertson, deserve to lose their careers over what they did. Of course, this is the New York Times, so they’re unlikely to pay any sort of penalty. Still, I thought they deserved to pay a price.

Well, it turns out researcher extraordinaire Charles Johnson felt the same way. He acquired the home addresses of both reporters and posted them at Gotnews.
New York Times reporters Julie Bosman and Campbell Robertson published the address of Darren Wilson in the New York Times so here are their addresses.
…It would be wrong, for example, to publish Bosman’s address at
5620 N WAYNE AVE APT 2
CHICAGO, IL 60660-4204
COOK COUNTY
It would be similarly wrong to publish the address of Robertson, too.


The Tech Worker Shortage Is A Lie To Reduce American Wages..

Along with temporary deportation relief for millions, President Obama’s executive action will increase the number of U.S. college graduates from abroad who can temporarily be hired by U.S. corporations. That hasn’t satisfied tech companies and trade groups, which contend more green cards or guest worker visas are needed to keep tech industries growing because of a shortage of qualified American workers. But scholars say there’s a problem with that argument: The tech worker shortage doesn’t actually exist.

“There’s no evidence of any way, shape, or form that there’s a shortage in the conventional sense,” says Hal Salzman, a professor of planning and public policy at Rutgers University. “They may not be able to find them at the price they want. But I’m not sure that qualifies as a shortage, any more than my not being able to find a half-priced TV.”

For a real-life example of ....

FACEBOOK CAN'T CITE EVIDENCE TO SUPPORT CLAIMS OF U.S. TECH WORKER SHORTAGE

Facebook, which has spent millions trying to get
massive amnesty legislation that would include huge increases in the number of guest-worker permits that would lower the wages of tech workers, cannot cite any definitive evidence pointing to a shortage of American high-tech workers.


The fact that a mainstream media outlet questioned the company about those claims may say as much as Facebook's refusal to provide evidence of the so-called shortage.

A funny thing has happened since tech industry scholars wondered why the the mainstream media were giving the high-tech industry a "free pass" on claims that there is a dire shortage of American high-tech workers.

Mainstream media outlets like CBS have started to finally examine and question those claims. And now even the pro-business Businessweek is not giving the industry a free pass.

In an article titled, "The Tech Worker Shortage Doesn't Exist," Businessweek cited some of the leading experts on the subject, like Rutgers University public policy professor Hal Salzman, who said that "there's no evidence of any way, shape, or form that there’s a shortage in the conventional sense"--meaning that when the tech industry claims there is a shortage, it just wants cheaper labor.

When Businessweek asked Facebook for evidence to counter all of the evidence against its claims of a dire shortage of American high-tech workers, a spokesman reportedly responded with a one-sentence statement: “We look forward to hearing more specifics about the President’s plan and how it will impact the skills gap that threatens the competitiveness of the tech sector.”

As Businesweek noted, Salzman, as he has done in numerous reports, pointed out that when the supply of...