90 Miles From Tyranny

infinite scrolling

Monday, December 9, 2019

'I hear he's found plenty': Trump says Giuliani will give report on Ukraine findings to Congress









President Trump claimed that his personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani will give a report on findings from a recent trip to Ukraine to Congress and the Department of Justice.

Speaking to reporters on Saturday, the president said that a recent trip to Ukraine by Giuliani was fruitful and that the former tough-on-crime New York City mayor was "going to make a report, I think to the attorney general and to Congress. He says he has a lot of good information."

Trump said he did not know the nature of Giuliani's findings and had not been briefed on the trip but indicated that there was significance to the information. "I hear he's found plenty," the president said, careful not to elaborate further. Trump has denied that Giuliani's trip to Ukraine was at his directive. "No, I didn't direct him, but he's a warrior," he said in November.

As the House prepares to draft articles of impeachment against the president, Giuliani has increased his efforts to determine whether Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden and his son Hunter Biden were guilty of corrupt practices in Ukraine. Last month, Giuliani claimed his mission was "concerning 2016 Ukrainian collusion and corruption" and to defend his client against "false charges."

Joe Biden has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing during his time as...

Daily Beast: Tom Steyer Is Running a Donor Scam

Brutal.

That's the way to sum up the Daily Beast description of wealthy Democrat candidate for president, Tom Steyer. The purpose of their Saturday article by David De La Fuente was to shame the Democrats into including "candidates of color' at their next presidential debate but a big take away from the story was that it basically described Steyer as a scam artist.

Not only were Democrats in general shamed in "Democrats Must Not Have an All-White Debate—and the White Candidates Should Say So" but what really stood out was the brutal slamming of Tom Steyer. Before we look at why De La Fuente is upset about the possible makeup of the next Democrat debate, let's get right to him verbally slapping Steyer around mercilessly:
Maybe there is an argument to be made for a smaller debate stage at some point, but the DNC has set up criteria that allows a billionaire to buy his spot while excluding serious candidates with a following and something to say.

And while we’re on the subject of Tom Steyer, he has spent $47 million of his own money in what amounts to a scam. Since he needs donors only to meet the DNC’s bizarre debate criteria, he has essentially purchased his donor base, through tactics such as selling $1 swag with free shipping—usually items worth far more than $1—that has nothing to do with him or his presidential campaign.
Ouch! But wait...there's MORE!
Why should he be allowed to “sell” a button about climate change or opposing Donald Trump for $1 and use that as some kind of indicia of popular support? He has also blanketed early states with enough TV ads and fancy mail to get his name identification up to the point that just enough people might utter it to a pollster because they recognize it.

Former Mayor Mike Bloomberg is eschewing debates thus far, but with his $52 billion in net worth it’s not hard to imagine clever ways for him to meet future DNC debate thresholds.

A debate stage that lets a white billionaire like Steyer buy his spot but excludes substantive candidates of color like Booker and Castro is neither democratic nor representative of the Democratic Party.
De La Fuente urges the all white qualifying Democrat candidates to boycott the next debate unless the "candidates of color" are allowed on the stage even if it means including the one candidate he doesn't like who has actually displayed some diversity of thought by criticizing Hillary Clinton, namely Tulsi Gabbard who unlike either Booker or Castro is now just one poll away from...

Morning Mistress

The 90 Miles Mystery Video: Nyctophilia Edition #133



Before You Click On The "Read More" Link, 

Please Only Do So If You Are Over 21 Years Old.

If You are Easily Upset, Triggered Or Offended, This Is Not The Place For You.  

Please Leave Silently Into The Night......

The 90 Miles Mystery Box: Episode #830


You have come across a mystery box. But what is inside? 
It could be literally anything from the serene to the horrific, 
from the beautiful to the repugnant, 
from the mysterious to the familiar.

If you decide to open it, you could be disappointed, 
you could be inspired, you could be appalled. 

This is not for the faint of heart or the easily offended. 
You have been warned.

Hot Pick Of The Late Night

Sunday, December 8, 2019

Girls With Guns

On Restoring The Constitution....


How The Nadler Stole The Constitution...




Till The Bullet Hit The Bone...



Evil Intentions...


In wake of Shutterstock’s Chinese censorship, American companies need to relearn American values






It’s among the most iconic images of the last few decades — a picture of an unknown man standing before a line of tanks during the protests in 1989 in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square. In just one shot, the photographer, Jeff Widener, managed to convey a society struggling between the freedoms of individual citizens and the heavy hand of the Chinese militarized state.

It’s also an image that few within China’s “great firewall” have access to, let alone see. For those who have read 1984, it can almost seem as if “Tank Man” was dropped into a memory hole, erased from the collective memory of more than a billion people.

By now, it’s well-known that China’s search engines like Baidu censor such political photography. Regardless of the individual morality of their decisions, it’s at least understandable that Chinese companies with mostly Chinese revenues would carefully hew to the law as set forth by the Chinese Communist Party. It’s a closed system after all.

What we are learning though is that it isn’t just Chinese companies that are aiding and abetting this censorship. It’s Western companies too. And Western workers aren’t pleased that they are working to enforce the anti-freedom policies in the Middle Kingdom.

Take Shutterstock, which has come under great fire for complying with China’s great firewall. As Sam Biddle described in The Intercept last month, the company has been riven internally between workers looking to protect democratic values, and a business desperate to expand further in one of the world’s most dynamic countries. From Biddle:
Shutterstock’s censorship feature appears to have been immediately controversial within the company, prompting more than 180 Shutterstock workers to sign a petition against the search blacklist and accuse the company of trading its values for access to the lucrative Chinese market.
Those petitions have allegedly gone nowhere internally, and that has led employees like Stefan Hayden, who describes nearly ten years of experience at the company as a frontend developer on his LinkedIn profile, to resign: The challenge of these political risks is hardly unknown to Shutterstock. The company’s most recent annual financial filing with the SEC lists market access and censorship as a key risk for...