1/ Quick comment about this statement from Dominion:
"Dominion has no company ownership relationships with any member of the Pelosi family, the Feinstein family, or the Clinton Global Initiative, Smartmatic, Scytl, or any ties to Venezuela." dominionvoting.com
2/ It's a lawyer's answer. Because we now know they left out a very interesting connection to the Democrat Party.
In 2018, they were bought by Staple Street, where board member William Kennard is one of the Democrats' most powerful movers and shakers.
3/ Kennard is a big bundler for Obama and the DNC (link below), was Obama's envoy to the EU, the FCC chairman under Clinton, and a key player behind the Democrats TTIP trade deal (later killed by Trump).
Kennard is as big as they get.
4/ So while Dominion bravely distanced themselves from non-stories like hiring a lobby firm which happened to have a former Pelosi staff member on board, they noticeably left out Mr Kennard.
An enjoyable history of ethnobotany by Dr. Mark Plotkin over at @tferriss site.
Except when he refers to the Great Plains as the traditional lands of the Kiowa. That's not true. The Kiowa originated in the mountains of BC and Montana.
2/ The constant war that characterized tribal cultures drove the Kiowa south until they arrived at the plains, where they found horses introduced by the Spanish.
The Kiowa quickly adapted to horseback and it was only then that they spread out onto the plains ...
3/ ... and began submitting other tribes.
So it seems even experts on traditional peoples seem to misunderstand what traditional really means.
Tribal cultures were constantly at war, always moving, invading and dying out. They rarely held the same land for long.
4. They claim climate change is a white crime that kills black people but they regularly fly around the world to collect speaking fees, accept awards in Australia and do hip-hop workshops in Cuba.
Kamala Harris' speeches are littered with complaints about unfairness in America. And you know what, she's right.
Because some people, like Kamala, were raised by successful professors in wealthy suburbs like Westmount in Montreal with regular holidays in India and Jamaica.
Then at just 29 years old, her married boyfriend Willie Brown named her to 3 important boards in California.
The Medical Assistance Commission alone paid her $70,000 a year to meet twice a month - and she still missed 20% of meetings.