>>11856956 LB
These are two different people testifying. First the immigrant than the IT worker.
>>11856956 LB
These are two different people testifying. First the immigrant than the IT worker.
Oh, quit the crap!
We are working to keep our republic! Who gives a crap what the q_Research logo looks like? GET A LIFE!!!
Hootan Yaghoobzadeh and Stephen D. Owens, both of Staple Street, are on the new Dominion board with Canadian founder, John Poulos. Both also have past ties to the Carlyle Group.
"Hootan Yaghoobzadeh
Managing Director/Co-Founder, Staple Street Capital
CURRENT POSITION
Managing Director/Co-Founder, Staple Street Capital
TENURE AT CURRENT POSITION
10/2009-PRESENT
PREVIOUS POSITION
Senior Vice President, Cerberus Capital Management
EDUCATION
Harvard Business School
Cornell University
BOARD MEMBERSHIPS
Ironline Compression Holdings Ltd
Aaroma Holdings LLC
INDUSTRY
Financial Services"
source: https://www.bloomberg.com/profile/person/19010314
Dominion site scrubs leadership…. it all goes down to CIA and former politicians.
"Carlyle Group is managed by a team of former US Gov personnel including its president Frank Carlucci, former deputy director of the CIA before becoming Defense Sec. His deputy is James Baker 3, who was US Sec of State under Bush sr.
"6 days after officially quitting Pentagon, 1-6-89, Frank Carlucci became Carlyles Dir Gen. He brought lieutenants from CIA, State Dept, and the Defense Dept with him."
source: Carlyle Group is managed by a team of former US Gov personnel including its president Frank Carlucci, former deputy director of the CIA before becoming Defense Sec. His deputy is James Baker 3, who was US Sec of State under Bush sr.
https://www.rightjournalism.com/images-the-owner-of-dominion-voting-systems-deleted-all-their-board-team-member-info-and-scrubbed-their-site-last-month-heres-why/
Please provide more of this information for digging.
Looked into Cambodia today:
Saw this: Sam Hancock
Tue, December 1, 2020, 11:42 AM CST·2 min read
A Cambodian woman decants rice wine into a water bottle for sale in Phnom Penh (AFP via Getty Images)
A Cambodian woman decants rice wine into a water bottle for sale in Phnom Penh (AFP via Getty Images)
A batch of rice wine, adulterated with a toxic substance, has killed seven people and hospitalised more than 130 others in Cambodia, officials have said.
Residents of a remote rural village in the central Kampong Chhnang province had gathered on Saturday at a funeral when the wine was drunk, according to Cambodia’s Health Ministry.
Officials believe the drink contained high levels of methanol, said ministry spokeswoman Or Vandine, which can be lethal even in small amounts.
Methanol is the simplest form of alcohol and is closely related to ethanol, the type of alcohol normally found in beer, wine and spirits "
https://news.yahoo.com/toxic-rice-wine-kills-7-174254085.html?guccounter=1&guce_referrer=aHR0cHM6Ly9zZWFyY2gueWFob28uY29tLw&guce_referrer_sig=AQAAAFWYdIIlTCubtFab4ZFpYXkeSqAGTMUAd4RhMks0S3Cn1czHSeFP4rX4HXYHugF4N-E-Ex9KJymJJg80IMq47pDpeNocE1iTuP0xebIm2Dggw5VNkSvnyh1ejrZjGhI4nRSeF1Vg2IF_D1OyM1DNrMUUAmF4ftCmQqQWSuMBck_F
Hillary recently challenges Cambodia
"PHNOM PENH, Cambodia – U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton on Monday urged Cambodia to confront its tortured past by ensuring the Khmer Rouge are brought to justice for crimes against humanity in the 1970s and improve its current human rights record.
In the capital of Phnom Penh, she visited a former school that served as the main Khmer Rouge prison and torture center and appealed for the Cambodian people and government to overcome a legacy of impunity for abuses. The government has refused to allow a U.N.-backed court trying top Khmer Rouge leaders to prosecute lower-ranking members.
Clinton toured the infamous S-21 prison where as many as 16,000 people were tortured before being executed for alleged counterrevolutionary behavior. The ultra-leftist Khmer Rouge regime is blamed for the deaths of some 1.7 million people from starvation, disease, overwork and execution during its 1975-79 reign.
"It's a very disturbing experience and the pictures both the pictures of the young Cambodians who were killed and the young Cambodians who were doing the killing were so painful," she told students after the tour. "But I also came away very impressed because a country that is able to confront its past is a country that can overcome it."
Sauce: https://www.foxnews.com/world/hillary-clinton-urges-cambodia-to-bring-khmer-rouge-to-justice