Anonymous ID: fa7dc1 Nov. 30, 2018, 7:45 p.m. No.4094011   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4113

>>4093955

“An Evening With The Clintons” Tour Dates:

11/18 – Las Vegas, NV @ Park Theater

11/27 – Toronto, ON @ Scotiabank Arena

11/28 – Montreal, QC @ Bell Centre

12/04 – Sugar Land, TX @ Smart Financial Center

Anonymous ID: fa7dc1 Nov. 30, 2018, 8:03 p.m. No.4094511   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>4094363

This is nothing new for Feinstein, and those who are at the hands of Red China know it. Harry Wu, who spent 19 years in the Chinese Gulag and dedicated his life to exposing the Communists' human rights abuses, said in a 2001 interview:

 

Congress gave me nice support — Sens. Helms and Paul Wellstone of Minnesota. When I met Sen. Wellstone, he said, "Harry, I don’t need a brief — just tell me what you want me to do." But they were only some of the senators. Others took a stand for communist China based on family or business interests. For example, Sen. Diane Feinstein (D-Calif.), her husband is a board member of COSCO [The PLA’s Chinese Overseas Shipping Corporation] and he has other investments in China. You see, this is the kind of person [Feinstein] who is never interested in my work.

 

In 2010, Taipei-based reporter Jens Kastler wrote in Asia Times:

 

No US politician is believed to enjoy ties to China’s previous and present-day leaderships as close as Feinstein. During 30 years of frequent visits to Beijing, Feinstein developed friendships with Chinese officials as high-ranking as former president Jiang Zemin, former premier Zhu Rongji and Chongqing Party Secretary Bo Xilai – now arguably a rising political star in the country.

 

Controversially, on most of her trips to China, Feinstein has been accompanied by her investment-banker husband Richard Blum, to whom Feinstein has been married since 1980. Blum has been reported by US media as having extensive business interests with China. Feinstein is often described as one of the most powerful women in US politics.

 

Most outrageously:

 

Apart from this, the strong proponent of closer US-China ties held a speech on the 21st anniversary of the 1989 crackdown in Tiananmen Square. Feinstein commented on the bloody protests in a way that strongly implied that she plays the role of being Beijing’s mouthpiece.

 

In an interview with the Wall Street Journal published June 6 [2010], the senator sought to explain the killing of hundreds of reportedly unarmed demonstrators by the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) into relations in a way that put the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) leaders of that era into a favorable light. “It just so happens I was here after that and talked to Jiang Zemin and learned that at the time China had no local police. It was just the PLA. And no local police that had crowd control. So, hence the tanks.”

 

This wasn’t the first time Feinstein had outraged China’s dissidents and international human-rights activists. In the past, the California Democrat demanded the creation of a commission that would study the evolution of human rights in both the U.S. and China. The panel “would point out the success and failures [of] both Tiananmen Square and Kent State,” referring the incident in which four students were killed by Ohio National Guard gunfire during a 1970 anti-war demonstration.

 

(The Tiananmen Square massacre was a government-approved act of official mass murder. It was not “just the PLA” – it was ordered by the Politburo a month before the massacre. And Feinstein would have known it by 2010; the account of a dissenting Politburo member was published in The New York Times in 2009.)

 

Why should anyone be surprised that Feinstein had a Red Chinese spy on her staff? Given her fondness for what The New York Times once called the "Butchers of Beijing," it's a wonder how she ever served on the Senate Intelligence Committee at all, much less as its chairman.

https://www.dailywire.com/news/34069/report-dianne-feinstein-and-butchers-beijing-spyridon-mitsotakis