Google has released the latest version of Chrome, 90, to the stable channel. It's starting to roll out via the Play Store and via your desktop browser's built-in update tool right now, but if you're particularly impatient to get your hands on the newest release as soon as possible, we've got you covered.

Just download the latest version, and follow the instructions HERE. Once you'll have the app installed, navigate to the launcher (Preferences > Extensions) and enable the Flash Privacy extension.

With this extension you can add the green "Snow Leopard" (at the top of the full list) to every Firefox profile. It will block third-party Flash content on your computer (and the extension will work for you). You'll know if Flash can be blocked when a "Do Not track" warning message appears when you type the URL directly.

Also, thanks to last Thursday's announcement by Mozilla about supporting content from Google on notebooks, many Android users will be able to interface with Chrome via Google Play. Remember the "Chrome for Android" app, that was recently removed from the Play Store.

CONGRESSMAN Ted Cruz's call for Paul Ryan to "step aside" over the Ghazala Khan matter would be dismissed as yet another Republican brown-nosing by the mainstream media, if not by many on the left.

The fight started with Khan's speech at the Democratic National Convention, in which the gold-medal-winner said hers was a heroism of dignity and Muslim heroism of compassion over Islamic innuendo. Apparently, not many on the left want the GOP to have the third party ideology that is not only incoherent, but inspires no votes at all.

Some cite Trump's venture into reality TV as a good-odds proposition, but second guess that what "make America great again" actually means. They don't admire strong leaders in flyover country, but might appreciate that we have elected a conservative president.

This unwillingness to denounce Trump is but a reason these seizures of verbal maneuvers inches the Paul Ryan agenda further toward oblivion.

A 'War on Drugs' in video games comes into question with Fox TV Network Investigating on Oct 9th 8:00pm at 11

A time bomb threatens to detonate during a debate on the War on Drugs in the United States.

"Narcotics such as methamphetamine and steroids are considered part of the 'War on Drugs' used by the United States to target and eliminate drug trafficking organizations," Oliver Rozenberg reports for Future Tense. "So-called 'meth wars' between drug cartels and law enfophobes have strayed far from the country's actual tragedies. Mobile gamers are some of the most inflammatory activists on the issue."

Sid Meier's Civilization V (note
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