Tuesday, June 25, 2024

Tuesday Tidings

On a warm partly sunny Tuesday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, according to a poll, Republican support for same-sex marriage has greatly decreased during the past two years.

From FrontpageMag, Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg's double standards.

From Townhall, the gag order imposed on former President Trump is partially lifted.

From The Washington Free Beacon, with help from Senator Socialism (I-VT) and congresscritter AOC (D-NY), congresscritter Jamaal Bowman (D-NY) campaigns in the South Bronx, which is not even in his district.

From the Washington Examiner, "I'm melting!"

From The Federalist, the corporate media vilify Judge Aileen Cannon for doing her job.

From American Thinker, an article from the Associated Press about infant mortality in Texas inspires science denial.

From MRCTV, many notable people celebrate the plea deal given to Australian journalist Julian Assange and his resulting freedom.

From NewsBusters, according to MSNBC analyst Eugene Robinson, President Biden will have a "massive victory" if he can "remain upright" during his upcoming debate with Trump.

From Canada Free Press, Biden's contempt for American liberty is exposed by his smirk.

From TeleSUR, police officers from Kenya arrive in Haiti and generate controversy.

From TCW Defending Freedom, when it comes to Russia, one author would rather listen to former europarliamentcritter Nigel Farage than to former U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson.

From EuroNews, according to Slovak State Secretary of the Defence Ministry Igor Melicher, two officials of the previous government broke the law by donating MiG29 fighter jets to Ukraine.

From Voice Of Europe, French President Emmanuel Macron sparks outrage by talking about a possible "civil war".  (If you read French, read the story at Le Figaro.)

From ReMix, while visiting China, Polish President Andrzej Duda presents Chinese President Xi Jinping a proposal for ending Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

From Balkan Insight, an Albanian appeals court upholds the vote-buying conviction of Himara mayor-elect Fredi Beleri, an ethnic Greek.

From The North Africa Post, the U.N. is urged to send international observers to monitor human rights in the Tindouf camps in Algeria.

From The New Arab, Hamas denies reports that its political bureau is relocating to Iraq.

From The Jerusalem Post, a 12-year-old rape victim was reportedly told to convert to Islam by her attackers.

From Arutz Sheva, a report from the terrorist rally outside a synagogue in Los Angeles.  (AS was experiencing some technical difficulties a while back, but the site is now working again.)

From Gatestone Institute, the White House worries about the upcoming speech by Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu.

From The Stream, Mike Rowe of Dirty Jobs releases a historical docudrama in time for Independence Day.

From The Daily Signal, according to his speechwriter, today's conservatives get some things wrong about President Ronald Reagan.

From The American Conservative, the U.S. has become even more like the old Soviet Union than conservative commentator Niall Ferguson thinks.

From The Western Journal, CNN offers an unconvincing statement after booting Trump spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt from the air.

From BizPac Review, comedian Adam Carolla decides to leave California, "pile of [bleep]" Governor Gavin Newsom (D).

From The Daily Wire, a new database tracks the "Bidenvasion crime wave".

From the Daily Caller, Biden aides are reportedly training him on how to "trigger" Trump during their debate.

From the New York Post, the House Oversight Committee demands that the group behind anti-Israel encampments reveals the source of its funding.

From Breitbart, the aforementioned Nigel Farage wins the Television and Radio Industries Club's best news presenter award for the second straight year.

From Newsmax, as noted in an op-ed from The New York Times, not even one of the Fortune 100 CEOs has donated any money to Trump's campaign.

And from the Genesius Times, a Colorado-based illegal immigration advocate gets angry when someone cuts in line at a Starbucks.

Monday, June 24, 2024

Monday Links

On a warm and sunny Monday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, an anti-Israel mob attacks a Jewish woman near a synagogue in Los Angeles.

From FrontpageMag, be very afraid of California Governor Gavin Newsom (D).

From Townhall, CNN contributor Van Jones explains why the coalition created by then-President Obama is now falling apart.

From The Washington Free Beacon, the Biden administration claims to have approved more oil drilling permits than the Trump administration did, but its own numbers say otherwise.

From the Washington Examiner, three things which Chicago is trying to address before the Democrats arrive for their convention.

From The Federalist, former President Trump's biggest debate opponent is not President Biden, but the media.

From American Thinker, in 24 hours, battery plants catch fire in South Korea and Scotland.

From MRCTV, over half of the Jesuit colleges in the U.S. promote "Pride Month".

From NewsBusters, watch out for shenanigans by CNN debate moderators Jake Tapper and Dana Bash.

From Canada Free Press, what led to America's civil wars.

From TeleSUR, 20 Peruvian soldiers are investigated for allegedly trying to murder citizens at protests in 2022.

From TCW Defending Freedom, British politician Nigel Farage is punished for telling the truth about Ukraine.

From Snouts in the Trough, the lying and useless Tories will blame U.K. voters for their upcoming debacle.

From EuroNews, according to its foreign policy chief Josep Borrell, the E.U. will bypass Hungary in sending €1.4 billion to Ukraine.

From Voice Of Europe, the E.U. adopts its 14th package of sanctions against Russia.  (I believe that I might have asked this before, and I'll probably ask it again.  When was the last time sanctions produced their intended result?)

From ReMix, Islamic terrorists destroy a church, a synagogue, and a police station in the Russian autonomous republic of Dagestan.

From Balkan Insight, a mass grave is discovered near Vukovar, Croatia.

From The North Africa Post, could Casablanca, Morocco and Madrid, Spain be connected by undersea rail by 2030?

From The New Arab, huge piles of waste in Gaza could create a health crisis.

From The Jerusalem Post, the Iranian judiciary sentences five converts to Christianity to a total of 25 years in prison.

From Allah's Willing Executioners, six Jewish children are attacked after leaving a cinema in Levallois, France.  (If you read French, read the story at Valeurs Actuelles.)

From the Daily Mail, more on the terror attack in Dagestan.

From Gatestone Institute, Hezbollah is allegedly storing Iranian-made armaments at Rafic Hariri International airport, which is the main civilian airport for Beirut, Lebanon.

From The Stream, presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (I) is right in that NATO should be disbanded, because it has turned into a suicide pact.

From The Daily Signal, according to Scientific American, parents who homeschool their children should undergo background checks.

From The American Conservative, the conviction of First Son Hunter Biden on gun-related charges is an act of misdirection.

From The Western Journal, CNN pulls Trump spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt off the air for telling the truth about debate moderator Jake Tapper.

From BizPac Review, Foo Fighters singer/guitarist Dave Grohl takes a jab at singer Taylor Swift by telling her that his band actually plays live.

From the Daily Mail, Dr. Anthony Fauci, now retired from the federal government, still gets a taxpayer-funded security detail.  (via BizPac Review)

From The Daily Wire, here's where the pro-life movement stands on the second anniversary of the end of Roe v. Wade.

From the Daily Caller, Fox News host Harris Faulkner corrects former congresscritter Patrick Murphy (D-PA) after he claimed that the coronavirus pandemic caused the inflation during Biden's term as president.  (When Biden took office on January 20, 2021 he inherited inflation of about 1.4 percent from Trump.  At that time, the pandemic had already been going on for a year.  This means that if the pandemic caused inflation, it should have already been high during 2020 when Trump as in office.)

From the New York Post, according to a study by Harvard University, housing costs are at all-time highs.

From Breitbart, legendary NCAA football coach Lou Holtz tells men to stay out of women's sports.

From Newsmax, according to a poll, Biden leads Trump among young voters.

And from The Babylon Bee, Trump prepares for his debate with Biden by visiting a nursing home and arguing with dementia patients.

Sunday, June 23, 2024

A Sasquatch's Dozen For Sunday

As the high temperatures continue but the clouds return, here are 12 things going on:

From The Jerusalem Post, two planes that were supposed to fly from Lithuania to either Sri Lanka or the Philippines instead land in Iran.

From Jewish News Syndicate, parts of the "humanitarian pier" built for bringing aid into Gaza wash up at a beach in Tel Aviv, Israel.

From Allah's Willing Executioners, a man shouts "Allahu akbar" and beats up people in a church in Bourg-en-Bresse, France.  (If you read French, read the story at Le Progrès and FDeSouche.)

From Gatestone Institute, the Palestinian plan for "the day after" in Gaza was to kill more Jews and to wipe Israel off the map.

From The Stream, a review of the latest book from Victor Davis Hanson.

From The American Conservative, the war on terror, launched by then-President George Bush the Younger, has been hamstringing U.S. foreign policies ever since.

From TCW Defending Freedom, the unforgivably ignorance behind "net zero" policies.

From American Thinker, the fact-checking site Snopes finally gets around to fact-checking the "very fine people" false accusation against then-President Trump.

From The Washington Free Beacon, a review of a book about the late Senator (D-Min)/Vice President Hubert Humphrey.

From Townhall, why pro-abortion Democrats are trying to overhaul a 150-year-old law.

From the New York Post, an Arab family allegedly attacks a Jewish couple at an elementary school's fifth grade graduation ceremony in Brooklyn, New York.  (via National Review)

And from Voice Of Europe, the two Koreas might take sides in the war between Russia and Ukraine.

Saturday, June 22, 2024

Saturday Stuff

On a hot Saturday that might set a record high for its date, here are some things going on:

From National Review, the University of Southern California decides against disciplining a Jewish professor who criticized Hamas while walking past anti-Israel protesters.

From FrontpageMag, imposing an apparently permanent gag order against former President Trump, and could it be done to others?

From Townhall, New York City Mayor Eric Adams (D) insists that the U.S. "needs" illegal aliens.  (To be fair, he did not use the term "illegal aliens", but I use it because it's the truthful term for such people.  I can only wonder about the legal immigrants that we normally take in and why they can't fulfill whatever needs that Adams might be referring to.)

From The Washington Free Beacon, Trump and President Biden will soon debate foreign policy.

From the Washington Examiner, Texas National Guard soldiers fire pepper balls to deter illegal migrants.

From American Thinker, former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo (D) attacks the lawfare against Trump and Biden's immigration policies.  (Yes, you read that right.  Cuomo is siding with Trump and against Biden on these two respective issues.)

From NewsBusters, billionaire Jeff Bezos owns The Washington Post, but left-wing activists won't let him run it the way he sees fit.

From TCW Defending Freedom, the global tyranny, from Darwin to Orwell.

From Snouts in the Trough, U.K. politician Nigel Farage (Reform) is again lambasted for telling the truth.

From The Times Of Israel, Palestinians workers in the West Bank are in despair after 8 months of not being able to go to work - in Israel.  (If Israel is oppressing the Palestinians, wouldn't providing jobs be a strange way to oppress them?  I though that oppressing people would involve denying them jobs.)

From The Jerusalem Post, for the second time in a week, an Israeli citizen is killed while entering Kalkilya, West Bank.  (The city's name can also be spelled "Qalqilya".)

From Gatestone Institute, Iran "drastically" speeds up its nuclear program, as the U.S. does nothing about it.

From The Stream, get rid of sanctuary laws.

From The Daily Signal, adversity leads to triumph for WNBA rookie Caitlin Clark.

From The American Conservative, Senator Rand Paul (R-KY) was right about the coronavirus.  (Paul is a licensed physician specializing in ophthalmology.)

From The Western Journal, according to a poll, Trump could win in a landslide.

And from the New York Post, when a cop gives you some advice, you might want to take it seriously.  (via BizPac Review)

Friday, June 21, 2024

Friday Fuss

On a hot and sunny Friday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, the Supreme Court rules that people accused of domestic abuse can be legally prevented from having guns.

From Frontpage, the reality behind the effort to "regulate" home schooling.

From Townhall, according to an opinion column, President Biden's executive amnesty is "illegal, unjust and self-defeating".

From The Washington Free Beacon, independent voters are the key to the 2024 presidential election.

From the Washington Examiner, the Pentagon is sued over the deletion of the motto "duty, honor, country".

From The Federalist, the Supreme Court ruling that U.S. citizens do not have a constitutional right to bring their non-citizen spouses into the country looks bad for Biden's amnesty for illegal alien spouses.

From American Thinker, former President Trump's proposal for "no tax on tips" shows the great divide between left and right.

From MRCTV, Biden quietly allowed over a million illegal aliens into the U.S. by parole or app programs.  (If you want to illegally enter the U.S., there's an app for that.)

From NewsBusters, TV host Stephen Colbert objects to a study showing that male gun owners are not trying to compensate for anything.

From Canada Free Press, the Vatican summons Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò to Rome over the alleged crime of schism.

From TeleSUR, heavy rains in Central America affect over 7,000 people.

From TCW Defending Freedom, the Reform party is the only option for people of the U.K.

From Snouts in the Trough, the "stupid" U.K. Supreme Court will bring the country back to the stone age.

From EuroNews, could former Italian Prime Minister Enrico Letta be French President Emmanuel Marcon's secret weapon against current Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni?

From Voice Of Europe, according to Ukrainian Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko, Ukraine and the E.U. are discussing the potential repatriation of Ukrainian men who illegally entered the E.U.  (Such men could be both military service dodgers and illegal aliens.)

From ReMix, former Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babiš pulls his europarliamentcritters out of the liberal Renew group.

From Balkan Insight, according to the E.U. Anti-Fraud Office, Albania misused €33 million.

From The North Africa Post, according to Finance Minister Nadia Fettah Alaoui, Morocco plans to reduce its public debt to less than 70 percent of its GDP.

From The New Arab, Hamas laughs at the idea that Qatar would impose sanctions on them.

From Gatestone Institute, after California legalized marijuana, the Mexican cartels took it over.

From The Stream, don't you love paying off other people's student loans, with their gratitude going not to you but to the Big Guy?

From The Daily Signal, your share of the U.S. debt is now $100,000.

From The American Conservative, how congresscritter Byron Donalds's (R-FL) star has risen.

From The Western Journal, Democrats prepare an authoritarian crackdown for their convention in Chicago, and the locals will pay the price.

From BizPac Review, a dean at Harvard University doesn't want its leaders and policies to be criticized.

From The Daily Wire, how the doctor at the center of a Texas children's hospital scandal formed an alliance with transgender activists.

From the Daily Caller, one of the Just Stop Oil activists who vandalized Stonehenge claims that American men taunted the by chanting the word "oil".

From the New York Post, authorities remove a mysterious monolith from a mount range near Las Vegas, Nevada.

From Breitbart, a country songwriter and an 18-year-old singer combine to produce a pro-life anthem.

From Newsmax, congresscritter Scott Perry (R-PA) explains why Biden is losing support.

And from SFGate, according to its organizers, if you can make it through the Broken Arrow Skyrace near Lake Tahoe, "you're a rock star".  (In my opinion, you're also a badass.)

Thursday, June 20, 2024

Links For The Summer Solstice

As the sun reaches its farthest point away from east and west, here are some things going on:

From National Review, our deficit disaster gets even worse.

From FrontpageMag, there are more police officers protecting the anti-police mayor of Chicago than protecting the people of Chicago.

From Townhall, the Department of Justice leaves out one inconvenient detail about the person who carried out the mass shooting at Club Q in Colorado Springs, Colorado.

From The Washington Free Beacon, Mexican drug cartel members harass Native Americans 40 miles from the Canadian border.

From the Washington Examiner, according to a poll, Latino voters in swing states now trust former President Trump more than President Biden on immigration.

From The Federalist, "pride" parades are really humiliation rituals.

From American Thinker, the 2024 election is Trump's for the taking.....or is it?

From MRCTV, the Biden administration's $43 million plan to expand internet access has increased the number of internet users by (drum roll, please) zero.

From NewsBusters, seven federal agencies are exposed for pressuring "Big Tech" to censor Americans.

From Canada Free Press, the second largest bank in the U.S. allegedly targets pro-life advocates.

From TeleSUR, Venezuelan presidential candidates agree to respect the results of the upcoming election.

From TCW Defending Freedom, the U.K. Parliament's "legion of the damned".

From EuroNews, soon-to-be-former Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte is set to become NATO's next Secretary General after garnering the support of Romania.

From Voice Of Europe, Poland takes action after its first death from fentanyl poisoning.

From ReMix, police arrive at birthday party in Cochem, Germany find that attendees who chanted "foreigners out, Germany for the Germans" were themselves foreigners.

From Balkan Insight, a bomb explosion in Cetinje, Montenegro takes the lives of two alleged drug gang members.  (It looks like wars between rival drug-pushing organizations aren't just for Mexicans any more.)

From The North Africa Post, King Mohammed VI urges the Moroccan government to use the results of the upcoming census as a structuring tool for national and local policies.

From The New Arab, according to the Syrian Network for Human Rights, forces from the Syrian government have detained 4,714 returning refugees.

From The Jerusalem Post, cholera breaks out in Somalia.

From Gatestone Institute, "do not buy from Jews" returns to Europe.

From The Stream, the Italian Supreme Court rules against a Reform Baptist church in Rome over the definition of "worship space".

From The Daily Signal, the effort by Democrats to subvert democracy.

From The American Conservative, the Biden administration does not have any definition of victory for Ukraine.

From The Western Journal, the Trump campaign reminds Vice President Harris of why she is disliked.

From BizPac Review, climate nutjobs make the stupid mistake of vandalizing private jets with paint.

From The Daily Wire, Biden orders federal agencies to signs all over the country which praise him.

From the Daily Caller, a judge is arrested at a night club in Atlanta for allegedly striking a police officer in the head.

From the New York Post, a 100-year-old woman who welded guns onto ships during World War II keeps fit with a "crazy" workout.

From Breitbart, prosecutor Nathan Wade is grilled over his relationship with Fulton County, Georgia District Attorney Fani Willis.

From Newsmax, according to congresscritter Mike Turner (R-OH), Russia nukes deployed in space threaten the world.

And from BBC News, Canadian actor Donald Sunderland goes to the movie screen in the sky.

Wednesday, June 19, 2024

Stories For Juneteenth

On the newest official American holiday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, if President Biden wants voters to believe that we're not in a recession, he should act like we're not in a recession.

From FrontpageMag, teachers in Chicago demand $145,000 salaries even though 80 percent of their student can't do math.

From Townhall, a truck driver who allegedly caused a fatal crash in Colorado is an illegal alien who has been deported 16 times.  (Yes, you read that right.  He's been removed from the U.S. 16 times.  I've sometimes had the idea that when someone from Latin America is deported multiple times, each deportation should be to a place farther south than the previous one.  Hopefully, such a deportee will get it through his thick skull that he's not welcome here before we're dropping him off in Antarctica.)

From The Washington Free Beacon, MacKenzie Scott, the former wife of billionaire Jeff Bezos, gives millions of dollars to a community fund with ties to the radical group behind the anti-Israel encampment at the University of Pennsylvania.  (She should be not confused with Scott McKenzie, who sang the song San Francisco, written by John Phillips of the Mamas and the Papas.)

From the Washington Examiner, at the top of the worst-run city list is (drum roll, please), San Francisco.  (The city appears to have deteriorated since Scott McKenzie sang about it.)

From The Federalist, San Francisco Mayor London Breed seems to think that her top job is naming drag queens.  (Could this be part of the reason why San Francisco appears to have deteriorated?)

From American Thinker, a very important 1st Amendment case is in store for the Supreme Court.

From MRCTV, Republicans blast Democrats intending to include women if the draft is reinstated.  (Such a provision could be confusing, since many of us these days don't even know how to define "woman".)

From NewsBusters, according to Shark Tank cohost Kevin O'Leary, California Governor Gavin Newsom (D) has turned his state into a "version of Venezuela".

From Canada Free Press, the Connecticut Bar Association appears to misunderstand the 1st Amendment.

From TeleSUR, the Haitian army is on a war footing.

From TCW Defending Freedom, British politician Nigel Farage must target Labour Party leader Keir Starmer's "anti-Christian neo-Marxism".

From Snouts in the Trough, are the people of the U.K. being fleeced by pushers of high blood pressure pills?

From EuroNews, why Prime Ministers Giorgia Meloni (Italy), Viktor Orbán (Hungary), and Petr Fiala (Czech Republic) are angry about how the E.U.'s top jobs are allocated.

From ReMix, did Meloni betray Orbán by rejecting his Fidesz party joining the ECR group in the European Parliament?  (If you read Italian, read the story at Corriere della Sera.)

From The North Africa Post, spillover from the conflict in Sudan complicates security concerns in Chad and the Central African Republic.

From The New Arab, according to an investigation, the National Union of Syrian Students is guilty of war crimes including the targeting of pro-democracy students.

From The Times Of Israel, aid deliveries in Gaza are hampered by cigarette smuggling.

From BBC News, an Israeli hostage released by Hamas no longer believes in peace.

From the Daily Mail, at least 550 pilgrims have died while on the Hajj in Mecca, Saudi Arabia.

From Gatestone Institute, while jihadists brutalize non-Muslim women, Western feminists go Sergeant Schultz.

From The Stream, Camp Stanton in Maryland, where black troops trained to fight as Union soldiers.

From The Daily Signal, Louisiana expands educational choice to everyone.

From The American Conservative, what kind of conservative will once-and-maybe-future President Trump be?

From The Western Journal, Trump takes off the gloves and (figuratively) swings at former Speaker and vice presidential candidate Paul Ryan (R-Wis), now a Fox News board member.

From BizPac Review, Trump congratulates U.S. open winner Bryson DeChambeau, who chugs a "Trump pour" with former First Son Eric Trump.

From The Daily Wire, inside the struggle to keep graphic material away from children in a very red state.

From the Daily Caller, the Biden administration finalizes its rules for governing subsidies in its climate bill, which is seen as a major victory for labor unions.

From Breitbart, three teenagers are arrested for the alleged anti-semitism-inspired rape of a 12-year-old Jewish girl in Courbevoie, France.

From Newsmax, the Chief Twit's xAI startup is building a supercomputer.

And from the New York Post, a group of people in the New York City neighborhood of Hell's Kitchen rescue a cat from an abandoned delicatessen.

Willie Mays 1931-2024

Willie Mays, who played 23 seasons in Major League baseball and was nicknamed the "Say Hey Kid", died yesterday at age 93 of heart failure at a care home in Palo Alto, California.  He was baseball's oldest living Hall of Famer.

William Howard Mays Jr. was born in Westfield, Alabama to William Howard Mays Sr. and Annie Satterwhite, who never married.  Mays Sr., nicknamed "Cat", was himself a talented baseball player who worked as a railroad porter and later in steel mills.  Satterwhite was a high school basketball player and track athlete.  Willie played baseball, football and basketball in high school.

In 1948, Mays started playing professional baseball with the Negro minor league team the Chattanooga  Choo-Choos and later joined the Birmingham Black Barons of the Negro American League.  The latter team lost the 1948 Negro World Series to the Homestead Grays.  He did not graduate high school until 1950, after which he was signed by the New York Giants, which assigned him to the Class B Trenton Giants of the Interstate League.  In 1951, he as promoted to the Class Triple-A Minneapolis Millers of the American Association, and later to the Major League team in New York, where he played well enough to earn the 1951 National League Rookie of the Year.

Mays was drafted by the U.S. Army and played for the Giants during only the first few weeks of the 1952 season.  He returned after being discharged in March of 1954.  While stationed at Fort Eustis in Virginia, he learned the basket catch from teammate Al Fortunato.  The Giants won the N.L. Pennant and World Series in 1954, with Mays being selected the league's Most Valuable Player.  During the World Series, he made his famous over-the-shoulder catch of a ball hit by Vic Wertz of the Cleveland Indians.  He would go on to be selected to play in 24 All-Star Games, and win his second N.L. MVP award in 1965.  His career totals included 660 home runs, 1909 runs batted in, and 339 stolen bases.

In 1958, the Giants moved to San Francisco, played at Seals Stadium for two years, and later at Candlestick Park.  During April of the 1961 season, Mays hit four home runs in a single game.  While mostly a center fielder, he played 48 games at first base in 1971.  Early during the 1972 season, he was traded to the New York Mets, where he played part-time at both positions before retiring as a player in 1973.

Mays stayed in the Mets organization as a hitting instructor until the end of the 1979 season.  Later that year, he took a job as a greeter at a gambling casino in Atlantic City, New Jersey, where he was joined by former New York Yankees player Mickey Mantle.  They were both suspended from baseball, but reinstated in 1985.  The next year, Mays rejoined the Giants organization.  Both the Mets and the Giants have retired his number 24.

Mays was married to Marguerite Wendell Chapman from 1956 to 1963.  They adopted a baby boy in 1959.  He married Mae Louise Allen in 1971, their marriage lasting until her death in 2013.  He was the godfather of Barry Bonds, whose father Bobby Bonds had been his Giants teammate.

On a personal note, yours truly went to see the Giants play against the Atlanta Braves at Atlanta in 1971.  This means that I got to watch Willie Mays, Bobby Bonds, Hank Aaron, and their respective teammates.

Read more at MLB(dot)com, ESPN, CBS Sports, NBC Bay Area and the New York Post.

Tuesday, June 18, 2024

A Few Late Things For Tuesday

As I return home after a busy Tuesday, here are a few things going on:

From FrontpageMag, how the conflict in Gaza could end.

From Townhall, President Biden has another brain fart while announcing an amnesty plan for illegal aliens.

From The Washington Free Beacon, Senator Bob Casey (D-PA) claims to be "standing up to big pharma" while leading the Senate in receiving cash from that industry.

From The Federalist, six more state block Biden's "egregious" rewrite of Title IX.

From American Thinker, Israel is the only country of whom "proportionality" is expected.

From NewsBusters, PBS cheers the on-campus pro-HamasPalestinian protests.

From TCW Defending Freedom, the myth of Europe's "far right surge".

From TheSun, at least 138 pilgrims from Indonesia die while attending the Hajj in Mecca, Saudi Arabia.

From The Jerusalem Post, a London security organization shares footage of an alleged attempt to kidnap Jewish children.

From Gatestone Institute, Israel gave work permits to Palestinians, while Palestinians planned the October 7th massacre.

From The Stream, some insights from a former radical Muslim, who is now a devout Jew.

From The Daily Signal, more on Biden's amnesty plan for illegal aliens.

From The American Conservative, NATO and Russia must make a nuclear deal.

And from Billboard, happy birthday to the musician known as Sir Paul.  (We should celebrate with the appropriate song.)

Monday, June 17, 2024

Monday Mania

On a very warm and sunny Monday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy calls for warming labels on social media platforms, similar to those on tobacco and alcohol products.

From FrontpageMag, the left knows that its own policies don't work.

From Townhall, Senators Rand Paul (R-KY) and Lindsey Graham (R-SC) demand answers after ISIS members illegally enter the U.S.

From The Washington Free Beacon, the Ford Foundation has sent millions of dollars to organizations that celebrated the Hamas attacks against Israel last October 7th.

From the Washington Examiner, former President Trump's hush money trial had a "glaring" error.

From The Federalist, if President Biden's economy really were "strong", our trade partners would not be running away from the dollar.

From American Thinker, ICE is losing just about all of the millions of illegal aliens allowed into the U.S. by Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas.

From MRCTV, former President Obama steps in after Biden has some internal technical difficulties.

From NewsBusters, with no evidence, NBC blames recent shootings on the Supreme Court's ruling on bump stocks.

From Canada Free Press, the TV host known as Morning Joe has become the U.S.'s version of the Iraqi minister known as Baghdad Bob.

From TeleSUR, the Haitian government is urge to revitalize the Haitian economy.

From TCW Defending Freedom, why the U.K. needs borders, and must leave the European Court of Human Rights.

From Snouts in the Trough, please don't mention the fake coronavirus vaccines.

From EuroNews, 10 Ukrainian pilots get trained in flying fighter jets in southwestern France.

From Voice Of Europe, as announced by Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg, a record number of NATO countries are meeting their defense spending targets.

From ReMix, according to a columnist at the Hungarian site Magyar Hírlap, the European Court of Justice has become a political tool.  (If you read Hungarian, read the MH column here.)

From Balkan Insight, former Albanian Prime Minister Sali Berisha loses the appeal of his ban from entering the U.K.

From The North Africa Post, according to a U.N. report, sub-Saharan migrants suffer abuse in Tunisia and Libya.

From The New Arab, according to Jordanian officials, 14 Jordanians who died of heat stroke at the Hajj in Mecca, Saudi Arabia were in the city illegally.

From The Jerusalem Post, how a prominent Gazan family secretly held three hostages.

From Gatestone Institute, responding to Hezbollah's offensive against Israel.

From The Stream, what kind of person files a defamation suit against someone who told the truth?

From The Daily Signal, is climate change really causing hurricanes to be more frequent and/or severe?

From The American Conservative, why the Supreme Court's ruling on the abortion pill is about the administrative state.

From The Western Journal, the White House Correspondents' Association responds after Biden snaps at the European reporter.

From BizPac Review, one of the 51 intelligence officials who signed the letter claiming that Hunter Biden's laptop was "Russian disinformation" warns of a "serious" terror threat.

From The Daily Wire, the Biden intelligence community with free trans flag manicures and lectures from a "Filipinx" activist.

From the Daily Caller, a self-identified Chinese government agent runs a private social network that provides illegal aliens with resources to enter the U.S. and evade border authorities.  (If someone claiming to be an American agent were providing migrants information on how to illegally enter China, how would the Chinese government respond?)

From the New York Post, a notorious racist sides with a whole bunch of other racists.

From Breitbart, former NFL player Robert Griffin III calls WNBA players Caitlin Clark and Angel Reese pawns in a "race war".

From Newsmax, according to the U.S. Treasury Department, the IRS plans to end a tax loophole for the rich, which could bring in $50 billion more tax revenue.

And from The Babylon Bee, Obama panics as his device for remotely controlling Biden loses its connection.