Monday, August 11, 2025

Monday Links

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

From National Review, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu rejects allegations of famine in the Gaza Strip as a "global campaign of lies".

From FrontpageMag, who's to blame for the "starvation" in Gaza?

From Townhall, U.S. Attorney for Washington, D.C. Jeanine Pirro gives criminals in the city a "blistering" warning.

From The Washington Free Beacon, inside the convention of the Democratic Socialists of America.

From the Washington Examiner, President Trump federalized the D.C. police and sends in the National Guard.

From The Federalist, finally, a president stands up to banks that practice wokeness.

From American Thinker, the first female Major League Baseball umpire gets her first call "horribly wrong".

From MRCTV, according to the D.C. Police Union, if you think that crime is down in D.C., you're wrong.

From NewsBusters, podcaster Bill Maher tells actress Drew Barrymore that The View is not "the best advertisement for women".

From Canada Free Press, the Islamist-leftist information campaign against Israel must stop.

From TeleSURVenezuelan Vice President Delcy Rodriguez announces that her country will not recognize any decision from the International Court of Justice in the dispute with Guyana over the region of Essquibo.

From TCW Defending Freedom, the U.K. Labour Party's civil service "job jiggery" further classifies the working class.

From Snouts in the Trough, the Labour Party will do anything for its "race replacers".

From EuroNews, Ukrainian President Zelenskyy tries to warn U.S. President Trump not to trust Russian President Putin before their meeting in Alaska.

From ReMix, the birth rate for refugee women in Austria is almost three times that of native Austrian women.

From Balkan Insight, women in Bosnia and Herzegovina still feel fear from a murder of woman that was livestreamed two years ago.

From The North Africa Post, the International Criminal Court issues an arrest warrant for a Libyan militia member who allegedly committed war crimes in Benghazi.

From The New Arab, Syria's interior ministry vows to hold accountable the people who allegedly killed an unarmed man at a hospital in the province of Suweida.

From The Jerusalem Post, a dissident Iranian journalist is assaulted at a march in London calling for Hamas to release the remaining Israeli hostages.

From EverythingGP, an Islamic court in the Indonesian province of Aceh sentences two men to public caning for what it deemed were "sexual acts".

From Gatestone Institute, Hamas's plan to undermine the Arab allies of the U.S.

From Radio Free Asia, two Chinese ships collide while chasing a Philippine patrol boat in the South China Sea.

From The Stream, the forgotten Christians of Yemen and the increasing aggression from the Houthis.

From The Daily Signal, according to a report, there were 415 attacks on churches in 2024.

From The American Conservative, Trump makes a "full-court press" on immigration.

From The Western Journal, wokesters find another attractive blonde to lambaste over her jeans.

From BizPac Review, Trump plans to send FBI agents out on night patrol in D.C.

From The Daily Wire, more about Trump's plans for D.C.

From the Daily Caller, congresscritter Don Beyer (D-VA) "personally requested" to meet with an illegal alien gang member and several other detained illegal aliens.

From the New York Post, a two-year-old English-French bulldog mix is crowned the world's ugliest dog for 2025.

From BBC News, the bones of a British man who died after falling into a crevasse in Antarctica in 1959 are found in a melting glacier.  (via the New York Post)

From Breitbart, the U.K. government loses track of 150,000 migrants admitted into the country on social care visas.

From Newsmax, FBI Director Kash Patel says that he's working with law enforcement agencies to help Trump's aforementioned plans for D.C.

And from The Babylon Bee, Trump promises to greatly reduce the number of criminals in Washington, D.C. by sending Congress home.

Sunday, August 10, 2025

A Sasquatch's Sunday Dozen

Now that I'm back from walking through a forest like Sasquatches are supposed to, on a warm and sunny Sunday, here are 12 things going on:

From AMU, the Taliban's morality police force shopkeepers in the Afghani province of Herat to wear long beards.

From Gatestone Institute, the French writer who challenged Karl Marx.

From The Daily Signal, the ugliest words from New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani (D), so far.

From TCW Defending Freedom, how government-sponsored spooks interfere with free speech.

From The Western Journal, a former butler for the late Jeffrey Epstein disputes that he killed himself, and brings some receipts against Mr. Bill.

From The Daily Wire, former congresscritter Bob O'Rourke (D-TX) say "[bleep] the rules" when it comes to his state's Democrat legislators being running away.

From the Daily Caller, USCIS Director Joseph Edlow admits that an amnesty program for abandoned migrant children has been abused by adult criminal illegal aliens.

From Breitbart, according to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel might sue The New York Times over photos allegedly showing a fake starving child.

From Newsmax, President Trump promises to not take a "Mr. Nice Guy" approach to crime in Washington, D.C.  (Perhaps Alice Cooper agrees.)

From National Review, Russia and Belarus appear to be testing Lithuania and Latvia.

From American Thinker, the Western woke model of fighting wars means that we won't ever win any.

And from the New York Post, I'm not saying it's aliens.....

Saturday, August 9, 2025

Saturday Stories

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

From National Review, California Governor Gavin Newsom (D) flinches as his state's war on the oil industry produces a crisis.

From FrontpageMag, the census should not count illegal aliens.

From Townhall, an anti-ICE rioter who allegedly threw cinderblocks at Border Patrol agents gets indicted and faces up to 20 years in prison.

From The Washington Free Beacon, Japan wants to embrace peace through strength, which is a good thing.

From the Washington Examiner, New Hampshire Governor Kelly Ayotte (R) declines to pursue any effort to redistrict her state.

From American Thinker, Texas Republican state legislators unleash hell against their deserting Democrat colleagues.

From NewsBusters, MSNBC panelists fret that Border Patrol agents can use a Penske truck to lure and arrest illegal aliens, and scoff at actor Dean Cain joining ICE.

From TCW Defending Freedom, beware the Rayner's Lane Stasi in the U.K.

From Snouts in the Trough, yes, an invasion is happening.

From The Jerusalem Post, a Jewish man is assaulted in Montreal, Canada.

From AMU, beauticians in Kabul, Afghanistan claim that some Taliban personnel have made "immoral proposals" to them.

From Gatestone Institute, don't let the Iranian regime achieve its planned comeback.

From The Stream, 12 connections between Jesus and the Old Testament prophet Elijah, all found in the Gospel of Mark.

From The Daily Signal, lessons from past immigration to America.

From The American Conservative, 80 years of the atomic bomb.

And from The Western Journal, the heat index has become a climate change propaganda tool.

Friday, August 8, 2025

Friday Phenomena For 8/8

On a warm and sunny Friday on the eighth day of the eighth month, here are some things going on:

From National Review, taking over the Gaza Strip would be a big risk for Israel.

From FrontpageMag, the Democratic Socialists of America hold a panel discussion on abolishing the family.

From Townhall, a judge who tried to hold the Trump administration in contempt is overturned by an appeals court.

From The Washington Free Beacon, Democrat attorneys general hire a law firm to sue oil companies, and the firm donates money to elect Democrat attorneys general.

Form the Washington Examiner, the Department of Justice subpoenas New York Attorney General Letitia James over her alleged mishandling of her case against then-former President Trump.

From The Federalist, the governors of blue states Illinois and New York harbor fugitive Texas state legislators.

From American Thinker, the aforementioned Democrat Texas legislators should be careful about the "debate" on gerrymandering that they wish for.

From MRCTV, host Stephen Colbert of The Late Show versus the late Johnny Carson.

From NewsBusters, allegedly civilized countries genuflect toward Hamas.

From Canada Free Press, the starvation in Gaza was invented by Hamas and the U.N.

From TeleSUR, Chileans oppose efforts to release Pinochet-era imprisoned human rights violators.

From TCW Defending Freedom, a trainee employee of a British prison contract company is fired for stating biological truth.

From EuroNews, U.K. Under-Secretary for Homelessness Rushanara Ali resigns over claims that she evicted tenants from a property that she owns and then increased its rent.

From ReMix, Poland pursues a second nuclear power plant in a continued effort to lessen its use of coal.  (As a descendant of coal miners, some of whom were Polish, I find this a bit dismaying.  If you read Polish, read the story at Do Rzeczy.)

From Balkan Insight, Bosnian crime reporter Nataša Miljanović-Zubac is detained for allegedly "disclosing official secrets".

From The North Africa Post, 11.6 million people visit Morocco during the first seven months of 2025, up 16 percent from a year earlier.

From The New Arab, what's next for Hezbollah after the Lebanese cabinet backs a U.S.-proposed disarmament plan?

From The Straits Times, according to Singaporean Leader of the Opposition Pritam Singh, nation building is the responsibility of every Singaporean, not just of one party.

From Free Malaysia Today, hundreds of people in the Malaysian state of Sabah gather to demand justice for slain student Zara Qairina Mahathir.

From the Borneo Post, Malaysia's Attorney-General's Chamber orders the Royal Malaysia Police to exhume the body of the aforementioned Zara Qairina Mahathir.

From Vietnam Plus, all 20 crew members of the Vietnamese ship GT Unity are rescued after a fire breaks out in its engine room.

From the Taipei Times, Taiwan calls for being included in the Pacific Islands Forum.

From China News, the population of Przewalski horses in China surpasses 900.

From The Korea Herald, when visiting a Starbucks Korea café, please refrain from setting up your office equipment in it.

From The Mainichi, the shape of the Japanese chocolate snack "Pocky" is registered as a 3D trademark.

From Japan Today, eight things that you should not do when riding Japanese trains.

From Gatestone Institute, is the popular desire for regime change in Iran just a myth?

From The Stream, the E.U.'s fake revisionist history project.

From The Daily Signal, New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani (D) claims that former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo (I) and President Trump are conspiring to rig the mayoral election.  (Cuomo was a Democrat when he was governor, but is running for mayor as an independent.)

From The American Conservative, why Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky should fear former General Valery Zaluzhny.

From The Western Journal, the walkout of Democrat Texas legislators might be connected to a PAC funded by left-wing billionaire George Soros.

From BizPac Review, Senator Adam Schiff (D-Cal) says that quiet part out loud about Democrats needing illegal aliens to be counted in the census.

From The Daily Wire, Tennessee becomes the latest state to ban the purchase of candy and sugary drinks with SNAP.

From the Daily Caller, Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill (R) helps fuel the left-wing war on the oil industry.

From the New York Post, New Rochelle, New York builds more housing and thus keeps its rents down, unlike many places in the region.

From Breitbart, a Moroccan migrant stand to lose his French residence permit and faces jail time after he uses the eternal flame at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Paris to light his cigarette.

From Newsmax, Attorney General Pam Bondi has reportedly authorized a special prosecutor to investigate allegations of mortgage fraud against the aforementioned Adam Schiff and Letitia James.

And from Bearing Arms, gun control in Colorado and Washington state fails to reduce gun-related homicides.

Thursday, August 7, 2025

Some Late Thursday Stuff

On a warm mostly cloudy Thursday, after I've been running around for much of the day, here are a few things going on:

From National Review, the Democrats have a delusion about gerrymandering.

From FrontpageMag, the U.N. admits that 95 of its aid trucks that were sent into Gaza were "intercepted".

From Townhall, a judge in South Carolina realizes that every storm just not justify a climate lawsuit.

From The Washington Free Beacon, the Israeli airline El Al's offices in Paris are vandalized after French President Emmanuel Macron recognizes the Palestinian state.

From the Washington Examiner, a federal judge temporarily halts construction at "Alligator Alcatraz" for environmental reasons.

From The Federalist, Arizona state Senator Analise Ortiz (D-Phoenix) admits sharing "information about ICE".

From American Thinker, that pesky little conjunction in the 14th Amendment.

From NewsBusters, the media give Texas Democrats 45 friendly interviews and the Texas Republicans just two.

From TCW Defending Freedom, more official confirmation that deaths only from the coronavirus were "vanishingly few".

From Snouts in the Trough, is the word "justice" being redefined?

From Bianet, a Muslim feminist writer in Turkey removes her headscarf in protest of a sermon on women's attire.

From Gatestone Institute, the Muslim Brotherhood should be designated a foreign terrorist organization ASAP.

From The Stream, will Christian pastors call on illegal aliens to repent?

From The Daily Signal, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu provides some details on Israel's plan to take control of Gaza.

From The American Conservative, U.S. President Trump should not play with nuclear fire in Ukraine.

From The Western Journal, lame duck TV host Stephen Colbert attacks Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. in a foul-mouthed rant about vaccines.  (What is this "civility" you speak of?)

And from the New York Post, a woman in San Fernando, California drinks tequila and becomes a chimney sweep, sort of.  (In response to this story, I don't know whether to sing "Chim-chiminy chim-chiminy chim chim cheree" from Mary Poppins or "Up on the roof" by the Drifters.)

Wednesday, August 6, 2025

Wednesday Wanderings

On a warm and cloudy Wednesday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, ICE is not a new Gestapo.

From FrontpageMag, New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani (D) wants police to not respond to certain crimes that are disproportionately committed by Muslims.

From Townhall, Fort Stewart in Georgia goes into lockdown after a gunman shoots and wounds five soldiers.

From The Washington Free Beacon, a former associate of former Attorney General Eric Holder's law firm accuses it of racism.

From the Washington Examiner, the Trump administration rescinds its approval of a large bird chopper project in Idaho.

From The Federalist, why giving justice to the Russia collusion hoaxers is both tricky and important.

From American Thinker, 80 years after the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, a right-wing oikophobia emerges.  (The term "oikophobia" which comes from ancient Greece, is bigotry or a harsh attitude toward one's own country, culture or society, sometimes accompanied by praise toward other countries, cultures or societies.  It's the opposite of "xenophobia".)

From MRCTV, an illegal alien from Mexico, who received DACA, announces his self-deportation.

From NewsBusters, the show CBS Mornings becomes the first lead network newscast to cover the hubbub over the American Eagle jeans ad featuring Sydney Sweeney.

From Canada Free Press, the U.S. weather machine appears to be attacking Russia.  (I remember jokes about the George W. Bush weather machine and Dick Cheney earthquake machine from back when those two were president and vice president, respectively.  With the recent earthquake and volcanic eruption in the Russian region of Kamchatka, it seems that Vice President Vance has figured out how to operate the Dick Cheney earthquake machine.)

From TeleSUR, Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum announces that the retail chain Walmart has expressed interest in joining the "Mexico Plan".

From TCW Defending Freedom, how expensive would a vaccine against hypocrisy be?

From Snouts in the Trough, more on the aforementioned Sydney Sweeny hubbub, and some climate stupidity.

From EuroNews, Italy gives its final approval for a bridge connecting the island of Sicily to the mainland.

From Free West Media, Palantir software is coming, perhaps to monitor alleged "hate crimes".

From ReMix, will new Polish President Karol Nawrocki be able to fulfill his campaign promises on taxes?

From Balkan Insight, Bosnia's Central Election Commission revokes the presidential mandate of Bosnian Serb leader Milorad Dodik due to his prison sentence and ban on holding public office.

From The North Africa Post, Morocco is elected vice-president of the U.N. Conference on Landlocked Developing Countries.

From The New Arab, the Lebanese Army kills three of the country's most notorious drug lords in a raid in the city of Baalbek.

From The Hans India, five people are killed and 100 are missing due to flash floods in the Indian state of Uttarakhand.

From the Hindustan Times, India fires back at U.S. President Trump's additional 25 percent tariff.

From ANI, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi urges his fellow Indians to "make India the world's third-largest economy".

From India Today, some facts about India's purchase of Russian oil.

From the Dhaka Tribune, political rallies block roads and cause congestion in Dhaka, Bangladesh.

From New Age, exports of readymade garments from Bangladesh to the U.S. increase by 25 percent from January to June.

From the Daily Mirror, as Trump's tariffs on Sri Lankan products have been reduced, Sri Lanka should strive to export even more goods.

From Raajje, the People's Majlis in the Maldive Islands greenlights a bill to strip councils of their power.

From the Bangkok Post, a new dinosaur fossil is found in Thailand's Fu Wiang National Park.

From Gatestone Institute, lessons from the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, Japan, 80 years later.

From The Stream, the defunding of NPR and PBS is a much-needed end of an era.

From The Daily Signal, why the U.S. can't disarm, 80 years after Hiroshima.

From The American Conservative, reports of America's economic death from Trump's tariffs have been greatly exaggerated, but challenges remain.

From The Western Journal, Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker (D) jokingly admits that his state's congressional district map looks like it was drawn by a "kindergarten class".

From BizPac Review, shock jock Howard Stern's show on SiriusXM is reportedly on its way to being canceled.

From The Daily Wire, more on the aforementioned shootings at Fort Stewart.

From the Daily Caller, how then-President Biden allegedly abused the federal workforce to snatch voters.

From the New York Post, New York City opens the first taxpayer-funded transgender homeless shelter in the U.S.

From Breitbart, MSNBC and CNN lose at least 40 percent of their viewers from last year.

From Newsmax, Trump claims that Senator Chuck Schumer (D-NY) is "extorting" him for $2 billion in exchange for confirming hundreds of his appointees.

And from the Genesius Times, Attorney General Pam Bondi promises to make up for not arresting clients of the late Jeffrey Epstein by not arresting anyone involved in the Russia collusion hoax.

Tuesday, August 5, 2025

Tuesday Tidbits

On a warm and cloudy Tuesday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, conservatives make a cultural comeback.

From FrontpageMag, Governor Gavin Newsom (D) wants Democrats to control 94 percent of the congressional seats from California, even with only 45 percent of the registered voters.

From Townhall, this "white savior" nonsense from the left over Sydney Sweeney's jeans ads has got to stop.

From The Washington Free Beacon, Senator Tom Cotton (R-Ark) presses the IRS to investigate CAIR's tax-exempt status due to "ties to terrorist organizations".

From the Washington Examiner, Texas Democrat state legislatures plan to stay in Illinois to stop their Republican colleagues from redrawing the state's congressional districts.  (Wisconsin Democrat state legislators did the same sort of thing a few years back, also going to Illinois.  See definition 1 in the Urban Dictionary.)

From The Federalist, redistricting is not a "threat to democracy", but four Democrat tactics are.

From American Thinker, no more free rides for left-wing "public broadcasting".

From MRCTV, the U.K. reuses a coronavirus-era speech to silence criticism of subsidized migration.

From NewsBusters, journalist Paul Krugman faulted President Trump for accusing the BLS of fudging job numbers, but he did the same thing.

From TeleSUR, Colombian President Gustavo Petro accuses Peru of violating the Rio de Janeiro Protocol by seizing Colombian territory.

From TCW Defending Freedom, five independent scientists demolish the myth of catastrophic climate change.

From EuroNews, no, French President Emmanuel Macron does not have a 7 percent approval rating from all French citizens.

From Free West Media, is Trump taking America to war?

From ReMix, the Romanian government imposes more austerity measures, which results in more protests.  (If you read Hungarian, the site Mandiner has related stories about the austerity measures and about the protests.)

From Balkan Insight, Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić pardons a woman accused of attacking two student protesters.

From The North Africa Post, women in U.N. peacekeeping military operations start their training in Agadir, Morocco.

From The New Arab, human rights organizations call for the UAE to disclose the fate of abducted Egyptian-Turkish poet and dissident Abdulrahman Qawadari.

From the Sudan Tribune, a Sudanese pro-democracy group calls for the National Congress Party and the associated Sudanese Islamic Movement to be designated a terrorist group.

From IranWire, an Iranian official recommends easing the enforcement of hijab laws.

From Iran International, a conservative official believed to be close to Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei is appointed to lead Iran's Supreme National Security Council.  (Does this guy believe in free market economics, limited government and personal responsibility?)

From Khaama Press, officials from the International Organization for Migration visit Afghanistan amid the mass deportation of migrants from Iran.

From Hasht e Subh, between the Taliban and tradition, women's freedoms decrease in Afghanistan.

From AMU, according to several local sources, the Taliban are digging tunnels in the Afghani province of Kandahar.

From Dawn, the Indus River delta in Pakistan is sinking and shrinking.

From The Express TribuneElection Commission of Pakistan disqualifies nine lawmakers from the party Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf.

From Pakistan Today, Pakistan's Foreign Office denies the involvement of any Pakistanis in the war in Ukraine.

From the Daily Mail, according to an official at the U.K.'s Office for Budget Responsibility, immigration is creating "serious problems" for public services and standards of living.

From Gatestone Institute, how Hamas sees the Western willingness to recognize "Palestine".

From The Stream, double standards on free speech.

From The Daily Signal, a group of Democrat congresscritters write a letter to Trump calling for the U.S. to recognize Palestinian statehood.

From The American Conservative, MAGA influencer Charlie Kirk's limited hangout.

From The Western Journal, Trump takes a walk on - and some questions from - the White House roof.

From BizPac Review, a former NFL player is convicted of running a dog-fighting operation.  (No, this is not about Michael Vick.)

From The Daily Wire, Congress subpoenas records from the Department of Justice, and former officials including Mr. Bill and Ms. Hill in connection with the Jeffrey Epstein case.

From the Daily Caller, more on the aforementioned subpoenas.

From the New York Post, according to officials, almost 90 percent of aid trucks in Gaza are looted by starving Palestinians or "armed actors" before reaching their destinations.

From Breitbart, Trump supports the 2nd Amendment.

From Newsmax, Trump states that he will "probably" not run for a third term.

And from SFGate, if you're in Samuel P. Taylor State Park in Marin County, California, beware of wasps.

Monday, August 4, 2025

Monday Mania

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

From National Review, the Democrats haven't figured out their stance on immigration.

From FrontpageMag, if it can't be blamed on the Jews, it's not news.

From Townhall, President Trump brutally claps back at Senator Fake Cherokee (D-MA) after she blamed him for rising prices.

From The Washington Free Beacon, a Pennsylvania Democrat congressional candidate claims to have raised money by "barnstorming" his district, but almost all of his donors live outside of it.

From the Washington Examiner, the "four lies that toppled the establishment".

From The Federalist, why restorative reproductive care is more pro-woman than in vitro fertilization.

From American Thinker, actress/jeans spokeswoman Sydney Sweeney just got even hotter.

From MRCTV, the Australian government pays for women to have abortions at up to 20 weeks gestation.

From NewsBusters, don't be surprised that left-wing billionaire George Soros is somehow involved in the Russia collusion hoax.

From TeleSUR, Brazilian President Lula da Silva announces that he will run for reelection in 2026.

From TCW Defending Freedom, the U.K. Labour Party, Islamophobia, and the suppression of free speech.

From EuroNews, a Ukrainian drone attack strikes five Russian fighter jets at an airfield in Saky, Crimea.

From Free West Media, will the war over microchips shape the world order?

From ReMix, a liberal German columnist goes after anti-migration protesters in Poland and even Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk.  (If you read Polish, read the story at Do Rzeczy.)

From Balkan Insight, protesters in Zagreb, Croatia demand recognition of war crimes against ethnic Serb civilians in 1995, committed during "Operation Storm".

From The North Africa Post, Algeria and the militant group Polisario need to face reality and end their boondoggle.

From Arutz Sheva, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu decides to have the IDF occupy Gaza.

From The Times Of Israel, Netanyahu's son Yair calls calls the Qatari emir a "modern-day Hitler".  (<sarc>Wait a minute, doesn't he realize that Trump is the "modern-day Hitler"?</sarc>)

From The Jerusalem Post, according to a medical report, Israeli hostages Evyatar David and Rom Braslavski have each lost 50 percent of his body weight.

From YNetNews, more on the starvation of the two aforementioned hostages.

From the Egypt Independent, according to Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty, Egypt is pressing open crossings into Gaza and provides 70 percent of the aid thereto.

From Egypt Today, woman and the elderly lead long lines of people waiting to vote for their Egyptian Senators.

From the Ethiopian Monitor, former Ethiopian Agriculture Minister Girma Amente is named African Union Permanent Representative to the U.N. Office and the WTO.

From the Saudi Gazette, the IMF praises the Saudi economy for its resilience and diversification.

From Doha News, Qatar establishes a first aid station at the Father Amir hospital in Gaza.

From The New Arab, Lebanese President Joseph Aoun promises justice over the explosion that rocked Beirut five years ago.

From Allah's Willing Executioners, at a railroad station in Ablon-sur-Seine, France, a man attacks another man, who refused to state if he was a Muslim, with a boxcutter and a table leg.  (If you read French, read the story at Le Figaro.)

From Gatestone Institute, the long history of European treachery from Hitler to the Iranian ayatollahs.

From Radio Free Asia, the Philippines and India conduct joint naval exercises in the South China Sea.

From The Stream, Generation Z is in revival and thus "the answer to our prayers".

From The Daily Signal, congresscritter Nancy Mace (R-SC) announces her run for South Carolina governor.

From The American Conservative, the left-wing addiction to overreaction.

From The Western Journal, Trump's deployment of two nuclear submarines draws a response from Russia.

From BizPac Review, Trump blasts Charlemagne tha God as a "racist sleazebag".

From The Daily Wire, a leftist organization tied to the Mexican consulate pushes banks to lend to illegal aliens.

From the Daily Caller, a transgender medical organization tried to sway a "developmentally delayed" a young adult into having a sex-change operation.

From the New York Post, the aforementioned Senator Fake Cherokee gushes over New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani (D) while other Democrats hold their tongues.

From Breitbart, Democrats plan to spend tens of millions of dollars on hundreds of social media content creators.

From Newsmax, the Aalborg, Denmark zoo is asking for donations of small pets to be used as food for its captive predators.

And from The Babylon Bee, Irish President Michael Higgins demands that the U.N. takes military action to protect the Shire.

Sunday, August 3, 2025

A Few Things For Sunday

On a warm sunny Sunday, here are a few things going on:

From National Review, Hiroshima, 80 years after the atomic bomb.

From FrontpageMag, New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani (D) wants police to stop responding to attacks against Jews.

From Townhall, a new app helps Democrats tip off illegal aliens about ICE.

From The Washington Free Beacon, a review of a book about actor/singer Desi Arnaz.

From the Washington Examiner, Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) admits never talking with then-President Biden during his entire term.

From American Thinker, it's time to kill the left-wing lie that President Trump is "gutting Medicaid".

From NewsBusters, CNN is still trying to force former Vice President Harris on us.

From TCW Defending Freedom, how leftist academia enabled the "industrial-scale" rape of girls in the U.K.

From Allah's Willing Executioners, a cleric for Muslim inmates at Stadelheim Prison in Germany allegedly sold cell phones and drugs to them.  (If you read German, read the story at Bild.)

From Organiser, a Hindu woman in Burhanpur, Madhya Pradesh, India is murdered, allegedly for refusing to convert to Islam and marry a Muslim man.

From Jewish News Syndicate, Hamas uses starvation as a tool of terror.

From Gatestone Institute, Israel puts out footage of humanitarian aid left waiting by the U.N. and NGOs.

From The Stream, "the Gift".

From The Daily Signal, what to know about the two former Biden aides who face questions from a House committee about his decline.

From The American Conservative, a review of the 2000 movie You Can Count on Me.

From The Western Journal, former Special Counsel Jack Smith, who once investigated Trump, is now under investigation.

And from The Texas Tribune, Democrats in the Texas state House become "fleabaggers".

Saturday, August 2, 2025

Saturday Stuff

On a warm (but not too warm) and cloudy Saturday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, why counting jobs is very difficult.

From Townhall, police in Colorado are punished for helping ICE.

From The Washington Free Beacon, a conference for a two-state solution for Israel and Palestine has no solution in sight.

From the Washington Examiner, families of hostages taken by Hamas on October 7th, 2023 stage an emergency protest in Tel Aviv, Israel.

From American Thinker, how former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and then-President Obama saved America.

From NewsBusters, Fox News highlights an illegal alien who killed two teenagers in Wisconsin after avoiding deportation.

From TCW Defending Freedom, a "children's wellbeing" bill under consideration by the U.K. parliament would bring lifetime surveillance.

From Snouts in the Trough, how left-wingers "really have no self-awareness".

From Gatestone Institute, the race against China to control nuclear fusion power.

From The Stream, 12 connections between the prophet Ezekiel and the Apostle Paul.

From The Daily Signal, President Trump (U.S.) asks President Ramaphosa (South Africa) a pointed question.

From The American Conservative, the film Eddington is a must-see coronavirus-related masterpiece.

From The Western Journal, the number one sign that America is regaining its greatness is an increase in marriage stability.

From BizPac Review, as the media blames Trump for disappointing job numbers, they look past a detail that is good for Americans.

From The Daily Wire, for the first time since 1981, the federal government is allowed to judge job applicants by merit.

From the Daily Caller, a Chinese couple in California renting wombs of American women expose the dark side of birth by surrogacy.

From the New York Post, the manhunt for an army veteran accused of killing four people in a bar in Anaconda, Montana continues for a second day.

From Breitbart, ICE lodges a detainer on a previously deported illegal alien who allegedly kidnapped and sexually assaulted a Houston woman.

And from Newsmax, a retired Marine Corps sergeant helped to establish a foundation that places service dogs with first responders and his fellow veterans to lead them away from "self-harm".