Tuesday, January 6, 2026

Tuesday Things

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

From National Review, a lesson for New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani (D) from Minnesota Governor Tim Walz (D).

From FrontpageMag, President Trump's most important achievement, for which all Americans should be thankful.

From Townhall, the aforementioned Mayor Mamdani finds another thing that he thinks he can make "affordable".

From The Washington Free Beacon, senatorial candidate Abdul El-Sayed (D-Mich) claims that Oklahoma's ban on Sharia is similar to the Trail of Tears suffered by the Cherokee.

From the Washington Examiner, the Department of Justice asks a federal appeals court to strike down a California law requiring background checks for buying ammunition.

From The Federalist, according to Secretary of War Pete Hegseth, the military is "already surpassing" the recruiting numbers from the surge a year ago.

From American Thinker, Republicans should be careful about which polls and pundits they trust this year.

From NewsBusters, a man uses a hammer to break windows at Vice President Vance's home in Ohio, which ABC and CBS ignore.

From Canada Free Press, Ukrainian President Zelensky appoints Canadian parliamentcritter Chrystia Freeland as his economic development advisor.  (She still is in the Canadian parliament.  Apparently, some people are allowed to work for the governments of two countries at the same time.  Her mother was Ukrainian, and unlike former First Son Hunter Biden, actually speaks Ukrainian.)

From TeleSUR, Venezuelan Attorney General Tarek William Saab demands the release of President Nicolás Maduro.

From TCW Defending Freedom, the U.K.'s "safeguarding" policy protects ideology, not children.

From EuroNews, at least six people in Europe die in cold weather-related accidents.  (The cold weather will soon be blamed, of course, on man-made global warming.)

From ReMix, police in Barcelona, Spain arrest 15 international bus drivers for allegedly accepting money from illegal migrants to transport them into France.  (If you read Spanish, read the story at El País.  If you read French, read the story at Le Parisien.)

From Balkan Insight, several municipalities in Kosovo are struck by floods.  (These, too, might get blamed on man-made global warming.)

From The North Africa Post, Morocco hosted a record 19.8 million tourists in 2025.

From The New Arab, five people are killed in Aleppo, Syria in clashes between Syrian government troops and Syrian Democratic Forces personnel.

From The Times Of Israel, violence surrounding protests in Iran claim the lives of 35 people, including four children.

From Arutz Sheva, according to an opinion column, "when sanctuaries change hands, civilizations speak".

From Sp!ked, the ban on fans of the Israeli team Maccabi Tel Aviv from attending its match in Birmingham, England is "a sop to Islamic sectarians".

From Gatestone Institute, it's time to prepare for a regional conflict before boatloads of Iranians attempt to reach the UAE.

From The Daily Signal, Hilton removes from its "system" the hotel in the Minneapolis area that refused to accommodate federal immigration enforcement agents.

From The American Conservative, with Maduro out, what comes next for Venezuela.

From The Western Journal, the CDC revises the childhood vaccination schedule after an "exhaustive review of the evidence".

From BizPac Review, the Capitol police officer who shot and killed January 6th protester Ashli Babbitt has an "alarming side gig".

From the Daily Caller, California Governor Gavin Newsom (D) blames deportations for the slow reconstruction of areas hit by fires in Altadena and the Los Angeles neighborhood of Pacific Palisades.

From the New York Post, ♪ICE ICE baby♪.

From Breitbart, congresscritter Jasmine Crockett (D-TX) screams "[bleep] you!" at the Supreme Court for not blocking redistricting in Texas.

From NewsmaxDepartment of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem is present in Minneapolis at the arrest of an illegal alien convicted of robbery and extortion in Ecuador, and is wanted there for alleged murder and sexual assault.

And from SFGate, the richest people in the U.S. shop at a 137-year-old grocery store in Woodside, California.

Monday, January 5, 2026

Monday Mania

On a cold and cloudy first Monday of 2026, here are some things going on:

From National Review, the future of Venezuela depends on Vice President Delcy Rodriguez, a loyalist to captured President Nicolás Maduro.

From FrontpageMag, the capture of Maduro is a big blow to the Iranian mullahs.

From Townhall, it's hard to believe what a guy was caught doing in a women's restroom in Concord, California.  (Reader discretion is advised.)

From The Washington Free Beacon, ending the Somali daycare fraud in Minnesota will require reinforcements.

From the Washington Examiner, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz (D) decides against running for reelection.

From The Federalist, 10 reasons why Republican congresscritters should not extend enhanced Obamacare subsidies.

From American Thinker, your race card is no longer good.

From NewsBusters, 10 items of good news that the media doesn't want you to know about.

From Canada Free Press, could President Trump be another Persian King Cyrus the Great?

From TeleSUR, Brazil's representative to the U.N. calls the aforementioned capture of Maduro a "dangerous precedent".

From TCW Defending Freedom, Swedish businessman Raoul Wallenberg, who helped rescue thousands of Jews in Hungary during World War II, remains "a hero without a grave".

From EuroNews, Ukrainian security chief Vasyl Maliuk resigns as President Zelensky(y) reshuffles his government.  (Whether it has one "y" or two, my spellchecker rejects Zelensky's last name.)

From Free West Media, "the peace president goes to war".

From ReMix, according to a poll, 58 percent of French people want President Emmanuel Macron to resign, and 90 percent say that France is in decline.  (If you read Polish, read the story at Do Rzeczy.  I don't see any French sources for this story.)

From Balkan Insight, a Bosnian producer of military drones loses its license due to legal violations.

From The North Africa Post, Libya starts preparing to host the fourth Turkey–Africa Partnership Summit.

From The New Arab, what lies ahead for the civil war in Yemen?

From the NL Times, a Dutch court is set to rule on the case of a father and his two sons accused of honor killing his daughter.

From AMU, the Taliban ban criticism of themselves, claiming that Islamic law justifies it.

From The Jerusalem Post, a shed on the property of the antisemitism commissioner of the German state of Brandenburg is set on fire.

From Gatestone Institute, the Middle East comes to a moment of strategic choice.

From The Daily Signal, Secretary of War Pete Hegseth takes action against Senator Mark Kelly (D-AZ).

From The American Conservative, Secretary of State Marco Rubio's road to Cuba goes through Venezuela.

From The Western Journal, the Chief Twit's company Starlink provides free broadband to the people of Venezuela.

From BizPac Review, independent journalist Nick Shirley has to protect himself.

From the Daily Caller, more on the aforementioned Tim Walz dropping out of the Minnesota gubernatorial race.

From the New York Post, Grok has been naughty.

From Breitbart, according to the Department of Homeland Security, Hilton Hotels are denying rooms to its personnel in the Minneapolis area.

From NewsmaxColombian President Gustavo Petro warns Trump against coming after him.

And from The Babylon Bee, left-wingers quickly change their "no kings" signs to say "yes kings" in support of the aforementioned President Maduro.

Sunday, January 4, 2026

Sunday Stuff

While I was in Pennsylvania, I learned that the U.S. military captured Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and his wife and brought them back here.  Thus, my expectation that 2026 would tell 2025 to "hold my beer" was fulfilled very quickly.  Now that I'm back on a cold and partly sunny Sunday, here are some (other) things going on:

From FrontpageMag, Democrats have been hypocritical about Venezuela.

From Townhall, a year ago, one of my Senators sang a different tune about Maduro than he is now.

From the Washington Examiner, President Trump warns Venezuelan Vice President Delcy Rodriguez against resisting the U.S.

From American Thinker, an amazing start to 2026.

From NewsBusters, CNN host Abby Phillip accuses YouTube user Nick Shirley of being racist and making an inaccurate video.

From TCW Defending Freedom, how migrants dominate the U.K.'s social housing debate.

From The Times Of Israel, a Palestinian from Tulkarem, West Bank is given a life sentence for fatally stabbing a Holocaust survivor.

From Jewish News Syndicate, Israel's Foreign Ministry presents evidence alleging that two staffers of the NGO Doctors Without Borders are also members of terrorist organizations.

From The Cable, terrorists kill 42 people and kidnap children in the Nigerian state of Niger.

From Arutz Sheva, when freedom is more valued in dictatorial Eastern countries than in the West.

From The Jerusalem Post, according to an opinion column, there already is a Palestinian state.  (The last five stories come via The Religion Of Peace.)

From Gatestone Institute, if Trump really wants Hamas to disarm, he must forget about its supporters, and the Palestinian Authority.

From The American Conservative, knocking over the Venezuelan government will be the easy part.

From the Daily Caller, Maduro gets his perp walk.

And from the New York Post, Maduro appeared to taunt the U.S., invoking John Lennon.

Friday, January 2, 2026

Late Friday Checking In

I've been running around again, this time to Pennsylvania.  I got to my intended undisclosed location pretty early, but then went out to dinner with an assortment of relatives.  We'll be busy with some stuff starting tomorrow morning, but I'll be back later on.  See youz soon.

Thursday, January 1, 2026

Stories To Start 2026

On a sunny but cold Thursday on the first day of 2026, here are some things going on:

From FrontpageMag, President Trump speaks about the protests in Iran, and issues a warning.

From Townhall, CNN's attempt to debunk YouTube user Nick Shirley's video about alleged fraud by Somalis in Minnesota fails spectacularly.

From The Washington Free Beacon, a nominee for TWFB 2025 Man of the Year is North Carolina football coach Bill Belichick.

From the Washington Examiner, a fire at a ski resort bar in Crans-Montana, Switzerland leaves 40 people dead and 115 others injured.

From The Federalist, most of daycare, not just in Minnesota, is a scam.

From American Thinker, will the theocratic government of Iran finally be overthrown?

From NewsBusters, 12 times when The View peddled conspiracy theories in 2025.

From Canada Free Press and the "good luck with that" department, calling for peace with sufferers of Trump Derangement Syndrome.

From TeleSUR, Venezuela reaffirms its support for Cuba on the 67th anniversary of the revolution which brought communist dictator Fidel Castro to power.

From TCW Defending Freedom, "kneel".

From EuroNews, according to Finnish customs officials, a ship seized in Finland suspected of damaging undersea cables was carrying Russian steel subject to E.U. sanctions.

From Balkan Insight, a year of BIRN investigations exposing scams and other matters.

From The North Africa Post, Moroccan authorities record over 500 offenses as digital currency funds terrorism.

From The New Arab, Saudi Arabia executed a record 356 people in 2025.

From the Daily Mail, the Star of David is removed from a projection of the Israeli flag onto the London Eye.

From Arutz Sheva, what's going on in Europe now is merely the trailer for its Islamization.

From Gatestone Institute, thanks to U.S. President Trump's "peace" plan, Hamas has time to hold elections in Gaza.

From The Daily Signal, four things to expect from the Trump administration in 2026.

From The American Conservative, the BBC has trapped itself with its own self-mythologizing.

From The Western Journal, former Special Counsel Jack Smith couldn't give straight answers during his deposition about the Capitol riot and Trump's alleged involvement.

From the Daily Caller, cable TV host Andy Cohen sends former New York City Mayor Eric Adams (D, later I) off with a drunken rant on New Year's Eve.

From the New York Post, protesters in Iran bring their government to a halt over soaring inflation.

From Breitbart, 10 years later, the German elite still downplays the sexual violence against over 1,000 women in major cities by male migrants.

From Newsmax, Trump decides to drop his plans for sending the National Guard into Portland, Chicago and Los Angeles.

And from CBS News, New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani (D) is inaugurated in an abandoned subway station.

Happy New Year

To everyone who reads this blog....


Now excuse me while I find some stories for your consideration.

Wednesday, December 31, 2025

2025 Comes To An End

Once again it's New Year's Eve as the year 2025 will reach its conclusion and 2026 will begin.  I'm sure that the upcoming year will once again say "hold my beer" to the previous one.

Last year started with a terror attack in New Orleans by man who drove his pickup truck into a crowd of people on Bourbon Street, killing 14 people and injuring 57 others.  Later in January, a fire in southern California spread into Los Angeles and destroyed over 16,000 homes and other structures.  President Trump took office for the second time and unleashed the new Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, for short, which led to eventually significant cuts and 260,000 fewer people in federal federal government jobs.  Cuts included the dismantling of the agency USAID.  On January 29th, an American Airlines jet collided with a U.S. Army Blackhawk helicopter as it approached Reagan National Airport, killing everyone on the two aircraft.

The Trump administration cracked down on illegal immigration, sending ICE out to arrest people and by establishing detention centers such as "Alligator Alcatraz" in Florida.  Trump also sent National Guard personnel to help law enforcement in several U.S. cities, and issued a whole bunch of tariffs.  Under his direction, the U.S. bombed Yemen, intending to strike the Houthis, and Iran, joining Israel's efforts.  Meanwhile in Gaza, Israel and Hamas agreed to a ceasefire, while the war between Russia and Ukraine continued without one.  On June 14, two Minnesota state legislators and their respective spouses were shot in their homes.  State Representative Melissa Hortman and her husband were killed.  After the death of Pope Francis, the Catholic Church elected Robert Francis Prevost, born in Chicago, to succeed him.  He took the name Leo XIV.

An object from interstellar space entered the solar system and was designated 3I/Atlas.  Right-wing activist Charlie Kirk was shot and killed on September 10th at a Turning Point USA event in Utah.  Starting in September, the U.S. military started attacking suspected drug-smuggling boats in the Caribbean Sea and Pacific Ocean.  Starting on October 1st, the U.S. government was shut down for 45 days, the longest such event in history.  Later in October, thieves broke into the Louvre museum in Paris and stole over $100 million worth of jewelry.  In November, Congress passed and Trump signed legislation to release files related to the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.  In December, a shooter killed two people at Brown University and a father and son killed at least 16 people at a Hanukkah celebration at Bondi Beach in Sydney, Australia.  Of course, no summary that I can write could ever be complete, so read more at On This Day, Britannica and History.

Among the people who passed away this year were actors Rob Reiner (allegedly killed by his son), Brigitte Bardot, June Lockhart, Diane Keaton, Claudia Cardinale, Robert Redford, Terence Stamp, Loni Anderson, Loretta Swit, George Wendt, Ruth Buzzi, Jean Marsh, Val Kilmer, Richard Chamberlin, Gene Hackman, Diane Ladd and Michelle Trachtenberg; sports figures Hulk Hogan, Dave Parker, George Foreman and Bob Uecker; musicians (or at least singers) Ace Frehley (Kiss), Tom Lehrer, Cleo Laine, Ozzy Osbourne (Black Sabbath, solo), Chuck Mangione, Connie Francis, Bobby Sherman, Lou Christie, Brian Wilson (Beach Boys), Sly Stone, David Johansen (New York Dolls), Roberta Flack, Marianne Faithfull, Sam Moore (Sam & Dave), Rick Derringer (the McCoys, Edgar Winter Group, solo), Wayne Osmond (the Osmonds), Peter Yarrow (Peter, Paul and Mary), Toby Myers (John Mellencamp's band), Garth Hudson (The Band), Chris Jasper (Isley Brothers), Robert John, Joey Mollard (Badfinger), Jesse Colin Young (the Youngbloods), Luís Jardim, George Kooymans (Golden Earring), Bobby Whitlock (Derek and the Dominoes), Roy Estrada (Mothers Of Invention, Little Feat), Mark Volman (the Turtles), Bobby Hart, Sonny Curtis (the Crickets), Chris Dreja (the Yardbirds), John Lodge (Moody Blues), Jimmy Cliff, Steve Cropper (Booker T. & the M.G.'s, Blues Brothers) and Tetsu Yamauchi (Free, Faces); political figures Dick Cheney, Alan Simpson, David Gergen and Carolyn McCarthy; scientist Jane Goodall; cartoonist Jules Feiffer; clothing designer Giorgio Armani; astronaut James Lovell; and base jumper/skydiver Felix Baumgartner.

For myself, 2025 included travels to eastern Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan, Minnesota, Wisconsin and Iowa.  Fortunately, due to various treatments, I have largely avoided the medical problems that I had in 2024.  Naturally, I expect many more interesting times, both as a blessing and as a curse, in 2026.  Happy New Year, everyone.

Wednesday Wanderings For The End Of 2025

On a cold and cloudy Wednesday on the last day of the year, here are some things going on:

From National Review, the things in 2025 that were overrated and underrated.

From FrontpageMag, President Trump's comments on recently murdered actor/director Rob Reiner.

From Townhall, the Trump administration sues Virginia over granting in-state college tuition to illegal aliens.

From The Washington Free Beacon, sharing a nomination for TWFB Men of the Year are the Minnesota motorists who called Governor Tim Walz (D) the R-word.

From the Washington Examiner, congresscritter Lauren Boebert (R-Col) suggests that Trump vetoed a bill to build a water pipeline in Colorado in "retaliation" to a petition to release the Epstein files.

From The Federalist, the top ten media hoaxes for 2025, including one about a "Maryland man".

From American Thinker, actor George Clooney gets slammed on social media for his string of hypocrisies.

From NewsBusters, the ten most-read NB stories of 2025.

From Canada Free Press, 2026 will be "a walk into the great unknown".

From TeleSUR, Chile goes on red alert due to the risk of forest fires.

From TCW Defending Freedom, is the Reform UK party, led by Nigel Farage, the U.K.'s last hope?

From EuroNews, Helsinki police investigate damage to undersea cables extending between Finland and Estonia.

From Balkan Insight, tributes to notable people in the Balkans who passed away in 2025.

From The North Africa Post, Moroccans saved 29.7 percent of their GDP in the third quarter of 2025.

From The New Arab, Saudi Arabia says that it needs to know that the UAE is "serious" about pulling its troops out of Yemen.

From the Daily Mail, the U.K.'s Labour Party rules out deporting an Egyptian dissident over his Tweets calling for Jews to be killed, because they don't regard this as sufficiently bad.

From Gatestone Institute, why Israel and U.S. President Trump should be cautious about allowing Pakistani troops into Gaza.

From The Daily Signal, as Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani gets ready to take over New York City, private property owners take cover.

From The American Conservative, are American suburbs the cause of our social problems?

From The Western Journal, Trump issues his first two vetoes of his second term in office.

From BizPac Review, Senator Eric Schmitt (R-MO) calls for visa revocation, deportation, and denaturalization due to the fraud in Minnesota.

From the Daily Caller, a convicted Somali fraudster in Minnesota used his ill-gotten money to buy land in Kentucky.

From Breitbart, actor Michael Rapaport announces his run for New York City mayor in 2029.

From Newsmax, Trump calls the aforementioned Tim Walz a "crooked governor".

And from the New York Post, if you have squatters on your property, a samurai-inspired company can remove them.

Tuesday, December 30, 2025

The Last Tuesday Things For The Year

On a sunny but cold and windy Tuesday, the last of 2025, here are some things going on:

From National Review, the Chinese navy conducts a live-fire exercise simulating a blockade of Taiwan.

From FrontpageMag, for two years, authorities suppressed the transgender Nashville school shooter's hate for Christians.

From Townhall, look who finally showed up at the "Quality Learing Center" in Minneapolis after YouTube user Nick Shirley's exposé.

From The Washington Free Beacon, a nominee for TWFB Man of the Year is the person who double-tapped a drug-loaded speed boat near Venezuela.

From the Washington Examiner, a federal judge rules that the Trump administration can share the Medicaid data of illegal aliens with ICE.

From The Federalist, as the year 2025 comes to an end, so should impressions of President Trump.

From American Thinker, tax law can be used to speed up deportations of illegal aliens.

From NewsBusters, 12 times in 2025 when co-hosts Joy Behar and Whoopi Goldberg of The View were divorced from reality.

From Canada Free Press, one city has garbage in, but no garbage out.

From TeleSUR, President Javier Milei dissolves Argentina's National Disability Agency.

From TCW Defending Freedom, what King Charles III should have said in his Christmas message.

From EuroNews, thieves drill into a bank vault in Gelsenkirchen, Germany and steal at least €10 million worth of property.

From ReMix, Polish farmers protest against the Mercosur trade agreement.

From Balkan Insight, Kosovo Prime Minister Albin Kurti returns to office with "a lot of work ahead".

From The North Africa Post, Egypt's National Railways operates its 43rd repatriation train to return Sudanese refugees home.  (To its credit, Egypt has been taking in refugees - other than modern Gazans, so it seems - for a very long time.)

From The New Arab, the Palestinian faction Fatah hands over its heavy weapons to the Lebanese army.

From Allah's Willing Executioners, after a "lone wolf" threatens people with a knife at a church in Rottenburg, Germany, the police and media cover up his background.  (If you read German, read the story at Jouwatch.)

From Newsweek, Iran designates the Canadian navy as a "terrorist organization".

From Jewish News Syndicate, the Palestinian Authority's strategy to keep conflict with Israel alive in Judea and Samaria.

From Gatestone Institute, American tech companies are helping terrorists to weaponize AI.

From The Daily Signal, three political losers and five political winners from 2025.

From The American Conservative, how U.S. President Trump can push Europe into securing Ukraine.

From The Western Journal, Attorney General Pam Bondi announces the arrests of 98 people in connection with alleged fraud in Minnesota, 85 of them of "Somali descent".

From BizPac Review, the Trump administration's $2 billion aid package to the U.N. comes with a warning.

From the Daily Caller, despite criticism from the Daily Beast, Assistant Secretary of State for Consular Affairs Mora Namdar is more than just a "beauty salon owner".

From the New York Post, New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani (D) names a self-described "social justice attorney" to lead the city's law department.

From Breitbart, according to Dutch social scientist Ruud Koopmans, Germany is facing a "demographic time bomb" from Syrian chain migration.

From Newsmax, according to Minnesota Republican Chair Alex Plechash, Governor Tim Walz (D) should step down.

And from SFGate, a bar in Marina del Rey, California famous for its turtle races closes after more than 50 years.

Monday, December 29, 2025

Links For The Last Monday Of The Year

On a cool, sunny and windy Monday, the last one of 2025, here are some things going on:

From National Review, no, Russian President Putin does not want Ukraine to "succeed".

From FrontpageMag, at a traffic stop, a Democrat exposes what entitled left-wing elites really are.

From Townhall, according to a writer for The New York Times, noticing the alleged fraud in Minnesota is "scapegoating".

From The Washington Free Beacon, one nominee for the TWFB Man of the Year is former First Son Hunter Biden.

From the Washington Examiner, after U.S. President Trump offers Ukrainian President Zelensky a 15-year security guarantee, Zelensky asks for 50 years.

From The Federalist, the daycare center scandal in Minneapolis shows "the trajectory of blue zone fraud culture".

From American Thinker, CNN and MS NOW ignore the aforementioned fraud in Minnesota.

From NewsBusters, the top ten worst media "fact" checks of 2025.

From Canada Free Press, the Trump Administration's new National Security Strategy rightly warns Europe to stop erasing its own civilization.

From TeleSUR, the Bolivian Workers' Center confirms that it will maintain its nationwide strike.

From TCW Defending Freedom, the work people in the West who feed Islamist terrorism.

From Snouts in the Trough, is the U.K. headed for a civil war?

From EuroNews, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov threatens Ukraine after an alleged Ukrainian drone attack on President Putin's residence in the oblast of Novgorod.  (My spellchecker has no problem with the Russian word oblast.)

From ReMix, the Polish oil and gas company Orlen starts drilling in the Różańsko natural gas field.  (Drill, dziecko, drill!)

From Balkan Insight, three police officers and six ISIS terrorists are killed in a battle in Elmalik, Turkey.  (Elmalik is in the Asian part of Turkey and thus not in the Balkans.  I chose this article because BI had none about events actually in the Balkans published on today's date and not behind a paywall.)

From The North Africa Post, Mauritania plans to construct a 220 megawatt hybrid renewable power plant in the capital city of Nouakchott.

From The New Arab, in a bid to stabilize its economy, Syria launches a new currency.

From The Jerusalem Post, a British Muslim woman faces a backlash after posting positively about her experience at Israel's Ben-Gurion Airport.

From the Daily Mail, a former Israeli hostage held by Hamas and used as a "sex slave".

From Gatestone Institute, no peace plan will stop Palestinian terror groups from attacking Israel.

From The Daily Signal, the aforementioned Hunter Biden still insists that "there is no laptop".

From The American Conservative, what the Christmas movie It's a Wonderful Life can teach today's conservatives.

From The Western Journal, China performs military maneuvers near Taiwan, intending to send the U.S. a "stern warning".

From BizPac Review, the Chief Twit mocks a misspelled sign at a daycare center in Minneapolis.

From the Daily Caller, Minnesotans told a Republican state legislator their concerns about Somali refugees over a decade ago, but he scolded them for it.

From the New York Post, New York City Mayor Eric Adams (I) is not sure if he will attend the inauguration of his successor Zohran Mamdani (D).

From Breitbart, the left-wing Australian government rejects calls for a national inquiry into antisemitism.

From Newsmax, Minnesota loses federal funding due to the twice-aforementioned alleged fraud.

And from The Babylon Bee, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz (D) announces an $8 billion grant to a Somali company to investigate the three-times-aforementioned alleged fraud.