Tuesday, April 3, 2018

Tuesday Links

After giving myself a day off, I'm back with some more things going on out there:

From Devex, there's a large gender wage gap at one British abortion provider.  (via LifeNews)

From Fox News, according to a seminar by University, white people and Christians are privileged in the United States.

From Breitbart Texas, Border Patrol agents in southern Texas are overwhelmed by illegal border crossers.

From Breitbart's Big Hollywood, Jimmy Kimmel exposes his Slavophobia.

From the Washington Examiner, a former Maryland governor is thinking of running for president in 2020.

From Voice Of Europe, a former Czech president likens the current migration into Europe to a much earlier migration.

From the Express, a controversial plan would raid the profits of the European Central Bank to make up for the budget shortfall caused by Brexit.

From Russia Today, two trains collide near Duisburg, Germany.

From The Local FR, railroad workers in France start three months of rolling strikes.

From Sputnik International, a protest by railroad workers in Paris turns into a riot.

From Middle East Eye, a day after Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu announces a migration deal, he cancels it.

From New Europe, the European Commission announces a grant of €180 million for refugee aid projects in Greece.

From Euractiv, according to a German member of the European Parliament, two Greek soldiers held in Turkey are "political prisoners".

From the NL Times, two cafes in Amsterdam are closed after shootings occurred in both.

From Thompson Reuters Foundation News, in the Indonesian province of Aceh, four people have been detained for allegedly having gay sex.

From The Jakarta Post, the daughter of Indonesia's first president is accused of blasphemy.

From CNN, ISIS has claimed responsibility for the murder of a Christian family in Pakistan.

From Step Feed, a Saudi cleric tries to justify child marriages.

From Gatestone Institute, the industry of "moderate" Muslim scholars.

From The Daily Signal, according to a U.N. report, Kenyan forces have allowed money to go to a Somali terrorist group.

From National Review, "how Canada bans books".

From FrontpageMag, the participants in the March For Our Lives aren't all that young.

From The Washington Post, in response to President Trump's Tweets, Mexico appears to have stopped the caravan of illegal aliens migrants moving northward.  (via Townhall)

From Townhall, the first person sentenced in Robert Mueller's investigation is a Dutch lawyer living in London.

From Page Six, future British royal Meghan Markle gets trained to protect herself.

From the New York Post, teachers in Oklahoma strike for the second straight day.

And from Entertainment Weekly, Anthony Michael Hall, who starred in Weird Science, pays tribute to his co-star Bill Paxton and their director John Hughes.

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