Tuesday, April 24, 2018

Tuesday Links

Some things going on out there:

From The Daily Caller, the Supreme Court rules that foreign citizens cannot sue foreign corporations in American courts.

From Fox News, Puerto Ricans are getting angry over the lack of basic services.

From LifeNews, British doctors express horror at the "medical tyranny" inflicted on young patient Alfie Evans.

From Philly(dot)com, Amazon will now deliver to your car, but there is a drawback.

From The Federalist, according to FEC records, Hillary Clinton's campaign laundered $84 million.

From Voice Of Europe, Alice Weidel of the AfD points out how German retirees live in poverty while migrants receive generous benefits.

From the Express, a Polish MP tells Europe to stop ruling them like babies.

From Breitbart London, the government of Bavaria orders crosses on its buildings.

From The Old Continent, the European Parliament publishes a sheet on "online disinformation", which is "as useless as you expected".

From the Daily Mail, Italy's highest court refuses to release a boat confiscated from a NGO.

From China Plus, China has developed a ducted fan drone.

From Euractiv, France's new asylum laws could clash with E.U. law.

From the NL Times, most of the Poles in the Netherlands work for less money than the Dutch, but still want to stay.

From Russia Today, the U.K. is faulted for its silence after a Saudi Arabian forces strike a wedding.

From Deutsche Welle, the European Court of Justice rules that torture victims may claim asylum.

From ANSA, an Italian woman originally from Pakistan returns there, and is killed for refusing an arranged marriage.

From Sputnik International, dozens of "radicalized individuals" have been identified in Finnish prisons.

From RTÉ, the E.U. and U.N. hold a conference on Syria in Brussels.

From Crux, in Nigeria, 15 people are killed when gunmen attack a Catholic church.

From BBC News, German Jews are advised against wearing the kippah.

From the Daily Nation, the Islamic University in Uganda expels 23 students for allegedly engaging in sexual relationships.

From Pakistan Today, a transgender person is killed in Swabi, Pakistan.

From The Telegraph, an Afghan teenage girl is forced to live as a boy.  (This website is from India, and has the same name as a well-known British site.)

From Gatestone Institute, the jihad continues in Spain.

From the Greek Reporter, Greece's Minister for Migration expresses "deep concern" over the increasing migration into his country.

From CNS News, California enforces a "new sexual orthodoxy" in recent bill.

From the New York Post, Uranus (pun intended) smells like a fart.

From The Seattle Times, a weird view of Seattle's "breakneck" growth.

And from Treehugger, Vancouver's weird bike share system.

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