Saturday, June 29, 2019

Saturday Stuff

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

From Free West Media, a study shows young adults to be less accepting of LGBTQs.

From the Express, a poll shows that the Liberal Democrats could win the next U.K. general election.

From BBC News, U.K. Liberal Party leader Jeremy Corbyn says that he's "not too frail" to lead his party or to be prime minister.  (According to the article, he's 70 years old, which is younger than the current U.S. president and two Democrats who want to unseat him.)

From the Evening Standard, Sir Elton John has some harsh words for Russian President Putin.

From the Independent, in the city where knives are illegal, a railway station is closed due to a man with a knife reportedly being on the tracks.

From the Irish Examiner, "tens of thousands" attend the Dublin Pride parade.

From CBC News, the trash arrives back home.

From Global News, at the G20 summit, Prime Minister Trudeau asks about two Canadians detained in China.

From CTV News, a woman is arrested after an LGBTQ protest at the home of the mayor of Hamilton, Ontario.

From RFI, about 500,000 people are expected to turn out for the Paris Pride celebration.

From SwissInfo, the Swiss Red Cross elects its new president.

From Deutsche Welle, a neo-Nazi group reportedly orders body bags and makes "kill lists".

From Radio Praha, a Czech scientist goes to the Congo.

From The Slovak Spectator, explore Jasov Monastery near Košice, Slovakia with audio guides in six languages.

From Daily News Hungary, Hungary looks to Australia for how to deal with illegal migration.

From Russia Today, Putin says that LGBTs should leave the kids alone.

From Sputnik International, Putin holds his last press conference for the G20 summit.

From Romania-Insider, Romanian Prime Minister Viorica Dancila is elected president of her party.

From the Sofia Globe, Bulgarian President Roumen Radev claims that the deal to purchase F-16s from the U.S. has a "hidden cost of a billion", with which Defense Minister Krassimir Karakachanov disagrees.

From Ekathimerini, 13 asylum seekers are arrested at the Moria refugee camp on the Greek island of Lesvos.

From the Greek Reporter, a Muslim party in Thrace claims to be neglected by the Greek government.

From Total Croatia News, Croatian motorcyclists protest a toll collection on a bridge between the mainland and the island of Krk.

From the Malta Independent, the captain of the Sea-Watch 3 is detained after the vessel reportedly rams a police boat and docks without permission.

From Malta Today, more on the arrest of her captain after the Sea-Watch 3 docks in Lampedusa, Italy.

From The Portugal News, for the first time in 10 years, the Portuguese Navy fires missiles.

From Morocco World News, Morocco remains the world's largest producer of weed.

From Egypt Today, a woman is arrested for allegedly joining the Muslim Brotherhood.

From Arutz Sheva, Israel is reportedly preparing for a military solution against Hamas.

From The Times Of Israel, the Palestinian Authority arrests a businessman who attended the U.S.-led conference in Bahrain.

From The Jerusalem Post, due to a drought, a 3,400-year-old palace is discovered in Iraqi Kurdistan.

From YNetNews, the Israeli airline El Al welcomes its first Druze flight attendant.

From Hürriyet Daily News, a Turkish court sentences gendarmerie officers and prosecutors who illegally stopped National Intelligence Organization trucks at the Turkey-Syria border.

From Turkish Minute, Turkish President Erdoğan claims that U.S. President Trump will not impose sanctions over Turkey's purchase of Russia air defense systems.

From Rûdaw, according to a Peshmerga chief, ISIS has regrouped and is stronger than ever.

From Radio Farda, Iran is reportedly using Malaysia to sidestep U.S. sanctions on oil.

From Dawn, 200 missing Baloch have returned home in 2019.

From The Express Tribune, Pakistan's Civil Aviation Authority bans naswar on all flights.

From Pakistan Today, according to Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan, empowering women is his government's "foremost priority".

From Khaama Press, a Taliban IED maker suffers premature detonation.

From The Hans India, according to India's vice president, the country "needs no lessons on religious freedom".

From the Hindustan Times, India proposes a July meeting with Pakistan to discuss the Kartarpur corridor.

From ANI, unidentified men allegedly attack a Muslim boy for not chanting "Jai Sri Ram".

From India Today, after a woman tells a doctor about a dog bit, the doctor tells her to bite the dog back.

From the Daily Mirror, Sri Lankan opposition leader Mahinda Rajapaksa states his opposition to the death penalty.

From the Colombo Page, according to Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, the Zion Church of Batticaloa will be rebuilt before Christmas.

From Gatestone Institute, Europe's missing ISIS terrorists.

From The Jakarta Post, an attack at a Philippine military base was likely a suicide bombing.

From Free Malaysia Today, a drug reform advocate praises Malaysia's intention to decriminalize personal drug use.

From EuroNews, six takeaways from G20.

From The Conservative Woman, "kicked out for telling the truth" about gender.

From Townhall, President Trump announces the next ICE age.

From The Washington Free Beacon, "reason without faith is dead".

From the Washington Examiner, Mexico's president claims to have a plan to offer jobs to migrants.

From American Thinker, how Einstein's theory of relativity led to multiculturalism.

From NewsBusters, the photo of the migrant father and daughter who drowned in the Rio Grande shows that the border crisis is not manufactured.

From the New York Post, a 93-year-old Holocaust survivor wants AOC (D-NY) out of Congress.

And from Real Climate Science, the record high temperature in France just might be fake news.

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