Saturday, September 28, 2019

Saturday Stuff - Part 1

Now that I've completed another walk in the woods, like a good Sasquatch, I return to present a bunch of things going on:

From National Review, can we have a bipartisan treaty against criminalizing elections?

From Townhall, let's see former President Obama's transcripts.

From The Washington Free Beacon, a federal judge rebukes Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel (D) for targeting religious foster care.

From the Washington Examiner, according to TV host Bill Maher, the media would be all over the Ukraine-related activities of Hunter Biden, if it had been President Trump's son instead.

From American Thinker, have the Democrats collapsed because of..........Sarah Palin?

From NewsBusters, why critics don't like Rambo: Last Blood.

From Canada Free Press, society has never in a public forum condemned the crimes of communism.

From CBC News, Canadians worried about climate change face a tough decision on election day.

From Global News, undecided Canadian voters know what they want, but not whom.

From CTV News, Canadian Conservative leader Andrew Scheer proposes a new transnational energy corridor.

From The Jakarta Post, Indonesia will be among 53 countries whose citizens may enter Russia at St. Petersburg using free electronic visas.

From The Straits Times, ahead of China's National Day, protesters in Hong Kong gather and spray graffiti, throw rocks and break windows.

From the Borneo Post, three detained Vietnamese fishermen escape from custody in Sandakan, Sabah, Malaysia.

From Free Malaysia Today, according to a sociology professor, Malaysia is slipping toward extremism.

From The Mainichi, the Japanese Coast Guard reports a ship captain whose tanker crashed into a bridge to prosecutors.

From the Colombo Page, Sri Lanka's prime minister unveils a new reclining statue of Buddha.

From The Hans India, in the Ramban area of Jammu and Kashmir, the Indian army kills three terrorists but lose one of their own soldiers.

From the Hindustan Times, a 15-year-old girl in the Indian state of Rajastan kills herself after allegedly being gang-raped.

From ANI, the Indian army salutes the soldier who was killed in Jammu and Kashmir.

From India Today, Indian Prime Minister Modi is welcomed home.

From Khaama Press, before they could attack election sites in Afghanistan's province of Balkh, a "notorious" Taliban commander and at least 13 others are sent to their virgins.

From Dawn, at least three people are killed by an IED explosion in the Chaman area of Pakistan's province of Balochistan.

From The Express Tribune, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi’s call for a peaceful resolution to the dispute over Kashmir "rattles" India.

From Pakistan Today, according to Pakistani Foreign Minister Qureshi, India is putting U.S. interests in southern Asia at stake.

From Radio Farda, nine whistleblowers are arrested in Iran and accused of "terrorist intentions".

From StepFeed, women in several Arab countries cannot pass their citizenship onto their husbands or children.

From Rûdaw, Iraq's prime minister removes the general who defeated ISIS from his position.

From Hürriyet Daily News, Turkey and the U.S. hold their seventh round of joint helicopter flights over the safe zone in Syria.

From Turkish Minute, Turkey is reportedly planning to spend $27 million to house refugees in the safe zone.

From In-Cyprus, according to President Nicos Anastasiades, Cyprus will go to the U.N. Security Council over Turkey's actions in the fenced-off town of Varosha.

From Arutz Sheva, Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu might return his mandate to form a government back to President Rivlin.

From The Times Of Israel, Israeli security forces arrest three Palestinians in connection with a terror bombing that killed a teenage girl.

From The Jerusalem Post, the IDF detains eight Hamas "leaders" in the Hebron area.

From YNetNews, Israel likes turtles.

From the Egypt Independent, the Egyptian Foreign Ministry criticizes a U.N. human rights report.

From Egypt Today, a professor at Al Azhar University is sent to a criminal court for allegedly forcing students to strip.

From Morocco World News, Moroccan police find the bodies of seven irregular migrants on a beach near Casablanca.

From the Sundiata Post, mothers of children allegedly chained and tortured at the Islamic center in Kaduna, Nigeria claim that the accusations against the center are false.

From Gatestone Institute, in Italy, it's former Interior Minister Salvini out and migrants in.

From The Stream, Evangelicals should "call a truce on the age of the universe".

From Breitbart, a citizen's tip helps the Border Patrol catch two Mexicans who had illegally entered the U.S. - from Canada.

From Twitchy, Democratic presidential candidate Bob O'Rourke does an "incredible self-own" on guns.

From the Daily Caller, the six worst "gimmick guns".

And from the New York Post, the newest member of the New York Rangers might give someone a good licking.

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