Saturday, November 30, 2019

A Traveling Sasquatch's Double Dozen To End November

Now that I've driven back to Maryland, let me present 24 things going on:

From National Review, a weakened communist China is still quite dangerous.

From Townhall, ISIS claims responsibility for the London Bridge knife attack.

From The Washington Free Beacon, former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg appears to have hung around with some alleged sex offenders.

From the Washington Examiner, a teacher in Texas fired for asking President Trump to remove illegal aliens immigrants from her school wins a ruling for reinstatement.

From American Thinker, Bloomberg is a "billionaire nothingburger".

From LifeZette, Democrats might be looking for a way out of the impeachment spectacle.

From Canada Free Press, are Millennials America's newest fifth column?

From The Conservative Woman, why it pays to be a white Australian Aborigine.

From the Mirror, the London Bridge knife terrorist was a "student" of noted hate preacher Anjem Choudary.

From The Guardian, the London Bridge knife terrorist had spent time in jail for terror offenses, and recently released.

From ABC News, Dutch authorities arrest a suspect in the knife attacks in The Hague.

From Gatestone Institute, new Chinese "cybersecurity" laws take effect this coming January.

From Hürriyet Daily News, a 3,500-year-old skull is found in Turkey.

From Arutz Sheva, Likud and the Blue and White party work to gather support for a new government.

From Egypt Today, in Cairo and Aswan, Egypt launches the "CleanShores" environmental campaign.

From Rûdaw, the fuel price hike in Iran causes a food price increase, adversely affecting Iranian Kurds.

From Radio Farda, the leader of Iran's Green Movement wants those who killed protesters to be prosecuted.

From Dawn, on the price of gasoline, Pakistan goes the opposite way of Iran.

From The Hans India, the London Bridge knife terrorist's family owns land in the Pakistan-controlled part of Kashmir.

From the Colombo Page, the WHO certifies that Sri Lanka has eliminated mother-to-child transmission of HIV and syphilis.

From The Straits Times, China arrests a Taiwanese citizen and a Belize citizen for allegedly meddling in Hong Kong affairs.

From The Stream, a woman who lived as a man for 11 years.

From the New York Post, you won't believe who were college friends at Harvard.

And from The Peedmont, after Virginia Tech's loss to Virginia in football, Tech's offensive line will be tested for performance-diminishing drugs.  (The picture shows VT cornerback Caleb Farley, who missed the game for medical reasons.)

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