Sunday, November 17, 2019

Sunday Stuff - Part 1

On cloudy Sunday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, Senator Marco Rubio (R-FL) has a "half-baked" political philosophy.

From Townhall, the effort to "fix NICS" is reportedly working.

From The Washington Free Beacon, California Democrats send cash to Colorado to promote the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact.

From the Washington Examiner, "wokeness" is about conformity.

From American Thinker, "the Bidens and Burisma".

From LifeZette, what congresscritter Adam Schiff (D-Cal) did to congresscritter Elise Stefanik could be regarded as intimidation.

From NewsBusters, Dan Rather appoints himself an arbiter of truth.

From Canada Free Press, who is really running Canada?

From CBC News, the Archdiocese of Vancouver has known about 36 cases of clergy sex abuse starting with the 1950s.

From TeleSUR, ousted Bolivian President Evo Morales claims that dictatorship has returned to his country.

From The Portugal News, the first unit of a wave energy power plant is installed in Peniche, Portugal.

From France24, "yellow vest" protesters stage rallies and occupy a department store in Paris.

From RFI, most complaints about abuse filed by French women are reportedly not followed through.

From Free West Media, while "yellow vest" activists demonstrate, thugs destroy a statue in Paris.

From SwissInfo, Switzerland's militia system is a tradition under threat.

From EuroNews, according to the mayor of Venice, the city is "in its knees".

From the Malta Independent, Pope Francis shows off his leftism.

From Total Croatia News, Croatian police injure a illegal migrant, one of a group who were apparently trying to reach Slovenia.

From Ekathimerini, police arrest seven people for allegedly trying to sneak firebombs onto rooftops in the Athens neighborhood of Exarchia.

From the Greek Reporter, thousands of people march in Athens to commemorate the 1973 Polytechnic uprising.

From Novinite, here's one Bulgarian whom you don't want to mess with.

From The Sofia Globe, Bulgaria's Constitutional Court rules that part of a data protection law is unconstitutional.

From Radio Bulgaria, "life is not a car part".

From Russia Today, former U.S. Marine Paul Whelan, waiting for trial in Russia for alleged spying, became a person of interest to Russian authorities back in 2007.

From Sputnik International, a Russian drone crashes near residential buildings in the town of Protasovo.

From The Moscow Times, Russia says that it will return three captured naval ships to Ukraine.

From the Hungary Journal, according to Hungarian Prime Minister Orban, central Europeans "are the future of Europe".

From Daily News Hungary, why people love living in Budapest.

From About Hungary, more on Orban's speech, which he gave in Prague.

From The Slovak Spectator, the group For a Decent Slovakia gathers to commemorate the Velvet Revolution.

From Radio Prague, Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babiš travels to Slovakia to honor the victims of communism with his fellow Visegrad Four leaders.

From Polskie Radio, according to foreign minister Jacek Czaputowicz, Poland wants to join the G-20.

From Deutsche Welle, Germany's Green party proposes a minimum wage of €12 per hour.

From Voice Of Europe, leftists in the Netherlands protest against Zwarte Piet.  (If you read Dutch, read the story at NOS.)

From VRT NWS, when in Brussels, please do not use the streets as an ash tray.

From the Express, every Conservative candidate for the House of Commons pledges to support Prime Minister Johnson's Brexit deal.

From the Evening Standard, Johnson promises an "equal" immigration system.

From the Independent, British volunteers who fought against ISIS find themselves being harassed.

From the Irish Examiner, an Irish ISIS bride could be returned to Ireland in the coming days.

From The Conservative Woman, an amnesty for illegal aliens in Britain could bring in lots more.  (I long believed that the same would be true for the U.S.)

From The Stream, President Trump's Tweet about former Ambassador Yovanovich wasn't the real Twitter scandal.

From the Daily Caller, according to Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Cal), Trump's Tweet was a "mistake", and nearly 80,000 illegal aliens had an arrest record before being approved for DACA.

From Breitbart, at the box office, Ford v Ferrari accelerates to number 1, while the reboot of Charlie's Angels bombs.

From WAVY, part of a fishing pier in VIrginia collapses after being struck by a loose barge.  (via Fox News)

From the New York Post, two ESPN announcers feud over the original anthem kneeler's workout video.

And from The Guardian, U.K. Prince Andrew insists that he was at a pizza party, not messing around with a teenage girl.

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