Thursday, November 7, 2019

Thursday Things - Part 1

On a rainy Thursday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, good riddance to Bob O'Rourke.

From FrontpageMag, not long after the Senate denies that any border emergency exists, Mexican cartels slaughter Americans.

From Townhall, Donald Trump the Younger points out TV host Joy Behar's past blackface appearance.

From The Washington Free Beacon, a study by The Washington Post finds racial and gender pay gaps - at The Washington Post.

From the Washington Examiner, U.S. media pretty much blame the slaughter of an American Mormon family in Mexico on the American Mormon family itself.

From The Federalist, our unending foreign wars keep us from fixing our own border crisis.

From American Thinker, the Democrats have shown that #MeToo was a ploy to attack Republicans such as President Trump.

From CNS News, the House appropriates nothing for Trump's border wall.

From LifeZette, why didn't ABC air the Jeffrey Epstein story three years ago?

From NewsBusters, Trump the Younger points out when TV host Whoopi Goldberg excused rape.

From Canada Free Press, the "whistleblower" was already involved in the deep state coup when President Obama was congratulating President-elect Trump.

From CBC News, the Canadian province of Quebec denies a French citizen's immigration application because one chapter of her PhD thesis was in English.

From TeleSUR, a Chilean court will investigate President Sebastian Piñera for alleged crimes against humanity.

From The Mainichi, police in the Japanese prefectures of Hiroshima and Ehime can't figure out who put hundreds of thumbtacks on a bicycling road.

From Free Malaysia Today, Malaysian authorities release three Cambodian opposition activists who had been detained at the request of the Cambodian government.

From The Straits Times, a mainland Chinese music student is among the first people to be convicted of charges related to the protests in Hong Kong.

From The Jakarta Post, according to a report by the Asian Development Bank, 22 million Indonesians suffered from "chronic starvation" during President Joko Widodo's first term.

From the Colombo Page, a delegation of Belgian travel organizers arrives in Sri Lanka.

From the Hindustan Times, air pollution levels "spike" in southern and eastern India.

From Khaama Press, Afghan forces arrest four ISIS terrorists disguised as women.

From Pakistan Today, Indian Sikh pilgrims visiting Kartarpur for the 550th anniversary of the birth of their religion's founder will not be required to have passports.

From Radio Farda, Iran's proxies are reportedly more important than its nuclear program.

From StepFeed, a "students' revolution" occupies Lebanese cities as protests continue for their 22nd day.

From The New Arab, six Iraqi protesters are killed in Baghdad.

From Hürriyet Daily News, according to Education Minister Ziya Selçuk, 781,000 foreign children are enrolled in Turkish schools.

From Rûdaw, according to a French intellectual, the moderate democratic Islam "desperately" sought by the West is in Kurdistan.

From In-Cyprus, the Turkish drillship Yavuz continues its allegedly illegal gas exploration.

From The Syrian Observer, Turkish forces and terrorist mercenaries continue committing crimes against the residents of Syria's Afrin region.

From Arutz Sheva, a pre-military program is inaugurated at Kela Alon, where "Trump Heights" will be established.  (Kela Alon is an Israeli settlement in the Golan Heights.)

From Egypt Today, according to President Abdel al-Sisi, Egyptians are "in a continuous struggle against terrorism".

From Morocco World News, American first daughter Ivanka Trump meets Moroccan King Mohammed VI.

From AsiaNews, a Muslim mob in the Pakistani province of Punjab destroys a Catholic church.

From CNN, U.S. federal prosecutors accuse two former Twitter employees of spying for Saudi Arabia.

From One India, how Nepal became a "playground" for Islamic terrorists.

From Gatestone Institute, the anti-Iranian revolution in the Middle East is now underway.

From The Stream, "what you must know about America going into 2020".  (The emphasis is in the original title.)

From the Daily Caller, a county in Maryland bans the display of a wooden replica of the "thin blue line" police flag - in front of a police station.

From CBN News, a former abortionist reveals why he became pro-life.  (via LifeNews)

From Fox News, Carrie Fisher's daughter Billie Lourd admits that she once disliked the character Princess Leia.

From the New York Post, another rich guy from New York is considering running for president.

And from The Babylon Bee, authorities are horrified at a woman who killed her baby with methamphetamine instead of a brain-sucking vacuum.

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