Tuesday, December 3, 2019

Tuesday Things - Part 1

Here on a sunny but cold Tuesday are some things going on:

From National Review, good riddance to Senator Kamala Harris (D-Cal), who just dropped out of the 2020 presidential race.

From FrontpageMag, censuring President Trump instead of impeaching him won't end our political divide.

From Townhall, congresscritter Jim Jordan (R-OH) points out the real reason why the Democrats are trying to impeach Trump.

From The Washington Free Beacon, former FLOTUS/Senator/Secretary of State/presidential candidate Hillary Clinton (D-NY by way of AR) becomes a punchline for establishment Democrats.

From the Washington Examiner, Trump tells our NATO allies that they must pay their fair share.

From The Federalist, Democrats have been trying to disarm blacks and other Americans for a long time.

From American Thinker, Democrats who hate Trump are the real cult.

From CNS News, congresscritter Adam Schiff (D-Cal) indicates that the investigations will continue.

From LifeZette, if you want your kid to read more, get a dog.

From NewsBusters, TV host Joe Scarborough demands that the Democrats expand their impeachment probe.

From Canada Free Press, is the U.N. crying "climate crisis" a means to interfere in the 2020 U.S. elections?

From CBC News, the Trans Mountain Corporation, after years of delay, prepares to start construction in its pipeline expansion.

From Global News, on defense spending, Trump calls Canada "slightly delinquent".

From CTV News, employed Ontarians reportedly increasingly use food banks.

From TeleSUR, seven people in Honduras are sentenced for the murder of an environmental activist.

From Morocco World News, according to Morocco's Islamic scholars, any changes to Moroccan abortion law must follow Islamic law.

From Hürriyet Daily News, a map shows Turkey's claimed boundary in the Mediterranean Sea.

From Turkish Minute, new E.U. commissioners plan to visit Greece and Turkey to discuss migration and refugees.

From Rûdaw, the Iraqi government lauds cooperation the Kurdistan Regional Government as oil-for-budget talks reach a conclusion.

From In-Cyprus, the British teenager on trial for falsely accusing a group of Israeli teenagers of raping her describes the alleged attack in court.

From The Syrian Observer, Syrian government warplanes strike a market in the town of Maraat al-Nu'man.

From Arutz Sheva, in Geneva, an Israeli mission donates wheelchairs for children to the U.N.

From The Times Of Israel, the latest meeting between Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and Blue and White leader Benny Gantz lasts only 45 minutes.

From The Jerusalem Post, Netyanyahu asks his Likud party to delay its central committee meeting, due to his upcoming meeting in Lisbon with U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.

From YNetNews, Jewish groups are angered over an urn allegedly containing the ashes of Holocaust victims being placed in front of the Germany parliament building.

From the Egypt Independent, the Egyptian satellite company NileSat signs a contract to build and launch a new satellite.

From Egypt Today, the second meeting of dam talks resumes today.

From StepFeed, 10 things that happened for the first time in Saudi Arabia in 2019.

From The New Arab, Iraqi political parties start talks to form a new government.

From Radio Farda, even piecemeal information shows the extent of protests in Iran.

From Dawn, the world's leading financial institutions give Pakistan a vote of confidence.

From The Express Tribune, Pakistan's Airport Security Force will court-martial some of its own personnel over a brawl with passengers at the Islamabad International Airport.

From Pakistan Today, former Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf claims that he's being denied justice.

From The Hans India, meet the engineer who spotted the debris of the lunar lander Vikram, from the Chandrayaan-2 mission.

From the Hindustan Times, an Indian Sikh woman tries to return from Pakistan via the Kartarpur Corridor.

From ANI, Indian security forces arrest a terrorist in Kishtwar, Jammu and Kashmir.

From India Today, according to a former state governor, the Indian Supreme Court's judgment on the Ayodhya temple was made on faith, not on facts.

From the Daily Mirror, according some Sri Lankan parliamentcritters, proroguing their parliament could cause problems.

From the Colombo Page, the media watchdog Reporters Without Borders accuses Sri Lanka's new government of harassing journalists.

From Inquirer(dot)Net, the Philippine National Capital Region Police Office will use Muslim cops at the Southeast Asian Games to address cultural sensitivity issues.

From NDTV, protesters in Islamabad, Pakistan try to storm the office of the newspaper Dawn because it identified the London Bridge knife attacker as a "man of Pakistani origin".

From Sp!ked, the ties U.K. Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn has with Islamists cannot be ignored.

From Gatestone Institute, how the interests of Palestinians are sabotaged by their own leaders.

From The Jakarta Post, an explosion occurs at the National Monument area in Jakarta.

From The Straits Times, at least four people are reportedly killed as Typhoon Kammuri tears across the main Philippine island of Luzon.

From the Borneo Post, 118,416 cases of dengue fever have been reported in Malaysia so far this year.

From Free Malaysia Today, the Sabah Progressive Party plans protests against temporary passes given to people in Malaysia illegally.

From The Mainichi, the main engines of the Japanese spacecraft Hayabusa2 have been activated.

From The Stream, after some pressure, a school in California relents and allows a student to play Joy To The World on piano.  (Perhaps the school would have had less of a problem with the song of the same title, which starts with the line "Jeremiah was a bullfrog".)

From the Daily Caller, congresscritter Eric Swalwell (D-Cal and methane) changes his tune on impeachment.

From Accuracy in Media, according to the MSM, Attorney General Barr is running interference for President Trump with the DOJ-IG report.

From Twitchy, anti-vaxxers wish to be called by a different term.

From WFSB, the "unicorn puppy" will stay with the group which rescued him.

And from the New York Post, a Welsh woman gets her eight dogs and nine cats to all pose for a photo.

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