Monday, January 27, 2020

Monday Mania - Part 1

On just another manic Monday, here are some more things going on:

From National Review, 15 flaws in congresscritter Adam Schiff's (D-Cal) impeachment case.

From FrontpageMag, end the impeachment circus, because the clowns are already here.

From Townhall, a Virginia Delegate can't define what an "assault weapon" is.

From The Washington Free Beacon, the Trump administration reconsiders U.S. aid to Lebanon, whose government is controlled by Hezbollah.

From the Washington Examiner, John Bolton needs to testify; no, he doesn't.

From The Federalist, no 2020 Democrat presidential candidate will align with Americans on abortion.

From American Thinker, the deep state's tapestry of deceit is starting to unravel.

From CNS News, at the 2008 Olympics games, Kobe Bryant called the United States "the greatest country in the world".

From LifeZette, an intelligence veteran recovers from a hit by the Clinton machine.

From NewsBusters, desparate networks hype an alleged "bombshell" from John Bolton.

From Canada Free Press, because of technology, your anonymity has "gone with the wind".

From CBC News, 19 people in Ontario are investigated for the coronavirus after one case is confirmed and another presumed.

From Global News, here's what we know about the global effort to find a vaccine for the coronavirus.

From CTV News, Canadian border officials seize $2.5 million worth of she-don't-lie at the Toronto Pearson International Airport.

From TeleSUR, students in Chile protest against an exam which they claim to be part of a profit and segregation system.

From Morocco World News, King Mohammed VI orders the repatriation of 100 Moroccan citizens from China.

From Hürriyet Daily News, the Turkish government starts an urban transformation project for cities hit by earthquakes.

From Turkish Minute, Turkish prosecutors investigate dozens of people for "provocative" posts on social media pertaining to the earthquake in eastern Turkey.  (What is this "freedom of speech" you speak of?)

From Rûdaw, a Kurdish cleric who publicly endorses polygamy goes on trial for "insulting women".

From In-Cyprus, a bill to combat violence against women is expected to be ready in a few weeks.

From The Syrian Observer, Syria's foreign minister tells the U.N. that the Syrian army will continue to attack in the Aleppo and Idleb regions until terrorism is eradicated.

From Arutz Sheva, Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu and U.S. President Trump meet in Washington.

From The Times Of Israel, ISIS announces a "new phase" of attacks, mainly against Israel.

From The Jerusalem Post, President Trump's peace plan is a "realistic vision".

From YNetNews, the security agency Shin Bet discovers and arrests a Hamas spy network operating within Israel.

From the Egypt Independent, Egyptian foreign minister Sameh Shoukry arrives in the U.S for some dam meetings.

From Egypt Today, according to its grand imam, Al-Azhar will open a religious center for heritage and renovation.

From StepFeed, a video allegedly showing the helicopter crash that killed Kobe Bryant really shows a crash that happened in 2018 in the UAE.

From The New Arab, a Saudi man who uploaded a video of himself dressed as a devil faces five years in prison.

From Radio Farda, Iranian hardliners protest against Foreign Minister Zarif for his remarks about the possibility of talks with the U.S.

From IranWire, a portrait of an influential female Iranian chemist.

From Dawn, how landmines, IEDs and other explosives post a threat to people in tribal areas of Pakistan.

From The Express Tribune, a Hindu temple is vandalized in Chachro, Pakistan.

From Pakistan Today, a political leader in the Pakistani province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa is arrested for sedition.

From Khaama Press, Taliban terorists claim to have shot down a U.S. plane.

From The Hans India, the West Bengal state assembly tables a resolution against the Citizenship Act.

From the Hindustan Times, the Indian government prepaers to evacuate more than 200 Indians from Wuhan, China.

From ANI, according to Indian Defence Minister Rajnath Singh, the Citizenship Act was "not made to hurt the sentiments of any religion".

From India Today, India's Border Security Force shoots down a Pakistani drone near the border in the Jammu area.

From the Dhaka Tribune, medical teams work at Bangladeshi land ports and immigration check points to keep the coronavirus out.

From the Daily Mirror, a Chinese woman at a hospital in Angoda, Sri Lanka tests positive for the coronavirus.

From the Colombo Page, Sri Lanka's minister of power and energy tells the Ceylon Electricity Board to start work on 14 solar power projects.  (Ceylon is another name for Sri Lanka.)

From News18, the All India Muslim Personal Law Board wants the Indian Supreme Court to rule against allowing non-Muslims to question Islamic law.  (via Swarajya)

From OPIndia, a Pakistani Hindu girl is abducted from her own wedding, forced to marry a Muslim man, and forced to convert to Islam.

From Palestinian Media Watch, on Palestinian TV, what real hate looks like.

From Gatestone Institute, "truthophobia" in Turkey.

From The Jakarta Post, Indonesian Health Minister Terawan Agus Putranto advises the public to stat healthy, don't panic, and pray.

From The Straits Times, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang visits Wuhan as the death toll from the coronavirus reaches 81.

From the Borneo Post, the Malaysian government temporarily suspends its immigration facilities for people from the Wuhan, China and the province of Hubei.

From Free Malaysia Today, don't hike the price of facemasks, warns Malaysia's domestic trade ministry.

From The Mainichi, researchers in Japan conduct a transplant of heart muscle tissue using stem cells known as iPS.

From The Stream, President Trump's defense team is "already on target".

From the New York Post, according to Trump, his Middle East peace plan has a chance despite its rejection by the Palestinians.

From Accuracy in Media, according to the Des Moines Register, Senator Fake Cherokee (D-MA) would "treat truth as something that matters".

From Breitbart, Trump defense lawyer Jane Raskin tells the Senate that former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani's (R) role in Ukraine was legitimate.

From Twitchy, failed presidential and current senatorial candidate John Hicklooper (D-CO) looses his cool speaking to a climate activist.

And from The Babylon Bee, for his performance before the Senate, congresscritter Adam Schiff receives a nomination for Best Actor.  (I thus end this post with the same person with whom I started it.  Congrats on your nomination, Mr. Schiff.)

No comments:

Post a Comment