Friday, November 6, 2020

Friday Phenomena - Part 1

On a warm sunny Friday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, some thoughts on the never ending election of 2020.

From FrontpageMag, President Trump unveils Democrat efforts at an election steal.

From Townhall, the battle for the election is just beginning.

From The Washington Free Beacon, The New York Times didn't learn its lesson from four year ago.

From the Washington Examiner, Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) tells Pennsylvania's Attorney General that vote counting is "America's business".

From The Federalist, Trump seems to have boosted Republicans, except for himself.

From American Thinker, some evidence of voter fraud.

From CNS News, 2,243,000 more people were employed during October than September.

From LifeZette, it's not yet time to throw in the towel.

From NewsBusters, according to TV host Joe Scarborough, the "Democratic party brand" was repudiated in this election.

From Canada Free Press, a promise from America's flyover country.

From CBC News, a group in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada hands out edible cannabis products in order to curb opioid use, but a doctor is skeptical.

From Global News, Santa Claus will not be visiting malls in and around Waterloo, Ontario, Canada due to the coronavirus.

From CTV News, the case of a man charged with threatening Canada's prime minister is adjourned until December 4th.

From TeleSUR, Chile's Constitutional Court rules against a bill to criminalize speech that denies, conceals or minimizes crimes committed by Augusto Pinochet's dictatorship.

From Morocco World News, an attempt by some Algerians to undermine Morocco's car industry fails.

From Hürriyet Daily News, according to Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu, Turkey is ready to cooperate with the U.S. regardless of who is elected President.

From Turkish Minute, according to a report by Turkey's Human Rights Association, the Turkish government forced 160 people to become informants.

From Rûdaw, a 1,700-year-old church is for sale in the Turkish province of Mardin.

From ArmenPress, Azerbaijani forces allegedly kill civilians in areas under their control.

From Egypt Independent, Egypt's New Administrative Capital will include the tallest building in Africa.

From Egypt Today, the head of Egypt's National Election Authority urges citizens to vote in the second stage of the elections for the country's House of Representatives.

From the Ethiopian Monitor, Ethiopia's Civil Aviation Authorities closes four airports.

From the Saudi Gazette, Saudi Arabian King Salman directs aid to earthquake victims in Turkey.

From The New Arab, the UAE-backed Southern Transitional Council is accused of violating human rights in the Yemeni region of Socotra.

From IranWire, women seeking work in Iran deal with the patriarchy and unjust laws.

From Dawn, Prime Minister Imran Khan accuses Pakistani politician Maryam Nawaz of maligning Pakistan's army.

From The Express Tribune, Pakistan issues new coronavirus restrictions.

From Pakistan Today, Pakistan People's Party Chairman Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari is "shocked" at statements from Nawaz.

From The Wire, Hindu's in the Pakistani province of Sindh are apprehensive as two blasphemy cases are filed within 24 hours.

From Khaama Press, the People's Peace Movement plans to march in Kabul to protest the recent attack at Kabul University.

From The Hans India, posters depicting people protesting against India's Citizenship Act appear in the city of Lucknow.

From the Hindustan Times, the Pobitora Wildlife Sanctuary in the Indian state of Assam will reopen for visitors on November 10th.

From ANI, when in India, don't litter.

From India Today, in the territory of Jammu and Kashmir, the Indian army sends to terrorists to their virgins.

From the Dhaka Tribune, the Padma Bridge, expected to open in 2022, will transform the lives of 30 million people.

From the Daily Mirror, Ravana Falls, in the Sri Lankan province of Uva, changes color due to heavy rainfall.

From the Colombo Page, Sri Lanka sends back 82 more containers of waste illegally imported from the U.K.

From Maldives Insider, the Maldivian island of Kandolhu reopens.

From Palestinian Media Watch, Palestine Polytechnic University names a gate after the mastermind of the 1972 Munich Olympics massacre.

From Gatestone Institute, according to Gulf Muslims, the Al-Aqsa Mosque does not belong to the Palestinians.

From The Jakarta Post, police in the Indonesian province of Banten arrest a man for posting a video of a damaged road leading into his village.

From The Straits Times, passengers board Singapore's first "cruise to nowhere".

From the Borneo Post, Malaysia reports 1,009 new coronavirus cases and 839 recoveries.

From Free Malaysia Today, Malaysian Princess Tengku Permaisuri Norashikin replaces a delivery rider's stolen motorcycle.

From Vietnam Plus, according to Vietnamese Deputy Prime Minister Trinh Dinh Dung, the Vietnamese government will create more detailed flood and landslide risk maps.

From The Mainichi, Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga warns of a coronavirus resurgence as cold weather drives people indoors.

From The Stream, a look at seven claims of voter fraud.

From The American Conservative, today's Republican Party still belongs to President Trump, not to Representative Lynn Cheney (R-WY).

From WPVI-TV, Pennsylvanian Republicans seek an emergency order from the Supreme Court to mandate that late arriving ballots are not counted.

From Fox News, over 120,000 mail-in provisional ballots still need to be counted in Nevada.

From The Daily Wire, according to President Trump, Americans deserve "full transparency" and "legal ballots must be counted".

From CBS Philly, the Fashion District Philadelphia is evacuated after a bomb threat.

From the New York Post, three female protesters are charged with assaulting police officers in Manhattan.

And from the Genesius Times, an elderly man wearing a mask and reportedly yelling "trunalimunumaprzure" commits armed robbery in broad daylight.

No comments:

Post a Comment