Sunday, November 1, 2020

Stories To Start November

On a rainy Sunday at the start of November, here are some things going on:

From National Review, why the left is angry about the Supreme Court, which is mostly not about the most recently appointed Justice.

From Townhall, as polls get tighter, post-election election challenges become almost inevitable.

From The Washington Free Beacon, the home of congressional candidate Sean Parnell (R-PA) is vandalized with left-wing graffiti.

From the Washington Examiner, Senators Lindsey Graham (R-SC) and Ron Johnson (R-WS) decline to subpoena Hunter Biden, for the time being.

From The Federalist, undecided voters in Pennsylvania are torn between faith and a party that was once their way of life.

From America Thinker, Governor Gretchen Whitmer (D-Mich) owes Trump supporters an apology.

From CNS News, at a rally for former Vice President Biden, his old boss jokingly tells someone to "put that mask back on".

From NewsBusters, ABC is shocked by both President Trump's post-coronavirus campaign energy and the "we love you" chants from his supporters.

From Canada Free Press, the Democrats will fall just as the Berlin Wall did.

From Global News, residents of the U.S. exclave Point Roberts, Washington are disappointed to find that relaxed coronavirus travel rules don't apply to them.

From TeleSUR, the Caribbean island nation of Antigua and Barbuda celebrates its 39th Independence Day.

From The Conservative Woman, ten reasons why a second coronavirus lockdown in the U.K. is a terrible idea.

From the Evening Standard, U.K. Prime Minister faces opposition against his plans for a second lockdown from his own Tory party.

From the (Irish) Examiner, Ireland's National Bus and Rail Union wants dedicated buses for health care workers.

From VRT NWS, some shops in Belgium will be allowed to partially reopen tomorrow.

From Dutch News, new coronavirus cases in the Netherlands dip below 10,000.

From Daily News Hungary, is the friendship between Hungarian Prime Minister Orban and Russian President Putin coming to an end?  (If you read Hungarian, read the story at Telex.)

From The Moscow Times, according to Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, there is no reason for Russia to intervene in Nagorno-Karabakh.

From EuroNews, the presidential election in Moldova heads to a runoff.

From Novinite, Bulgaria celebrates the National Enlightener's Day.

From Ekathimerini, aftershocks are expected to last for weeks after the quake which struck in the Aegean Sea and the island of Samos.

From RFI, "nonessential" shop owners in France denounce "unfair competition".

From Free West Media, the person who shot an Orthodox priest in Lyon, France is identified as of the "Mediterranean type".

From Inside OverTurkey's strategy to conquer parts of Europe and Asia, inspired by Turanism.

From The Times Of Israel, Health Minister Yuli Edelstein announces that Israel's coronavirus quarantine will be shortened from 14 days to 12.

From The Jerusalem Post, two Israeli companies will display their hardware at a defense show in the UAE.

From the Egypt Independent, Egypt's Hurghada International Airport receives its first flight from the Netherlands since the coronavirus pandemic started.

From IranWire, Baha'is are barred from university enrollment in Iran for the 40th straight year.  (What is this "equal opportunity" you speak of?)

From Dawn, according to Pakistani politician Maryam Nawaz, the country's armed forces "should not appear to be inclined towards any one political party".

From India Today, Indian army doctors in the territory of Ladakh perform an appendectomy at 16,000 feet.

From the Daily Mirror, the coronavirus curfew in Sri Lanka's Western Province is extended to November 9th.

From Free Malaysia Today, despite the coronavirus pandemic, the village of Kampung Pulau Tengah keeps drawing visitors.

From Gatestone Institute, the unasked questions for the U.S. elections.

From The Stream, how hate for Columbus leads to terror.

From The Daily Signal, a new price transparency rule will help improve the U.S. health care system.

From Breitbart, a "huge" crowd lines up ahead of a Trump campaign rally in Hickory, North Carolina.

From The Daily Wire, after President Trump complains, Facebook reinstates a "New Jersey Women For Trump" page.

From Fox News, Penn State drops out of the AP's Top 25 in NCAA football, as Liberty gets the 25th rank.

From WPVI-TV, voters in Philadelphia can catch a free trolley to the polls.

And from the New York Post, former President Obama still has some basketball skills.

No comments:

Post a Comment