Thursday, December 31, 2020

2020 Comes To An End

In a few hours, the year 2020 will reach its end in my part of the world, which in this case is the Eastern Standard Time Zone.  This year has already ended in most time zones east of my own.  In previous year end posts, I've referred to the saying "may you live in interesting times".  I would have to say that the year 2020 has been about as interesting as any in recent memory.

I'd say that 2020 will always be remembered as the year of the coronavirus known as Covid-19, which unlike the "interesting times" saying, originated in China.  Whether it arose in a wet market, was transmitted by bats, or even engineered in a lab (which has largely been disproved), no one quite seems to know.  The spread of the virus resulted in governments imposing lockdowns and restrictions on movement and business in numerous countries around the world, including here in the U.S.  Although some countries (or more precisely, pharmaceutical companies in certain countries) have produced vaccines against the virus, restrictions of various sorts are still in place.  These restrictions have already had widespread negative effects on the economies of numerous countries.

The coronavirus and the resulting travel restrictions certain cut into my own travels.  During the entire year, I left my adopted home state of Maryland exactly three times.  The first time, before the restrictions were imposed, was to the New Bern area of North Carolina, which was reported in this blog during January.  The second time was when I walked into Pennsylvania along the Appalachian Trail in November.  The third and last time was to briefly visit some family members in Virginia over Christmas.

The interesting times of 2020 got off to an early start with the impeachment trial and acquittal of President Trump.  Of the three such trials of U.S. presidents, I now have the distinction of having lived through two of them, the other involving President Bill Clinton in 1999.  Nobody in my family was here during the first one, that of President Andrew Johnson in 1868.

There was quite a bit of civil unrest in the U.S. this year, some of it inspired (or had an excuse provided) by the death of a black man named George Floyd, whose neck was kneeled on by a Minneapolis police officer.  Riots and looting broke out in many cities, some of which involved groups which call themselves Black Lives Matter or Antifa (the latter of which I like to call "ProFa").  Statues were toppled, vandalized, or officially removed in many U.S. cities.  One group of protesters created their own allegedly autonomous area in Seattle, Washington, known as CHAZ or CHOP.  Another response to police mistreatment of black Americans and resulting protests and riots was the decision by the Washington football team to abolish their name "Redskins", followed later by the Cleveland baseball team deciding to remove their name "Indians".  In my not-so-humble opinion, the elimination of these two names will improve the lives of zero people, black or otherwise.

One positive development later during this year has been the normalization deals between Israel and the Arab countries UAE, BahrainSudan and Morocco, largely brokered by the Trump administration.

Despite garnering over 10 million more votes than in 2016, and improving his performance among women and minorities, President Trump at least officially lost his bid for reelection to former Vice President Joe Biden, whose vice presidential running mate was Senator Kamala Harris (D-Cal).  As for what I think of the election, go to a post I made earlier this month entitled "A Reverse Scenario And Two Questions".

The coronavirus had quite an effect on college football, as many players had to sit out games due to possible exposure to the virus, while some decided to opt out completely from playing.  My Virginia Tech Hokies finished their season at 5-6, and declined to appear in a bowl game, even with the normal six-win requirement being waived.

As with any year, 2020 saw its share of famous people passing on.  Among those I've noted were musicians such as Rush drummer Neal Peart, rock and roll pioneer Little Richard, guitarist Eddie Van Halen, Fleetwood Mac founder Peter Green, guitarist-singer Leslie West of Mountain, country singer Kenny Rogers and R&B singer Bonnie Pointer, and actors such as Sean Connery, Diana Rigg, David Prowse (who wore Darth Vader's costume) and Dawn Wells.

All of the above are the things that I can recall from memory.  There was obviously a lot going on this year, and I could never report or summarize all of it.  I certainly hope that 2021 will be somewhat less interesting than 2020, but that might not be saying much.  Perhaps a slight return toward normal won't be too much to ask.

Stories For The End Of 2020

As the year 2020 reaches its last day, here are some things going on:

From National Review, what will historians make of the year 2020?

From FrontpageMag, Senator Mitt Romney (R-UT) laments President Trump's grip on the Republican Party.

From Townhall, good riddance to 2020.

From The Washington Free Beacon, the Journalist of the Year award goes to Dave Portnoy.

From the Washington Examiner, Trump returns to D.C. early, reportedly to contest election certification.

From The Federalist, Trump has been "the most illuminating president in decades".

From American Thinker, without the Constitution, the U.S. is under occupation.

From LifeZette, Trump might not be the only candidate to have his election stolen this year.

From NewsBusters, a "rewind" of the media's four-year war against Trump's presidency.

From Canada Free Press, "where is President-elect Joe Biden?"

From The Conservative Woman, the U.K. has its third coronavirus lockdown "in all but name".

From the (U.K.) Independent, the U.K. territory of Gibraltar will join the Schengen area.

From Euractiv, a divided U.K. leaves the E.U. and enters the "Brexit unknown".

From EuroNews, Kraków becomes the first Polish city to fund an LGBT support center.

From The Moscow Times, President Putin urges Russians to unite in 2021 as the second wave of the coronavirus strikes Russia.

From Novinite, a fantasy park in Sofia, Bulgaria includes dragons.

From the Greek Reporter, Greece sends aid to earthquake-stricken Croatia.

From the Greek City Times, six people from Palestine allegedly enter Greece illegally and steal a pickup truck.

From Total Croatia News, photos of earthquake damage in Croatia.

From ANSA, according to Transport Minister Paola De Micheli, the Italian government should be ready for the scheduled opening of schools on January 7th.

From France24, what's allowed for New Year's Eve in France and what isn't.

From ReMix, French courts punish people involved in peaceful right-wing protests.

From Free West Media, France lags behind Germany when it comes to coronavirus vaccinations.

From El País, more on the agreement between Spain and the U.K. over Gibraltar.

From Morocco World News, Morocco's National Museum Foundation plans to establish a museum of tangible and intangible heritage in the city of Marrakech.  (It will be one more thing for Graham Nash to visit if the Marrakech Express ever really takes him there.)

From Hürriyet Daily News, President Erdoğan promises reforms for Turkey in 2021.

From Gatestone Institute, a park in Istanbul, Turkey is named after a Nazi sympathizer.

From Rûdaw, ISIS claims responsibility for a terror attack in eastern Syria.

From The Jerusalem Post, Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu is reportedly seeking an Arab candidate for his Likud party.

From the Jewish Press, in Gaza, Hamas puts up posters of slain Iranian General Qasem Soleimani.

From the Egypt Independent, Egypt summons the Ethiopian charge d'affairs over some dam comments.

From the Ethiopian Monitor, Ethiopia's central bank resumes circulating new currencies in the region of Tigray.

From the Saudi Gazette, Saudi Arabia has received over half a mission doses of Pfizer's coronavirus vaccine.

From The New Arab, the war in Syria resulted in 6,800 deaths in 2020, the lowest since it began almost 10 years ago.

From Radio Farda, agents of the Iranian government break tombstones.

From Dawn, 14 people are arrested for destroying a Hindu shrine in the Karak district in the Pakistani province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

From The News, Afghan security personnel abandon nearly 200 checkpoints to the Taliban.

From ANI, according to health experts, the number of coronavirus cases in India is declining as the country approaches herd immunity.

From the Dhaka Tribune, Bangladesh went "from despair to hope" in 2020.

From the Colombo Page, the Sri Lankan parliament will hold its first sitting on January 5th.

From The Jakarta Post, Indonesia's foreign ministry repatriates fives sailors and the body of one more.

From The Straits Times, Singaporeans ring in the new year with fireworks and virtual festivities.

From Free Malaysia Today, Malaysia's chief justice tells judges to submit to the law and not to people.

From The Mainichi, according to a study, forests on Japan's Mount Fuji are moving to higher elevations due to global warming.

From The Stream, what we've learned from the crazy year 2020.

From The Daily Signal, will 2021 be better?

From The American Conservative, President Trump's decision to support Morocco's claim over Western Sahara should be reversed.

From The Daily Wire, in her New Year's Eve message, Queen Elizabeth of the U.K. promises "better days" ahead.

From Fox News, former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie (R) promises that his failed White House run in 2016 won't hinder him in 2024.

From WJHL, congresscritter-elect Diana Harshbarger (R-TN) announces her intent to challenge electoral college votes for several states.  (via Breitbart)

And from the Genesius Times, a Democratic politician in Hartford, Connecticut awaits learning President Trump's opinion on the coronavirus relief bill, so that he can determine his own.

Wednesday, December 30, 2020

Dawn Wells 1938-2020

Dawn Wells, best known for her role as Mary Ann Summers on the sitcom Gilligan's Island, has died at age 82 in Los Angeles from causes related to the coronavirus.  Her character's last name was rarely mentioned on the show.

Dawn Elberta Wells was born in Reno, Nevada to Joe Wesley Wells, the owner of a local shipping company, and his wife Evelyn Wells.  After graduating from Reno High School, she attended Stephen's College in Columbia, Missouri, majoring in chemistry, and later transferred to the University of Washington, graduating with a degree in theater arts and design.  In 1959, Wells was crowned Miss Nevada and represented the state in the 1960 Miss America pageant.

After appearing in several TV shows as a guest star, Wells landed the role of Mary Ann on Gilligan's Island, which ran from 1964 to 1967.  Afterwards, she participated in three reunion movies based on the show, and provided voices for the cartoon spin-off Gilligan's Planet.  She also appeared in almost 100 theatrical productions and had her own one-woman show in 1985 at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.

Wells published Mary Ann's Gilligan's Island Cookbook in 1993, which included a forward by Bob Denver, who played the titular character Gilligan, and a recipe from another former castmate Alan Hale Jr., who played The Skipper.  (Like Mary Ann's last name, his character's real name Jonas Grumby was rarely mentioned.)  In 2014, she published What Would Mary Ann Do? A Guide To Life.  Wells was also involved in humanitarian and charitable work.

Wells married talent agent Larry Rosen in 1962.  They were divorced in 1967 and had no children.  The only surviving cast member from Gilligan's Island is 86-year-old Tina Louise, who portrayed an actress named Ginger Grant.

Read more at TMZ, CNN, the New York Post, The Hollywood Reporter and Variety.

Wednesday Whatnot

As the end of 2020 has almost arrived, here are some things going on:

From National Review, the Nashville RV bomber's girlfriend told police in August 2019 that he was building bombs.

From FrontpageMag, what a quote from Soviet leader and mass murderer Joseph Stalin reveals about the 2020 election.

From Townhall, some good news from 2020.

From The Washington Free Beacon, the media blackout on senatorial candidate Raphael Warnock (D-GA).

From the Washington Examiner, in 2020, the U.S. blocked $50 million worth of imports made by companies that used forced labor.

From The Federalist, President Trump invokes Saint Thomas Becket in defense of religious liberty, which should not be expected from President-elect Biden and Vice President-elect Harris.

From American Thinker, Biden admits whom he really believes to have won the 2020 election.

From CNS News, Speaker Pelosi (D-Cal), who with her husband shares a nine-digit net worth, creates a panel to "combat the concentration of wealth in America".  (I say "nine-digit" because I recently read something which said that the Pelosis are worth over $100 million.  Even if that is inaccurate, and they're really worth something like $80 or $90 million, their eight-digit fortune would still be a concentration of wealth.  This, of course, shows why I regard accusing politicians of being hypocrites is an exercise in redundancy.)

From LifeZette and the "I hope you're right" department, the two Georgia senatorial races look good for Republicans.

From NewsBusters, right-wing commentator Mark Levin takes his hike from Facebook.

From Canada Free Press, the Democrats stole the 2020 presidential election, but it's Trump's fault.

From Global News, primatologist Jane Goodall joins the call to move Lucy the elephant from Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.

From TeleSUR, Puerto Rican Governor-elect Pedro Pierlusi (New Progressive Party) presents his latest cabinet appointments.

From The Conservative Woman, in 2020, the Church "was as sharp as a marshmallow".

From the Evening Standard, three quarters of England will be under Tier 4 coronavirus restrictions starting tomorrow.

From ReMix, E.U. bureaucrats should have learned from Brexit, but didn't.

From the (Irish) Independent, according to Taoiseach Micheál Martin, Ireland will enter Level 5 coronavirus restrictions.

From VRT NWS, police seize almost one ton of illegal fireworks in Koekelberg, Belgium.

From Dutch News, police are accused of racially abusing a mixed-race family while arresting them in Dordrecht, Netherlands.

From the CPH Post, a majority of the Danish parliament agrees to an expanded launch of the 5G network in Denmark.

From EuroNews, at least 10 people are injured by a landslide in Ask, Norway.

From Radio Prague, the Association for the Restoration of the Czech Kingdom raises money to make a copy of the St. Wenceslas Crown for a Habsburg descendant.  (As a descendant of people who emigrated from the Austro-Hungarian Empire, ruled by this guy's ancestors, I naturally oppose this effort.)

From Daily News Hungary, the Fidesz opposition in the Budapest city council accuses Mayor Gergely Karácsony of using citizens as "a means to power".

From Sputnik International, according to President Putin, Russia seeks to develop a hydrogen-fueled bus by 2023.

From Euractiv, Russia plans to revives its sobering-up stations in 2021.

From Romania-Insider, Romanians start welcoming the New Year in the traditional way.

From Novinite, President Rumen Radev expresses the sympathy of the Bulgarian people for the Croatian people.

From Ekathimerini, Greek authorities impose a full lockdown on the island of Kalymnos due to a spike in coronavirus infections.

From Malta Today, Malta will start banning the importation of single-use plastics starting on January 1st.

From SwissInfo, the Swiss government decides against imposing more coronavirus restrictions.

From RFI, according to Health Minister Olivier Veran, France is set to impose stricter curfews in some places to avoid having a third lockdown.

From Free West Media, according to the daily Le Parisien, the mayor of the Paris suburb Saint-Denis has withdrawn subsidies for the Journal de Saint-Denis.

From The Portugal News, Olieros, Portugal installs a collection system for used cooking oils.

From Turkish Minute, the jailed wife of a Turkish police chief involved in corruption and bribery is reportedly denied medical treatment.

From In-Cyprus, Cyprus's Supreme Court decides against the extradition of a woman wanted in Russia.

From The Times Of Israel, Israel is running out of coronavirus vaccine doses.

From Egypt Today, the Cairo Criminal Court sentences the two killers of the "Maadi Girl" to death, while clearing a third defendant.

From The New Arab, an explosion at the Aden, Yemen airport kills at least 16 people and injures 60 others.

From IranWire, do the Iranian people really want former President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad back in office?

From Pakistan Today, according to Pakistani Minister for Interior Sheikh Rasheed Ahmed, Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz leader Nawaz Sharif's passport will be canceled on February 16th.

From Khaama Press, Afghan President Ghani reportedly asks public health minister Ahmad Jawad Osmani to resign.

From the Hindustan Times, India's federal government tells airport operators to draft standard operating procedures for transporting coronavirus vaccines.

From the Daily Mirror, three Ukrainian tourists test positive for the coronavirus while in Sri Lanka.

From Vice, Bangladeshi police use an anti-porn law to crack down on a movie about gender violence.

From CGTN, jihadists attack a village near a gas plant in the Mozambican province of Cabo Delgado.

From the Borneo Post, police in Malaysia believe that a meat cartel allegedly using fake halal labels includes both foreign and domestic syndicates.

From Gatestone Institute, China uses the coronavirus to overtake the U.S. economy.

From The Stream, 2020 has seen crises in trust and in truth.

From Sino Daily, China sentences 10 Hong Kong activists to three years in jail.

From Space War, when John Majors was prime minister, the U.K. was worried about going into a second war against Saddam Hussein's Iraq.  (This war did indeed occur, when Tony Blair was prime minister.)

From Fox News, President Trump's executive order restricting guest worker visas will soon expire.

From The Daily Wire, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton (R) warns Austin Mayor Steve Adler (D) against imposing new coronavirus restrictions on restaurants.

From Breitbart, a ProFa group in Seattle demands that the city government pay their hotel rents.

And from India Today, a nurse in Indonesia is suspended after having sex with a coronavirus patient in a hospital bathroom.

Tuesday, December 29, 2020

Tuesday Tidings

On the last Tuesday of 2020, here are some things going on:

From National Review, President-elect Biden's electric vehicle plan would actually make it harder to develop them in the U.S.

From FrontpageMag, the Person of the Year is the disenfranchised American voter.

From Townhall, Vice President-elect Harris receives a coronavirus vaccine, after opposing it.  (She was against it before she was for it.)

From The Washington Free Beacon, a TWFB Man of the Year is congresscritter Jeff Van Drew (R-NJ).

From the Washington Examiner, a judge who just happens to be the sister of gubernatorial candidate Stacy Abrams (D-GA) rules that voters who move can vote at their old addresses.

From The Federalist, the stories from 2020 in The Federalist that big media didn't want you to see.

From American Thinker, Biden appears ready to "double down on climate madness".

From CNS News, according to a Gallup poll, the most admired man in 2020 is (drum roll, please) President Trump.

From LifeZette, a reporter tells of the "red smear" he endured from the media.

From NewsBusters, Biden has a litmus test for climate change.

From Canada Free Press, an open letter, and an offer, to business owners.

From CBC News, travel restrictions for thee, but not for Ontario's provincial finance minister.

From TeleSUR, Venezuela signs an agreement to acquire Russia's coronavirus vaccine.

From The Conservative Woman, 2020 has been the year of selling liberty for medical tyranny.

From the Express, the U.K.'s Labour Party falls into chaos as it revolts against leader Sir Keir Starmer's vote to back the Brexit agreement.

From the NL Times, the Netherlands reveals its 26 coronavirus vaccination locations.

From Deutsche Welle, a large cyber attack in Germany targets the Funke Media group.

From Polskie Radio, Kraków, Poland seeks to hire a bugler.

From ReMix, according to Polish Defense Minister Mariusz Błaszczak, defense is an important element in cooperation among the Visegrád Four.  (If you read Hungarian, read the story at Magyar Hírlap.)

From The Slovak Spectator, the Slovak cabinet extends the country's coronavirus restrictions 40 more days.

From Hungary Today, according to Hungarian official Csaba Dömötör, left-wingers are trying to undermine Hungary's coronavirus vaccination efforts.  (If you read Hungarian, read the story at Origo.)

From Russia Today, a Russian Orthodox priest, who has some weird beliefs about President Putin, is detained for allegedly pushing children to kill themselves.

From Euractiv, Russia kicks out more Germans.

From Radio Bulgaria, kindergartens and grades 1 through 4 will reopen in Sofia, Bulgaria on January 4th.

From the Greek Reporter, Greece reports the first allergic reaction to a coronavirus vaccine after hundreds receive it.

From Independent Balkan News Agency, the Montenegrin parliament ratifies changes to the country's law on freedom of religion.

From Balkan Insight, Serbian customs authorities find 2,113 historical artifacts hidden in a truck.

From Total Croatia News, for the second straight day, an earthquake strikes Croatia.  (If you read Croatian, read the story at Index.)

From EuroNews, more on today's earthquake in Croatia.

From Total Slovenia News, Slovenia offers aid to Croatia after the earthquake.

From the Malta Independent, a coronavirus vaccination program starts on the Maltese island of Gozo.

From ANSA, the Pfizer coronavirus vaccine will be transported to Italy aboard six planes.

From Free West Media, almost 200 British skiers escape from a resort in Verbier, Switzerland.

From France24, French designer Pierre Cardin goes to the fashion show in the sky.

From El País, over 350,000 doses of coronavirus vaccines are flown into Spain.

From Morocco World News, the Moroccan province of Taroudant prepares to launch a mass coronavirus vaccination program.

From Hürriyet Daily News, Turkey and the U.K. sign a historic free trade deal.

From Rûdaw, Kurdish villagers claim that Iraqi army personnel forced them to leave their farms.

From Armenpress, Armenian Defense Minister Vagharshak Harutyunyan visits a Russian military base in Gyumri, Armenia.

From Arutz Sheva, Blue and White party leader Benny Gantz claims that the party saved Israel from Prime Minister Netanyahu.

From the Egypt Independent, police close many highways in Egypt due to fog.

From the Saudi Gazette, Saudi Arabia will reportedly receive 3 million doses of the Pfizer coronavirus vaccine.

From The New Arab, activists and musicians call for the Palestinian Authority to release a DJ known as the "techno queen", who was arrested at a religious site.

From Radio Farda, can a Biden administration do anything about human rights in Iran?

From Dawn, a prayer leader in Malir, Pakistan is sentenced to 25 years in jail for raising funds for an outlawed organization.

From The Express Tribune, according to Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi, Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan will not resign.

From The Hans India, the Madhya Pradesh state cabinet approves an ordinance to deal with "love jihad".

From the Dhaka Tribune, webinar speakers urge those who abuse women to be made examples.

From the Colombo Page, the Sri Lankan government postpones provincial elections due to the coronavirus.

From NewstalkZB, police in New Zealand launch an AI unit to monitor social media after the Christchurch mosque shootings.

From The Jakarta Post, Indonesia signs deals to obtain two coronavirus vaccines.

From The Straits Times, according to experts, employers in Singapore are unlikely to require workers to get vaccinated against the coronavirus.

From Free Malaysia Today, a group of Arab refugees in Malaysia claim to have been discriminated against.

From Vietnam Plus, Vietnam and the U.K. sign a free trade agreement.

From The Mainichi, Japan reportedly provided the U.S. and the U.K. with intelligence about China's crackdown in the Uyghurs.

From Gatestone Institute, Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas wants an international "peace" conference, to displace Israel.

From The Stream, is Pope Francis, who says little about the Uyghurs, the vicar of Christ or Caiaphas?

From The Daily Signal, honoring our deployed military personnel, who keep us safe.

From Fox News, the NYPD faces delays in getting a coronavirus vaccine.

From The Daily Wire, fans of President-elect Biden say that they plan to attend his inauguration despite the threat from the coronavirus.

From Breitbart, according to former congresscritter Donna Edwards (D-MD), Speaker Pelosi (D-Cal) will push through Biden's agenda.

From the New York Post, Biden makes a scary gaffe referring to Vice President-elect Harris.

And from The Babylon Bee, 10 tips for men on proposing to their girlfriends.

Monday, December 28, 2020

Monday Links

On the last Monday of 2020, here are some things going on:

From National Review, the Nashville RV bomber has been identified, but his motive has not yet been determined.

From FrontpageMag, more fake news about the coronavirus.

From Townhall, some coronavirus data from counties in Tennessee.

From The Washington Free Beacon, President-elect Biden's promise to end executions could be good for liberal billionaires.

From the Washington Examiner, for the first time, the EPA sets limits on carbon dioxide emissions from aircraft engines.

From The Federalist, five things we learned about the elite in 2020.

From American Thinker, the results of election fraud denial.

From CNS News, anti-Catholic bigotry spiked in 2020.

From LifeZette, Senator Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) calls for term limits "for bureaucrats".

From NewsBusters and the "believe it or not" department, CNN actually admits that President Trump "won the economic message battle".

From Canada Free Press, go forth into the new year 2021.

From The Conservative Woman, the coming coronavirus crimes tribunal.

From Free West Media, the Austrian Constitutional Court overturns the country's ban on headscarves in public schools.

From EuroNews, North Macedonian police arrest eight men for allegedly planning terror attacks.

From Euractiv, E.U. countries start vaccinations to end the coronavirus "nightmare".

From ReMix, U.K., Spanish and Portuguese media note the efforts of Polish doctors and soldiers aiding truck drivers stranded in Dover, England after France closed its borders.

From The New Arab, the Saudi women's rights activist who helped Saudi women get the right to drive is sentenced to over five year in prison.

From Gatestone Institute, the U.S. ratchets up the threat of sanctions in a effort to stop the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline between Russia and Germany.

From Thomson Reuters Foundation News, Bangladesh plans to send more Rohingya refugees to the island of Bhasan Char.

From the Daily Mail, the Muslim son of a police officer in Belfort, France is beaten up by other Muslims for eating a Christmas dinner.

From Dawn, a prayer leader is shot dead at a mosque in Pindegheb, Pakistan.

From the Deccan Chronicle and the "he ain't heavy, he's my brother" department, a Muslim policeman carries at 60-year-old Hindu to a temple on a hill in Tirumala, India.

From ABC News, every year, 1,000 girls in Pakistan are forced to convert to Islam.  (The last five stories come via The Religion Of Peace.)

From The Stream, a promise kept by President Trump.

From The American Conservative, President-elect Biden does a "two-step" on critical race theory.

From The Daily Wire, according to "community leaders", efforts at "police reform" are behind a crime wave in Atlanta.

From Breitbart, senatorial candidate Jon Ossoff (D-GA) reportedly refuses to disclose his film company's financial documents.

From Fox News, the Nashville RV bomber told a neighbor that the world is never going to forget him.

From WPVI-TV, police investigate the vandalizing of a sculpture of shooting victim Breonna Taylor.

And from the New York Post, the mysterious "dark spot" on Neptune changes its direction.

Sunday, December 27, 2020

I'm Back

I got back a while ago from my undisclosed location in Virginia, after giving some gifts to younger family members, so it looks like I'm just going to take it easy for a bit.  There was enough snow down there to give us all a white Christmas, but not enough to mess up the roads.

I'll soon be resuming my normal blogging activities, so stay tuned.

Saturday, December 26, 2020

Stories For The Feast Of Stephen

As we observe the feast of the first Christian martyr, here are some things going on:

From National Review, Democrat dishonesty about right-to-work laws.

From Townhall, Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer (D) is glad that she's not President-elect Biden's vice presidential running mate.

From The Washington Free Beacon, a TWFB Man of the Year awards goes to a dude who wanted "bbq", "beer" and "freedom".

From the Washington Examiner, what we know so far about the explosion on Christmas day in Nashville.

From American Thinker, the Nashville bomb blast is unlike any other on American soil.

From NewsBusters, now that the election is over with, CNN shows a video of drug traffickers hiking across the U.S. border.

From Canada Free Press, "what happened to the FBI?"

From Free West Media, the fast rise of a "far-right" party in Romania.  (The article's title includes the quotes around "far-right", perhaps because FWM realizes that "far-right" simply means that you want your country to be sovereign instead of being an administrative sub-unit of an international organization such as the U.N. or the E.U.)

From EuroNews, Hungary and Slovakia start coronavirus vaccination a day earlier than planned by the E.U.

From Euractiv, the E.U. start rolling out coronavirus vaccinations as a new strain spreads.

From ReMix, according to Polish Minister of Education Przemysław Czarnek, gender ideology is Marxism.  (If you read Polish, read the story at TVP Info.)

From Gatestone Institute, tensions between Turkey and the E.U.

From The New Arab, Jordanian authorities arrest a journalist who alleged that officials had been vaccinated against the coronavirus.  (What is this "freedom of the press" you speak of?)

From OpIndia, why Pakistan has a problem with Google and Wikipedia.  (When reading an article from an Indian source about Pakistan, or vice versa, a bit of NaCl is always permissible.)

From The Stream, a baby against the world.

From The Daily Wire, the authenticity of the story of the virgin birth.

From Fox News, a left-wing journalist and three others are charged in connection to BLM firebombing of police vehicles.  (via The Daily Wire)

From WPVI-TV, the RV which exploded in Nashville blared out a warning before the blast.

From Breitbart, according to a German economist, the "Great Reset" will cause a crash worse than what happened in the Weimar Republic.

From the New York Post, how dogs sniff out the coronavirus, cancer, and other stuff.

And from ABC7, a monolith appears in San Francisco's Corona Heights Park, and it's made of gingerbread.  (Has anyone tried to eat any of it yet?  The story comes via Breitbart.)

Thursday, December 24, 2020

A Few Stories For Christmas Eve

Now that I've got all my Christmas shopping done, I now present some things going on:

From National Review, the media flips pre-election truths now that a Democratic administration is presumably on its way in.

From FrontpageMag, the Thanksgiving coronavirus surge didn't happen, but Democrat governors still want to cancel Christmas.

From Townhall, Operation Legend concludes, after racking up a "stunning number of arrests".

From The Washington Free Beacon, TWFB chooses its Man Of The Year for 2020.

From the Washington Examiner, what President-elect Biden's appointments mean for his administration.

From The Federalist, infants were reportedly born alive during botched abortions in Texas in 2019.

From American Thinker, why Democrats should read the report from White House advisor Peter Navarro.

From LifeZette, President Trump rights wrongs with his new pardons.

From NewsBusters, the worst of the media's Trump derangement syndrome in 2020.

From Canada Free Press, Christmas, Jesus, and the Bar Kokhba revolt.

From Sky News, the U.K. and the E.U. finally reach a Brexit trade deal.  (via The Conservative Woman)

From Gatestone Institute, jihadists are attracted to Christmas for unattractive reasons.

From The Stream, the extraordinary "yes" from the mother of Jesus.

From Breitbart, a Mexican border policeman is found to be the leader of a drug cartel cell.

From CBS Philly, a federal judge rules against a bid to overturn Pennsylvania Governor Tom Wolf's (D) ban on indoor dining at restaurants.

From The Daily Wire, the Biden team complains that Twitter won't turn over to them all followers of the Trump White House accounts.

From Fox News, Dr. Fauci moves the goalposts on herd immunity to the coronavirus.

And from The Peedmont, while trying to sing Christmas carols, former Virginia Governor Terry McAuliffe (D) passes out after three bars of Jingle Bells.

Wednesday, December 23, 2020

Checking In, And A Few Stories

I have arrived at my undisclosed location in Virginia, so that I can play Santa Claus to some younger members of the Bigfoot family.  I have found that eating at restaurants and shopping is just about the same on the way down as at home, in other words, wear a mask if you want to enter.  I have also learned that the coronavirus has not kept truckers off the interstate highways.  The blogging will be light for a few days, but for now, I've got a bit of time, so here are just a few things going on:

From National Review, why six Senators voted against the coronavirus relief bill.

From FrontpageMag, an arrest of a terrorist shows the perils of President-elect Biden's immigration plan.

From Townhall, congresscritter Ilhan Omar (D-MN) makes a decent point about the coronavirus relief bill.

From The Washington Free Beacon, senatorial candidate Jon Ossoff's (D-GA) film company took a payment from a Chinese-backed media giant.

From the Washington Examiner, President Trump warns Iran after rockets hit the U.S. embassy in Baghdad.

From The Federalist, some good things that happened in 2020.

From American Thinker, Trump pardons Hunter (no, not Biden's son).

From CNS News, congresscritter-elect Marjorie Greene (R-GA) gives her opinion of the coronavirus relief bill, and it ain't pretty.

From LifeZette, Dr. Deborah Birx, caught breaking her own coronavirus rules, announces her retirement.

From NewsBusters, "stop coddling the Cuomos".

From Canada Free Press, patriots tell Biden to stop the fear mongering.

From The Conservative Woman, science on the coronavirus has become a "witches' brew".

From Gatestone Institute, the "dirtiest little secret" about drug trafficking.

From The Stream, the Christmas story is very Jewish, and has good news for all the nations.

And from the Genesius Times, according to a study, people who support socialism are more likely to have sniffed glue during economics class.

Tuesday, December 22, 2020

Tuesday Links

On the last Tuesday before Christmas, here are some things going on:

From National Review, coronavirus vaccine priority for congresscritters creates feuds.

From FrontpageMag, controlling people is easier than fighting a virus.

From Townhall, Democrats unleash their own inner racists.

From The Washington Free Beacon, a union in California calls for people to stay at home, with a very notable exception.

From the Washington Examiner, Vice President-elect Harris's successor in the Senate has been chosen.

From The Federalist, with theaters in New York City shut down, a walking tour turns the city into 1899 Paris.

From American Thinker, the two major parties come together to rob the American taxpayer.

From CNS News, according to Senator Rand Paul (R-KY), the spending bill including coronavirus relief is everything that the Republicans claim to be against.

From LifeZette, a documentary exposes municipal malfeasance in Seattle.

From NewsBusters, factcheckers aren't so good at factchecking themselves.

From Canada Free Press, Ontario provincial Premier Doug Ford need to realize that it's Christmas, not Armageddon.

From CBC News, according to Chief Public Health Officer Dr. Theresa Tam, the new coronavirus strain in the U.K. has not yet been found in Canada.

From TeleSUR, over 5,000 Guatemalans remain in shelters after hurricanes Eta and Iota.

From The Conservative Woman, U.K. Prime Minister Boris "the Spider" Johnson's never-ending horror show.

From the Express, Brexit talks are in chaos as E.U. negotiator Michel Barnier wants to extend them after January 1st.

From Free West Media, the new coronavirus strain in the U.K. almost coincides with Brexit.

From EuroNews, the British territory of Gibraltar closes travel to the U.K.

From the (Irish) Independent, what level 5 coronavirus restrictions mean during Christmas.

From the NL Times, coronavirus vaccination registry in the Netherlands will be voluntary.

From Deutsche Welle, German Santa Clauses face tough times during the coronavirus pandemic.

From Polskie Radio, Polish police and border guards detain four people trying to smuggle marijuana into Poland.

From ReMix, a new law in Poland could fine social media which censor lawful speech.  (If you read Polish, read the story at Benchmark.)

From Daily News Hungary, being a police officer in Hungary is getting more difficult.

From Russia Today, an American who moved to Russia after allegedly killing his girlfriend asks President Putin for Russian citizenship.

From The Sofia Globe, new locomotives to into service on Bulgarian state railways.

From the Greek Reporter, new lighting arrangements are completed at two ancient monuments in Athens.

From the Malta Independent, the St. Paul's Shipwreck Pilgrimage of February 2021 is postponed until the following September due to the coronavirus.

From ANSA, the Italian interior ministry orders widespread checks on movements during Christmas.

From SwissInfo, the new U.K. coronavirus strain has probably reached Switzerland.

From France24, a bill proposed in France could require a coronavirus vaccination in order to ride public transportation.

From El País, Spain's coronavirus restrictions in each of its regions.

From The Portugal News, coronavirus testing chaos at the Faro, Portugal airport.

From Morocco World News, a delegation from the U.S. and Israel visits the tombs of Moroccan kings Hassan II and Mohammed V.

From Gatestone Institute, why the U.S. should help Morocco.

From Hürriyet Daily News, according to Defense Minister Hulusi Akar, Turkey's issues about the Aegean are bilateral with Greece, not multilateral with the E.U.

From Rûdaw, Iraq approves flight bans and border closures to fight the "new strain" of the coronavirus.

From In-Cyprus, Cyprus's cabinet approves a ban on plastic bags.

From The Syrian Observer, a Russian ship reportedly carrying tanks heads toward Syria.

From Arutz Sheva, according to Prime Minister Netanyahu, Israel could be among the first countries to emerge from the coronavirus crisis.

From the Egypt Independent, a court in Cairo sentences three defendants to death for torching a house, which caused the death of a child inside it.

From the Ethiopian Monitor, Ethiopia allows U.N. teams to enter the province of Tigray, to assess humanitarian needs.

From the Saudi Gazette, over 4.5 pilgrims have visited the Two Holy Mosques in Mecca and Medina since October.

From The New Arab, Al Azhar University in Egypt issues a fatwa against membership in the Muslim Brotherhood.

From IranWire, a review of 2020.

From Dawn, the Hindu community of Islamabad, Pakistan is given permission to build a wall around a proposed cremation site.

From Khaama Press, Afghan National Army personnel "safely" detonate a bomb in Kabul, avoiding damage to infrastructure.

From The Hans India, two Lashkar-e-Taiba terrorists surrender in the Indian territory of Jammu and Kashmir.

From the Dhaka Tribune, Bangladesh sees the highest number of deaths along its borders in 10 years.

From the Colombo Page, Sri Lankan police arrest a man for allegedly trying to sell babies online.

From Radio Dalsan, an Al Shabaab court in Somalia cuts off a mans hand for stealing.  (via AllAfrica)

From The Jakarta Post, Indonesian President Joko Widodo announces a cabinet reshuffle.

From The Straits Times, how Singapore took steps to ensure access to coronavirus vaccines.

From Free Malaysia Today, according to Malaysian Senior Minister for Security Ismail Sabri Yaakob, it's not yet time for "green travel bubbles".

From Vietnam Plus, Vietnam and Cambodia ratify treaties on border demarcation.

From The Mainichi, in Shirahama, Japan, someone appears to have mis-gendered a panda cub.

From The Stream, 2020 has been the year in which hate made the world go round.

From The Daily Signal, fitness classes are all but banned in D.C. due to coronavirus fears.

From SmallBizDaily, more than ever, the gifts we give matter.

From The Daily Wire, according to Phil Robertson of Duck Dynasty, "politicians put people out of work" and "killed small business".

From the New York Post, Heinz swag for babies conceived during coronavirus lockdowns sells out - again.

From Fox8, a dog stolen from a home in Barberton, Ohio in 2012 is reunited with his owner.  (via Fox2Now.)

And from Apartment Therapy, speaking of dogs, scientists study how dogs recognize each other.

Monday, December 21, 2020

Stories For The Winter Solstice

Today is the winter solstice in the northern hemisphere, and will feature a Great Conjunction of Jupiter and Saturn.  Meanwhile down here on earth, here are some things going on:

From National Review, the statue of Confederate General Robert E. Lee is removed from the U.S. Capitol building.

From FrontpageMag, the media saves President-elect Biden, just as it once saved President Obama.

From Townhall, congresscritter Tulsi Gabbard (D-HI) "rips" the CDC for its "immoral" coronavirus vaccine strategy.

From The Washington Free Beacon, the U.S. charges a Libyan man in connection with the 1988 bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland.

From the Washington Examiner, President Trump makes an executive order encouraging a classical style for new federal government buildings.

From The Federalist, 400 years ago today, the Pilgrims landed at what is now called Plymouth Rock.

From American Thinker, is China committing genocide against the Muslim Uighurs?  (It seems that the same people who railed against Trump's three-month travel moratorium, wrongly characterized as a "Muslim ban", have gone Sgt. Schulz about what China is doing to these Muslims.)

From CNS News, China still claims that the coronavirus came from elsewhere.

From LifeZette, federal lawmakers brag about their coronavirus relief bill, but should really be ashamed.

From NewsBusters, an Axios reporter ignores Senator Sheldon Whitehouse's (D-RI) hypocrisy on special interests.  (A "special interest" is any interest that a given politician disagrees with.)

From Canada Free Press, congresscritter AOC (D-NY) gets a coronavirus vaccine and a photo op.

From TeleSUR, according to President Jair Bolsonaro, there is no rush for coronavirus vaccination in Brazil.

From The Conservative Woman, the U.K. will have coronavirus passports.

From Free West Media, the man who attacked two policemen in Bollène, France was following a "de-radicalization" program.

From EuroNews, according to U.K. Prime Minister Johnson, the U.K. and France will soon allow cross-channel traffic.

From Euractiv, the leaders of six Hungarian opposition parties agree to join forces against Prime Minister Orban in 2022.

From ReMix, Hungary and Poland have a victory against globalism.  (If you read Hungarian, read the story at Magyar Nemzet.)

From Independent Balkan News Agency, Mostar, Bosnia and Herzegovina holds elections for the first time in 12 years.

From Balkan Insight, Bosnian authorities promise to convert the open-air Lipa migrant camp into a reception center.

From Rûdaw, Iraq signs a deal to purchase 1.5 million doses of Pfizer's coronavirus vaccine.

From The New Arab, Lebanon's parliament passes a bill to criminalize sexual harassment.

From TimesNowNews, a man in the Indian state of Bihar stabs himself to death inside a mosque.

From OpIndia, according to Islamic cleric Zakir Naik, saying "Merry Christmas" is "shirk".

From RAIR Foundation USA, according to French journalist Eric Zemmour, it's time to stop saying that violence has nothing to do with Islam.

From Gatestone Institute, the E.U. needs to stand up for the human rights that it proclaims.

From The Stream, since when are all these things seen after the election acceptable?

From ITR Economics, what effect would a capital gains tax increase have on the stock market?

From The American Conservative, the incoming Biden administration will face a legitimacy crisis.

From The Daily Wire, according to Surgeon General Jerome Adams, black Americans might distrust coronavirus vaccines due to past medical racism.

From Breitbart, pro-Israel left-wing congresscritter-elect Ritchie Torres (D-NY) will not join the "Squad".

From NBC News, Kilauea volcano erupts at Halemaumau crater after a series of weak earthquakes.  (via Breitbart)

From Fox News, according to former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Hailey, Americans should "wake up" and realize that China wants to "dominate" the world.

And from The Babylon Bee, congress agrees to a coronavirus stimulus bill that will give everyone a coupon for $5 off at Applebee's.