Monday, December 7, 2020

Stories For Pearl Harbor Remembrance Day

On the 79th anniversary of the "date which will live in infamy", here are some things going on:

From National Review, we have almost reached the "safe harbor" deadline for the 2020 presidential election.

From FrontpageMag, presumptive president-elect Biden's pick to head the DHS was the "architect" of DACA.

From Townhall, Democrat double standards on speaking "truth to power".

From The Washington Free Beacon, a teachers union in Chicago claims that reopening schools is racist, even though closing them has worsened racial inequality.

From the Washington Examiner, five takeaways from the debate between Senator Kelly Loeffler (R-GA) and her opponent Raphael Warnock (D).

From The Federalist, the George vote-counting video was not even close to being debunked.

From American Thinker, election fraud and suspicious conduct by Democrats.

From CNS News, Operation Warp Speed's chief scientific advisor doesn't know if vaccinated people can still spread the coronavirus.

From LifeZette, Fox News host Chris Wallace snaps at HHS Secretary Alex Azar for not calling former Vice President Biden "president-elect".  (Technically, there is no president-elect until the Electoral College votes on December 14th.)

From NewsBusters, Project Veritas exposes CNN.

From Canada Free Press, how Nazis and Communists started their evil work by taking control of the media.

From CBC News, according to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, 249,000 doses of coronavirus vaccine will arrive in Canada by the end of the year.

From TeleSUR, a delegation from the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights meets with Peruvian victims of forced sterilizations.

From The Conservative Woman, the hidden left-wing agenda of media "experts".

From Snouts in the Trough, are the Chinese laughing at the West due to the coronavirus?

From the Evening Standard, what would a no-deal Brexit mean for the U.K.?

From the (Irish) Independent, Irish Taoiseach Micheál Martin verbally attacks Sinn Féin over an attempt to silence one of its younger officials.

From VRT NWS, according to virologist Steven Van Gucht, coronavirus numbers in Belgium are flattening off.

From Dutch News, a new monolith turns up in the Dutch region of Friesland.

From Deutsche Welle, Germany is no longer a role model when it comes to the coronavirus.

From Euractiv, Denmark and Norway apply for E.U. funds to build the world's largest hydrogen-fueled ferry.

From Polskie Radio, 50 years ago today, German Chancellor Willy Brandt visited Warsaw and knelt in front of the monument to the heroes of the Warsaw Ghetto uprising.

From ReMix, Polish Justice Minister Zbigniew Ziobro wants to ban the Communist Party of Poland.

From Hungary Today, according to Prime Minister Orban, coronavirus restrictions will stay in place in Hungary until January 11th.

From Russia Today, "flights to nowhere" from a Moscow airport sell out.

From The Sofia Globe, Bulgaria's Heath Ministry threatens to close big stores if they continue to allow crowding.

From the Greek Reporter, U.K. citizens legally resident in Greece will be allowed to stay there after Brexit.

From Independent Balkan News Agency, Romanian Prime Minister Orban steps town.

From Total Croatia News, small business owners in Croatia demand reform.

From Total Slovenia News, all of Slovenia is a high-risk area for the H5N8 bird flu.

From the Malta Independent, front line healthcare workers and residents and staff of nursing homes in Malta will be given a coronavirus vaccine in January.

From ANSA, an events organizer from Turin, Italy commits suicide by throwing himself into the Tiber River in Rome.

From Allah's Willing Executioners, a Turkish woman kicks over candles left by mourners of the victims of a terror attack in Vienna.

From SwissInfo, Switzerland signs an agreement to obtain three million doses of a coronavirus vaccine.

From EuroNews, Switzerland will evacuate the village of Mitholz to allow for the clearing of a 3,500-tonne stockpile of munitions stored underground.

From France24, French Prime Minister Emmanuel Macron defends his climate policies.

From El País, the first Spaniards to be given a coronavirus vaccine are cross-border workers in the British territory of Gibraltar.

From The Portugal News, Portuguese President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa is expected to announce whether he will seek reelection.

From Free West Media, parts of North America and Central Asia saw record snowfall during November.

From Morocco World News, Moroccan and French officials discuss judicial cooperation and combatting terrorism.

From Hürriyet Daily News, a Turkish court orders the release of two Russian journalists.

From Rûdaw, Pope Francis plans to visit Iraq this coming March.

From ArmenPress, Armenian Foreign Minister Ara Aivazian calls for Turkey to remove its forces and "terrorists" from Nagorno Karabakh.

From In-Cyprus, an inmate in a jail in Cyprus sets his cell on fire.

From The Syrian Observer, the Syrian government and opposition each submit documents in Geneva.

From YNetNews, Pfizer's coronavirus is expected to arrive in Israel this coming Thursday.

From the Egypt Independent, the Coptic Church in Egypt suspends services in Cairo and Alexandria due to a surge in coronavirus cases.

From the Saudi Gazette, the Arab coalition in Yemen destroys a Houthi drone targeting Saudi Arabia.

From The New Arab, an Algerian opposition activist involved in anti-government protests gets a one-year suspended sentence.

From Radio Farda, more on Iran's claim that a machine gun with a "satellite-controlled smart system" was used to murder the country's top nuclear scientist.

From Dawn, according to prime ministerial aide Dr. Faisal Sultan, the Pakistani government is negotiating with Russia, China and others to procure coronavirus vaccines.

From Khaama Press, a special Afghan National Police unit defuses four IEDs in various parts of the country.

From Gandhara, primary school students in Afghanistan will be educated at mosques.

From India Today, farmers in India gear up for a peaceful Bharat Bandh.  (The country known as India calls itself "Bharat", after a legendary king named Bharata.)

From the Dhaka Tribune, Bangladeshi Foreign Minister Dr. Abdul Momen calls for the U.N. to help Rohingyas.

From the Colombo Page, Sri Lanka plans to release at least 8,000 inmates due to prison overcrowding.

From Channel News Asia, Indonesian police shoot and kill six supporters of an Islamic cleric as they tried to reach a police station where his was to be questioned.

From The Jakarta Post, observers call for an investigation of the police shooting.

From Free Malaysia Today, Malaysian Senators push for reforms to ease prison overcrowding.

From The Mainichi, the bird flu is found in the Japanese prefecture of Hiroshima.

From Gatestone Institute, Turkish President Erdoğan threatens Europe.

From The Stream, congresscritter AOC's (D-NY) $58 "tax the rich" T-shirt shows perfectly how her ideas harm the poor.

From The Daily Wire, according to the CEO of Goya Food, since their sales jumped after AOC called for a boycott, she has been named employee of the month.

From The Daily Signal, how we can help the military fight for our country's future.

From the Daily Caller, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo designates several countries as "violators of religious freedom".

From SmallBizDaily, holiday shopping has already started well.

From Fox News, President Trump is expected to sign an executive order prioritizing Americans over foreigners for receiving coronavirus vaccines.  (via Breitbart)

From The Baltimore Sun, Speaker Pelosi (D-Cal) will reportedly headline a fundraiser for Georgia Democratic senatorial candidates Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock.  (via Breitbart)

And from The Babylon Bee and the "don't give him any ideas" department, California Governor Gavin Newsom (D) orders residents to stay inside smaller houses inside their regular homes.

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