Tuesday, January 5, 2021

Tuesday Things

On the first Tuesday of 2021, here are some things going on:

From National Review, Senator Josh Hawley (R-MO) doesn't like left-wingers demonstrating outside his house.

From FrontpageMag, patriots won't bend to the mob, even if the judiciary does.

From Townhall, how U.S. taxpayers lose if a Biden administration stops building the wall.

From The Washington Free Beacon, more on the protest outside Senator Hawley's house.

From the Washington Examiner, according to some Republican congresscritters, Speaker Pelosi (D-Cal) is tossing out coronavirus rules for political convenience.

From The Federalist, removing "white" authors from school curricula won't help kids read better.

From American Thinker, evidence of disappeared votes in Pennsylvania.

From CNS News, new congresscritter Lauren Boebert (R-Col) very much supports the 2nd Amendment.  (She owns a restaurant in a town named Rifle, which yours truly has visited.  See this blog's archives for August 2015 for a look at nearby Rifle Falls State Park.)

From LifeZette, congresscritter AOC (D-NY) is reportedly considering running against Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) two years from now.

From NewsBusters, when the media supported people who objected to presidential elections.

From Canada Free Press, is there a remedy for blackmail?

From The Conservative Woman, the insanity of the U.K.'s third coronavirus lockdown.

From Snouts in the Trough, has the coronavirus vaccine brought fun and games?  (This is the site's first article since this past December 16th.)

From Free West Media, Hungary launches a social media alternative to Facebook.  (If you read Hungarian, read the story at 24HU.)

From EuroNews, more than 40 people are injured by a gas explosion outside a restaurant in Ferizaj, Kosovo.

From Euractiv, the recent earthquake in Croatia has revealed problems with the country's building standards.

From ReMix, the plight of a French girl named Glina should show the contradictions between opposing homophobia and opposing islamophobia.

From The New Arab, according to the Saudi Arabian government, ties between Qatar and the countries which embargoed it have been restored.

From Gatestone Institute, over 100 U.S. congresscritters beat the drums for Iranian mullahs.

From the Greek City Times, according to Turkish President Erdoğan, turking the Agia Sofia into a mosque was "the crown of 2020".

From Allah's Willing Executioners, according to rioters who burned a Christmas tree in Vienna, it had no place in a Muslim district.  (If you read German, read the story at Heute.)

From The Times Of India, five people in the Indian state if Uttar Pradesh are booked in for allegedly torching the house of a Muslim man who converted to Hinduism.

From The Stream, thanks to what has happened recently with the coronavirus and social media censorship, the World War II-era "good German" is easier to understand.

From The Daily Signal, how does the congressional certification process for the electoral college work?

From Fox News, New York City's coronavirus vaccine rollout lags despite threats from New York Governor Andrew Cuomo (D).

From the eponymous site of Drew Berquist, why are the Georgia senatorial runoffs so important?  (via LifeZette)

From NPR, the National Guard is mobilized in Kenosha, Wisconsin ahead of a decision on charging police in the shooting of Jacob Blake.  (via The Daily Wire)

From Breitbart, Senators Jim Inhofe (R-OK) and Tim Scott (R-SC) decide against objecting to certifying the electoral college results.

From the New York Post, the exodus from New York City under Mayor Bill de Blasio (D) didn't start with the coronavirus.

And from The Babylon Bee, Vice President-elect Kamala Harris recalls how during her younger days, she helped escaping slaves on the Undewgwound Wailwoad.

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