Tuesday, January 26, 2021

Tuesday Things

On a Tuesday on which the previous day's dusting of snow is melting, here are some things going on:

From National Review, the media have become the censors that they profess to hate.

From FrontpageMag, President Biden puts an anti-Israel activist in charge of NSC intelligence.

From Townhall, Democrats have a double standard about cancel culture.

From The Washington Free Beacon, a look at a "diversity audit" at a prep school in Los Angeles.

From the Washington Examiner, hundreds of White House staffers have received coronavirus vaccines.

From The Federalist, how to bring about an American spring.

From American Thinker, "Biden's false Catholicism".  (Isn't it interesting that new Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett's Catholicism is a problem for some people, but President Biden's Catholicism is not?)

From CNS News, congresscritter Jim Jordan (R-OH) asks a question about unity and impeachment.

From LifeZette, according to Biden, coronavirus restrictions might hang around for a while.

From NewsBusters, networks omit an important detail about the power-sharing deal between Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY).

From Canada Free Press, Democrats consider banning former President Trump from future electoral politics by using an obscure part of the 14th Amendment.

From The Conservative Woman, Sweden shows that coronavirus lockdowns are not necessary.

From Free West Media, Dutch politician Geert Wilders calls on Prime Minister Mark Rutte to send in the army to quell violence by immigrants in the Netherlands.

From EuroNews, Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte resigns.

From Euractiv, the German government approaches having an agreement on a new copyright law.

From ReMix, foreigners in the U.K. stage their own Brexit.

From Rûdaw, numerous civilians are killed and injured by an explosion at a market in Gire Spi, Syria.

From The New Arab, suicide bombings like the recent one in Baghdad could bring checkpoints back to Iraq.

From Jewish News Syndicate, a park in Istanbul, Turkey is named after a Nazi sympathizer.

From Gatestone Institute, China already starts testing the new Biden administration.

From The Stream, a message for old-school Democrats.

From The Daily Signal, school choice can help kids learn while teachers unions keep them out of the classroom.

From SmallBizDaily, how to manage the employee termination process amid the coronavirus pandemic.

From The American Conservative, requiem for a legendary pro-life activist.

From Fox News, a federal judge temporarily blocks President Biden's 100-day moratorium on deportations.  (If then-President Trump's executive orders were subject to judicial review, so now are President Biden's.)

From Newsmax, Senator Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) accuses Biden of bypassing Congress with his executive orders.

From The Daily Wire, according to the CDC, schools with in-person attendance have seen "scant transmission" of the coronavirus.

From Breitbart, according to congresscritter Lee Zeldon (R-NY), every state should enact voter ID and signature verification.

From the New York Post, an accused Capital rioter is identified after getting kicked off a plane at Ronald Reagan National Airport.

And from ABC 7, Target joins Costco in dropping a brand of coconut milk produced by forced labor done by monkeys.

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