Wednesday, January 27, 2021

Wednesday Wanderings

On a partly cloudy Wednesday, here are some of the wanderings going on:

From National Review, what does the Biden administration endorse about Critical Race Theory.

From FrontpageMag, the most important question about the 2020 presidential election.

From Townhall, on the 2020 campaign trail, then-candidate Joe Biden promised not to raise taxes.  (You know, just like 1988 candidate George Bush the Elder.)

From The Washington Free Beacon, the U.S. Navy faces rough waters under President Biden.

From the Washington Examiner, Biden orders federal agencies to buy more carbon-free power and electric cars.

From The Federalist, the National Guard occupation of D.C. is panic porn, of which you are the target.

From American Thinker, questions the media might ask about the coronavirus pandemic if they were doing their jobs.

From CNS News, according to Senator John Kennedy (R-LA), parts of Capitol Hill "look like a scene from Mad Max".

From LifeZette, Senator Marco Rubio (R-FL) rips the second Trump impeachment and suggests that he can be prosecuted like a private citizen.

From NewsBusters, CNN and MSNBC barely mention that latest ProFa rioting in Portland, Oregon.

From Canada Free Press, are the Democrats biding their time with Biden as president?

From TeleSUR, Brazilian religious leaders call for the impeachment of President Jair Bolsonaro.

From The Conservative Woman, why do politicians pay attention to fanatical environmental activists?

From the Express, drivers in the U.K. had better get their vehicles tested.

From Deutsche Welle, the German government tackles the coronavirus using paper, pen and fax machines.

From Gatestone Institute, meet Angela Merkel's successor as leader of the Christian Democratic Union.

From Polskie Radio, according to Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki, remembering the victims of Auschwitz is an "important part" of Polish identity.

From Daily News Hungary, almost 250,000 Hungarians have recovered from the coronavirus.

From ReMix, Hungary prepares its anti-censorship law.

From Russia Today, police raid the apartment of Russian dissident Alexey Navalny.

From Euractiv, according to President Putin, Russia wants better ties with the E.U.

From the Greek Reporter, the 59,000 Greek Jews who were killed in the Holocaust.

From ANSA, according to Italian President Sergio Mattarella, remembering the Holocaust is a "duty of civilisation".

From France24, France is sued over alleged racial profiling by police.

From El País, a series of earthquakes strikes the Spanish province of Granada.

From Free West Media, the coronavirus pandemic could lead to more illegal migration into Europe.

From EuroNews, a 97-year-old woman has survived the Holocaust and the coronavirus.

From Morocco World News, Morocco will start its coronavirus vaccination campaign tomorrow.

From Hürriyet Daily News, Turkey observes International Holocaust Remembrance Day.

From DuvaR, the Turkish Religious Affairs Directorate comes under fire for allegedly "spreading extremism" in Islam courses for children in Syria.

From Rûdaw, in the province of Kirkuk, Iraqi counter-terrorism troops send seven ISIS terrorists to their virgins.

From The Syrian Observer, a magnitude-5.2 earthquake strikes an area on the Syria-Iraq border.

From Arutz Sheva, Prime Minister Netanyahu extends Israel's coronavirus lockdown.

From the Egypt Independent, Egyptian parliamentcritter Shaima Halawa requests further studies on the issues relating to the planned Cairo Eye Ferris wheel.

From The New Arab, according to a U.N. expert, the war in Yemen is fueled by economic profiteering.

From Radio Farda, a U.S. bomber flies over the Persian Gulf.

From The Express Tribune, according to Pakistani minister Asad Umar, Pakistan will start it coronavirus vaccination campaign next week.

From Khaama Press, the U.K. and Canada pledge to defend "media freedom" in Afghanistan.

From ANI, two people in the Indian state of Goa are booked for allegedly organizing a bullfight.  (Goa is the only current Indian state to have not been colonized by the U.K.  It was colonized by Portugal in 1510 and conquered by India in 1961.)

From the Daily Mirror, according to Sri Lankan presidential advisor Lalith Weeratunga, no one in Sri Lanka will be forced to vaccinate themselves.

From The Straits Times, a 16-year-old Singaporean is detained for allegedly planning terror attacks against two mosques.

From the Borneo Post, Malaysia starts a trial of a coronavirus vaccine.

From Vietnam Plus, Vietnam's 13th National Party Congress considers documents submitted by its delegates.

From The Stream, on International Holocaust Remembrance Day, we must confront the current anti-Semitism.

From The Daily Signal, the dark side of "gender equality" around the world.

From Military History Matters, Bonnie Prince Charlie's stash of weapons on the Culloden battlefield is found.

From Fox News, former President Donald Trump and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R) will meet as Democrats consider their impeachment trial options.

From The Daily Wire, according to Energy Secretary nominee and former Michigan Governor (D) Jennifer Granholm, some jobs may have to be "sacrificed" for President Biden's climate agenda.

From CBS Philly, Pennsylvania voters will get the final say about limiting their governor's powers during a disaster or emergency.

From the New York Post, with Mardi Gras parades being canceled, thousands of people make "house floats".

And from the Genesius Times, Biden tells the White House press corps, "If you question me, you ain't a journalist".

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