Tuesday, March 30, 2021

Tuesday Links

On a sunny and mild Tuesday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, Senator Fake Cherokee (D-MA) is hungry for power.

From FrontpageMag, are all those coronavirus-related deaths really from the coronavirus?

From Townhall, congresscritter Chip Roy (R-TX) does not regard Vice President Harris as the right person to deal with the border crisis.

From The Washington Free Beacon, President Biden puts former National Security Advisor Susan Rice in charge of expanding vote by mail.

From the Washington Examiner, according to a border agent, the Biden administration has opened a processing operation for illegal migrants.

From The Federalist, the biggest left-wing control activist goes Sgt. Schulz about Hunter Biden's firearm scandal.

From American Thinker, your coronavirus papers, please.  (This blog has a label for "big government".  The subject of this article would be "huge government".)

From CNS News, according to Republican congresscritters, discontinuing former President Trump's migration agreements is "a serious and preventable" blunder.

From LifeZette, New York City's chief doctors tells white people to "drop dead".

From NewsBusters, liberal media outlets push the idea that pollution is making male parts smaller.

From Canada Free Press, a look at Big Tech's speech gestapo.

From CTV News, according to a poll, Canadians favor stricter gun control and buyback to banned guns.

From TeleSUR, Guatemalan President Alejandro Giammattei potentially authorizes force against a migrant caravan from Honduras.

From The Conservative Woman, the myth of the "super-deadly" British coronavirus variant.

From the (U.K.) Independent, a cargo ship blocks Littlehampton Harbor in southeastern England.

From Free West Media, migration into Germany leads to success for its right-wing parties.

From EuroNews, Germany suspends the use of the AstraZeneca coronavirus vaccine for people under 60.

From Euractiv, over 16 percent of Slovaks are at risk for poverty.  (Yours truly, an American of mostly Slovak descent, is comfortably well off, and thus not at such risk.)

From About Hungary, Hungary now has the highest coronavirus vaccination rate in Europe.

From The Moscow Times, a court in Crimea jails a Jehovah's Witness for six and a half year for organizing and "extremist" group.

From Radio Bulgaria, only 14 percent of restaurant operators in Bulgaria agree to reopen using only their outdoor areas.

From The Greek Reporter, Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis plans to visit Libya next week.

From Independent Balkan News Agency, Italian Foreign Minister Luigi Di Maio visits Bosnia and Herzegovina.

From Balkan Insight, Bosnian police hunt for a wanted American alleged white supremacists.

From ReMix, French politician Marine Le Pen details her immigration referendum plans.

From The North Africa Post, to the displeasure of local textile makers, Chinese and Turkish textile companies will produce uniforms for the Tunisian military.

From Arutz Sheva, United Arab List leader Monsour Abbas is reportedly leaning toward supporting an Israeli government headed by current Prime Minister Netanyahu.

From The New Arab, Egyptian President Abdel al-Sisi warns against Ethiopia's dam risks.

From Dawn, Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan responds to Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Pakistan Day message.

From ANI, according to Health Minister Harsh Vardhan, India's success in fighting the coronavirus can be used to eliminate tuberculosis by 2025.

From Gatestone Institute, the Chinese communist party's new five-year plan.

From The Stream, why the Biden administration fired staffers over past marijuana use but has no problem with Vice President Harris's past marijuana use.

From The Daily Signal, the left-wing cries of "Jim Crow" are "absurd, insulting and dishonest".

From HistoryNet, baseball star Ted Williams goes to war.

From Space War, the sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un calls South Korea's leader "a parrot raised by America".

From The American Conservative, take a stand against mandatory masks.

From the New York Post, would-be congresscritter Dan Rodimer (R-TX) is accused of faking an accent.

From Newsmax, according to Georgia Governor Brian Kemp (R), calls to boycott his state over its new voting law are "ridiculous".

From The Daily Wire, the U.S. Olympic Committee sets guidelines for protesting by athletes.

From Investment Watch, the Amish, who decided against coronavirus restrictions, are still alive.

And from Fox News, an eight-year-old Girl Scout in San Bernardino, California sells the most cookies ever.  (Does that make her the new Cookie Monster?)

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