Tuesday, March 2, 2021

Tuesday Things

On a sunny but cold Tuesday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, when he was California's attorney general, Xavier Becerra did indeed fight Catholic nuns.

From FrontpageMag, President Biden brings back his old boss's foreign policy.

From Townhall, some questions for determining whether someone is a liberal or a leftist.

From The Washington Free Beacon, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo (D) hires a lawyer who already has some distinguished clientele.

From the Washington Examiner, the Department of Homeland Security warns that there could be a record number of unaccompanied children arriving at the border this year.

From The Federalist, Democrats are turning against Governor Cuomo for only one reason, which isn't a noble one.

From American Thinker, how environmental groups stopped going after ozone and started going after carbon dioxide.

From CNS News, according to Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton (R), everyone showing up at the border claims asylum.

From LifeZette, "woes pile up" for California Governor Gavin Newsom (D).

From NewsBusters, conservative leaders write an open letter scorching Jeff Bezos for Amazon's censoring of conservative books.

From Canada Free Press, why isn't Governor Gretchen Whitmer (D) calling Michigan's National Guard home?

From CTV News, Canada revamps its divorce act.

From TeleSUR, Peru's Public Prosecutor's Office ratifies forced sterilization charges against former President Alberto Fujimori.

From The Conservative Woman, why a TCW author will never again vote for the U.K. Tories.

From the (U.K.) Independent, according to U.K. Health Secretary Matt Hancock, England is on course to end coronavirus-related social distancing by mid-June.

From Allah's Willing Executioners, the German state of Hesse decides that the Islamic call to prayer does not need government permission.

From Free West Media, according to a study, most of the rapes committed in Sweden were by first or second generation immigrants.

From EuroNews, Poland clears LGBT activists of charges of offending religious feelings arising from their images of the Virgin Mary with a rainbow.

From Euractiv, the E.U. Court of Justice tells Polish judges to ignore national laws that break E.U. laws.

From About Hungary, Hungary will have almost 11 million doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccine.

From ReMix, according to Foreign Minister Szijjarto, the E.U. cannot force Hungary's choice of coronavirus vaccines.

From The Moscow Times, Russians ski, bike and skate across frozen Lake Baikal in Siberia.

From Radio Bulgaria, Bulgaria's gender gap is reportedly 13.5 percent.

From Independent Balkan News Agency, survivors of the 1995 genocide in Srebrenica, Bosnia and Herzegovina plan to sue members of the Greek organization Golden Dawn.

From Balkan Insight, the daughter of a former Romanian president is convicted of money laundering.

From The Jerusalem Post, the Israeli cabinet approves a partial reopening of the country's skies to airline travel.

From The New Arab, the U.S. imposes sanctions on two Houthi rebel commanders.

From Dawn, senatorial elections in Pakistan will be held as in past practice.

From India Today, senior Indian ministers receive coronavirus vaccinations.

From The National, an ISIS-linked attack at a U.N. humanitarian center in Nigeria traps 25 aid workers.

From The Quint, a picture of an alleged Israeli attack on a mosque is really from Iraq in 2008.

From GhanaWeb, Ghana's national chief imam opposes legalizing gay marriage.

From 9News, the man who carried out an Allahu Akbar on a 9News reporter in London goes to jail.

From Vice, 20 percent of the victims of honor violence are male.  (The last five links and the article from AWE above come via The Religion Of Peace.)

From Gatestone Institute, China continues to crush freedoms in Hong Kong.

From The Stream, Pope Francis will have a "last chance" in Iraq.

From The Daily Signal, Peronists return to power in Argentina, with rising inflation and decreasing economic freedom.

From Military History Matters, according to archives in the U.K.'s National Maritime Museum, Admiral Horatio Nelson urged his mistress to have their daughter vaccinated against smallpox.

From Space War, Huawei executive Meng Wahzhou's effort to avoid being extradited to the U.S. enters its final round in Canada.

From Newsmax, former White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany becomes a Fox News contributor.

From Fox News, a look at Dr. Seuss creator Theodor Geisel.

From The Daily Caller, politicians and others defend Dr. Seuss.

From the Chicago Sun-Times, a Chicago man is charged in a federal court with inciting a riot over posts made in Facebook.  (via The Daily Caller)

And from the New York Post, a flight from Khartoum, Sudan to Qatar is grounded after the pilot is attacked - by a cat.  (If you read Arabic, read the story at Al Sudani.)

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