Monday, April 5, 2021

Monday Links

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

From National Review, some northeastern Democrat congresscritters make some demands over President Biden's infrastructure bill.

From FrontpageMag, "not all Muslims do that", we are told.

From Townhall, Senator Joe Manchin (D-WV) throws a monkey wrench into Biden's infrastructure bill.

From The Washington Free Beacon, Biden's infrastructure bill would be a boon for unions.

From the Washington Examiner, according to a poll, voters are turning against Biden's handling of the underage migrant surge.

From The Federalist, the show 60 Minutes displays its double standards on governors.

From American Thinker, the director of the Portland, Oregon Board of Education worries that trees might be racist.

From CNS News, right-wing commentator Ben Shapiro points out things that people believe because of media lies.

From LifeZette, according to Senator John Kennedy (R-LA), "Biden just doesn't care" about the current surge of migrants on the southern border.

From NewsBusters, does anyone care about the politics of the Capitol barricade rammer?

From Canada Free Press, the mayor of Calgary, Alberta, Canada should understand that the lion has turned.

From TeleSUR, the Brazilian Supreme Court authorizes religious acts in churches and temples.

From The Conservative Woman, could coronavirus vaccines pave the way for the next pandemic?

From Free West Media, the German government mandates coronavirus PCR tests for all travelers, except illegal migrants from Greece.

From EuroNews, U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson is hopeful that international travel can resume on May 17th.

From Euractiv, Bulgarians vote to send three new parties to their parliament.

From ReMix, how does Europe deal with migrant clans from Africa and the Middle East?

From Independent Balkan News Agency, Montenegrin Prime Minister Zdravko Krivokapić demands the resignation of Justice Minister Vladimir Leposavić over comments on the Srebrenica genocide.

From Balkan Insight, Vjosa Osmani, who earned her law degree in the U.S., becomes Kosovo's second female president.

From The North Africa Post, Algeria reportedly signs a memorandum of understanding with Chinese companies to mine iron ore in the province of Tindouf, thus violating an agreement with Morocco.

From The New Arab, Egypt's first female ship captain is wrongly accused of blocking the Suez Canal.

From WION, the rise of political Islam and terrorism in Bangladesh.

From the Blitz, Sweden has become the rape capital of Europe.

From Gatestone Institute, the real enemies of the Arabs are Turkey and Iran.

From The Stream, the old expression "say it isn't so, Joe" gets a new meaning.

From The Daily Signal, the "Zuckerbucks" from Facebook's CEO show the extent of corporate influence on elections.

From SmallBizDaily, the Hey Baby! brand of baby products are booming.

From The Daily Wire, a new bill in Utah would require biological fathers to pay support for women during their pregnancies.

From the New York Post, according to a study, 7 percent of all Americans live without the Internet.

From Breitbart, Dr. Fauci wants "nothing to do with" the border as 10 percent of illegal migrants have the coronavirus, and two Yemeni nationals on the FBI's terrorist watch list are captured after illegally entering the U.S. from Mexico.  (Remind me again where Yemen is within Latin America.)

From Newsmax, Arkansas Governor Asa Hutchinson (R) vetos a ban on transgender treatment for people under 18.

And from the Saskatoon StarPhoenix, an immigrant from France fails the French for immigrants test in the Canadian province of Quebec.

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