Sunday, April 25, 2021

Sunday Links

On a cool cloudy Sunday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, according to congresscritter Kevin McCarthy (R-Cal), President Biden promised to be a "moderate" but has governed as a "socialist".

From Townhall, in a poll, Biden "gets wrecked" for his dealing with immigration.

From The Washington Free Beacon, a review of Senator Amy Klobuchar's (D-MN) new book.

From the Washington Examiner, a scientist who worked for the Obama administration advises cooling the talk about a climate "emergency".

From American Thinker, move over Biden T-shirts, here comes the children's book written by Vice President Harris.

From LifeZette, Senator Lindsey Graham dares to say that the U.S. is not a racist country.

From NewsBusters, Biden's approval rating fails to beat a poll's margin of error.

From Global News, coronavirus restrictions on air travelers going to and from Canada are a boon to taxi and limousine services in the U.S.

From The Conservative Woman, for every human in the British countryside, there are a million ants.

From the Evening Standard, an allegedly dangerous driver in the English county of Kent causes a bomb squad to be called and a highway to blocked.

From the Irish Examiner, gardaĆ­ raid a home in Drogheda, Ireland to find bomb making materials, and arrest one suspect.

From The Brussels Times, what are Belgians allowed to do starting tomorrow?

From Dutch News, hospitals in the Dutch province of Noord-Brabant reach the breaking point.

From Free West Media, German police use a "CIA company's" surveillance software.

From Daily News Hungary, Hungarian police arrest a suspected sexual predator who allegedly targeted underage girls.

From ReMix, according to a Finnish academic, Swedes will become a minority in the own country in 45 years.

From Sputnik International, a meeting between Presidents Putin (Russia) and Biden (U.S.) might take place in June.

From The Sofia Globe, most of Bulgaria's tourism workers are expected to be vaccinated against the coronavirus by the end of May.

From Ekathimerini, Greece waives its quarantine requirements for travelers from seven more countries.

From EuroNews, Albanian's governing Socialist Party appears headed to a narrow win in the country's parliamentary elections.

From Malta Today, restaurants in Malta will be allowed to serve customers until 5:00 p.m. staring on May 10th.

From France24, thousands of people protest in Paris against a ruling by France's highest court that the killer of a Jewish woman was not criminally responsible.

From Allah's Willing Executioners, E.U. funding has been a "windfall for Islamists".

From The North Africa Post, Spanish victims of Polisario terrorism in the Canary Islands call for the arrest of a Polisario leader currently hospitalized in Spain.

From The Times Of Israel, Israel is ready to lift restrictions on event attendance for people vaccinated against the coronavirus.

From Egypt Today, Coptic Pope Tawadros II leads a Palm Sunday Mass in Alexandria, Egypt.

From The New Arab, Houthi rebels in Yemen advance toward the city of Marib.

From IranWire, an Iranian military commander is rebuked for admitting that Iran has a military presence in Yemen.

From the Afghanistan Times, Afghan security forces send at least 90 Taliban terrorists to their virgins.

From India Today, as the Indian state of Tamil Nadu prohibits entry into places of worship, weddings take place outside temple premises.

From the Daily Mirror, according to Sri Lankan President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, the only solution for the coronavirus pandemic is vaccination.

From The Daily Star, two imams are arrested for allegedly spreading rumors and inciting violence in Brahmanbaria, Bangladesh.

From The Straits Times, a missing Indonesia submarine has been found cracked into three pieces, with its crew of 53 all dead.

From the Borneo Post, two new coronavirus clusters are found in the Malaysian state of Sarawak.

From Vietnam Plus, border guards in the Vietnamese province of Dien Bien arrest seven people for illegally entering Vietnam.  (My spellchecker has a problem with "Dien" but not with "Bien".)

From Gatestone Institute, the long and sordid history of crowds threatening violence if there is an acquittal in court.

From The Stream, Senator Chuck Schumer's (D-NY) 2017 warning about the intelligence community appears to have come true.

From Military History Matters, a review of a book about Macedonian kings Philip and Alexander the Great.

From The Daily Signal, yes, we know, Democrats don't seem to want improved security for our elections.

From Breitbart, as the rest of the world isolates, a band plays for 50,000 fans in New Zealand.

From The Daily Wire, New York City police officers leave in droves.

From 6ABC, a police officer from Delmar, Delaware fights for his life at a hospital in Baltimore after being assaulted.

And from the New York Post, this year's only "pink supermoon" will be in the sky tomorrow night.

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