Thursday, April 8, 2021

Thursday Things

On a warm sunny Thursday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, President Biden doesn't know physics.

From FrontpageMag, when a story about racism really isn't.

From Townhall, former Senator Kelly Loeffler (R-GA) slams Biden and former gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams (D-GA) about disinformation over Georgia's new voting law.

From The Washington Free Beacon, New York state will give direct payments to illegal aliens who lost their jobs during the coronavirus pandemic.  (Come to think of it, since they are in the U.S. illegally, they really had no right to those jobs in the first place.)

From the Washington Examiner, Biden orders the Justice department to regulate AR-15-style pistols.

From The Federalist, the truth about the Nation of Islam that the media don't want to deal with.

From American Thinker, what the Capitol rammer's attack a form of jihad?

From CNS News, the Border Patrol encountered enough illegal migrants in March to populate Salem, Oregon.

From LifeZette, Biden's choice of ATF director like the "well regulated" part of the Second Amendment.

From NewsBusters, NBC gets confused on red states handling the coronavirus better than blue states.

From Canada Free Press, on rules and cheating.

From CTV News, the Canadian province of Ontario reports over 3,000 new coronavirus cases as its stay-at-home order takes effect.

From TeleSUR, St. Vincent and the Grenadines announces a stage 3 disaster alert due to increased activity from the La Soufriere volcano.

From The Conservative Woman, the coronavirus pandemic has been "very convenient".

From the (U.K.) Independent, Labour Party leader Keir Starmer urges U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson to convene all-party talks to deal with recent violence in Northern Ireland.

From EuroNews, Slovakia is told to return its batch of the first Russian coronavirus vaccine.

From About Hungary, Hungary helps the E.U. secure funds for border protection - in central Asia.

From ReMix, a Hungarian political analyst asks if the West is already dead.

From The Moscow Times, Ukrainian President Zelenskiy visits his country's eastern frontline as German Chancellor Merkel urges Russian President Putin to pull back his troops.

From Radio Bulgaria, according to Bulgarian politician Maya Manolova, her party will not negotiate with status quo parties.

From the Greek City Times, Greece has vaccinated 2 mill people against the coronavirus.

From Independent Balkan News Agency, crowds take to the streets in Montenegro as their government announces changes to its citizenship law.

From Balkan Insight, a restaurant stages a silent protest against Kosovo's coronavirus restrictions.

From ANSA, a Muslim girl is held captive by her family to stop her from seeing a Hindu boy - in Arezzo, Italy.

From Free West Media, a family in Annecy, France files negligent homicide charges after one of them dies after receiving the AstraZeneca coronavirus vaccine.

From Republic World, French authorities seek terrorism charges against an 18-year-old woman for allegedly plotting an attack on a church during Easter weekend.

From Euractiv, three-time French rally champion commits to planting a tree for every time he wins a lap.

From The North Africa Post, Morocco extends its state of health emergency until May 10th.

From The Jerusalem Post, what is Israeli "kingmaker" Naftali Bennett really thinking?

From The New Arab, Sudanese women rally against gender-based violence and inequality.

From Dawn, according to Pakistani Science Minister Fawad Chaudry, criticism should not be criminalized.

From Pajhwok Afghan News, funds for power projects in the province of Faryab are included in Afghanistan's 2021 budget.  (I found this site a few days ago and decided to start using it.  So please welcome Pajhwok Afghan News, my third source from Afghanistan.)

From The Hans India, India and China plan to hold the 11th round of their Corps Commander-level talks in the eastern part of the territory of Ladakh.

From PC Gamer, the Council on American-Islamic Relations asks Valve, Microsoft and Sony to stop distributing the game Six Days in Fallujah.

From Africa News, the remains of a dozen expats near the Amarula Hotel in Palma, Mozambique are found after it was attacked by ISIS terrorists.

From Gatestone Institute, China boycotts Western companies over criticism of their treatment of the Uyghurs.

From The Stream, Joe Biden campaigned as a moderate and is governing as a radical leftist.

From The Daily Signal, Pennsylvania decides to remove dead people from its voter rolls.

From The American Conservative, the anti-plutocracy conservatism of America's biggest President.

From Space War, the U.S. Air Force invests in autonomous daytime telescopes for tracking enemy satellites.

From Breitbart, seven awkward moments from President Biden's gun control announcement.

From Fox News, a federal judge blocks the release of video recorded during meetings of the National Abortion Federation.

From The Daily Wire, discarded masks are becoming a serious pollution problem.

From Newsmax, former NFL player Phillip Adams allegedly kills five other people and then himself.

From the New York Post, what you should know about your vaccine card.

And from Consequence Heavy, rocker Ted Nugent wonders why there were no lockdowns for the first 18 types of Covid.

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