Tuesday, April 13, 2021

Tuesday Links

On a cool damp Tuesday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, when it comes to illegal immigration, The Washington Post will "burn the dictionary".

From FrontpageMag, "first they came for...."

From Townhall, Senator John Barrasso (R-WY) calls President Biden's "infrastructure" bill the "green new deal in disguise".  (Whatever Democrats want or support is now "infrastructure".)

From The Washington Free Beacon, following a Supreme Court ruling, California Governor Gavin Newsom (D) backs down on his church crackdown.

From the Washington Examiner, some Democrats find themselves agreeing with some of former President Trump's immigration policies.

From The Federalist, Big Tech censors science because the coronavirus panic made them rich.

From American Thinker, what history repeating itself will look like.

From CNS News, 35 conservative groups pledge to reject money from Big Tech.

From LifeZette and maybe the "goalpost moving" department, according to Dr, Fauci, even people vaccinated against the coronavirus should still not eat with others indoors.

From NewsBusters, MSNBC tries to blame black on Asian violence on "white supremacy".

From Canada Free Press, hospitals and long-term care facilities in the Canadian province of Ontario were in bad shape long before the coronavirus.

From CTV News, the province of Nova Scotia reinstates its border restrictions with the neighboring province of New Brunswick.

From TeleSUR, Nicaragua's government plans to debate reforms to its election laws.  (Will any professional sports teams or leagues boycott the country if its reforms aren't to their liking?)

From The Conservative Woman, while BLM and Extinction Rebellion might not like the U.K.'s national anthem, they do indeed have their own anthem.

From the (U.K.) Independent, political leaders in Northern Ireland fear that even worse violence could be coming.

From Free West Media, according to a study, the lack of black goalkeepers in the German soccer league Bundesliga is due to discrimination.

From About Hungary, according to Hungarian President János Áder, the effects of climate change are showing up earlier in the Carpathian Basin than elsewhere in Europe.

From The Moscow Times, a timeline of the growing tension between Russia and Ukraine.

From EuroNews, according to Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu, the deployment of Russian troops near Ukraine is a response to threats from NATO.

From Euractiv, Ukraine accuses Russia of ignoring its request for talks.

From Radio Bulgaria, according to a poll, Bulgarians are still divided over coronavirus "vaccination passports".

From the Greek City Times, the Ottoman massacre of Greeks at Naousa, which took place on 13 April 1822.

From Independent Balkan News Agency, tensions rise at the virtual meeting of the U.N. Security Council because the representative from Kosovo had his country's flag in the background.

From Balkan Insight, according to Croatian President Zoran Milanović, Serbia must account for soldiers missing in the war of independence from Yugoslavia before joining the E.U.

From ReMix, according to Italian prosecutor Andrea Bonomo, there is no reason to try former Interior Minister Matteo Salvini for illegal detention of migrants.

From Allah's Willing Executioners, imams of a mosque in Linz, Austria are on trial for allegedly supporting ISIS.

From The North Africa Post, according to an Italian expert, misery in the camps run by the Polisario in the Algerian region of Tindouf can cause radicalization.

From The Jerusalem Post, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Yamina party leader Naftali Bennett finish the fourth round of their talks to form a coalition government for Israel.

From The New Arab, Egypt seizes the Ever Given, which had blocked the Suez Canal, and demand $900 million from its owners.

From Dawn, a policeman is killed and 40 people are injured in protests in Lahore, Pakistan over the arrest of Tehreek-i-Labbaik Pakistan leader Allama Saad Hussain Rizvi.

From Barnabas Fund, two Christian nurses in Pakistan accused of "blasphemy" are rescued from an angry mob.

From the Afghanistan Times, Taliban terrorists reportedly kill over 60 people in Afghanistan in three weeks.

From India Today, Delhi, India reports 13,468 new coronavirus cases in 24 hours, a new record.

From Gatestone Institute, China compromises elected U.S. officials.

From The Stream, there is some bad news in the Supreme Court's recent ruling on religious liberty.

From HistoryNet, Russia's stolen and lost Amber Room.

From Space War, Russian Foreign Minister calls for talks to create a treaty prohibiting weapons in space.

From The American Conservative, President Biden's nominee to head the BATFE thrusts the disaster at Waco, Texas back into the national spotlight.

From Breitbart, Mick Jagger sings against people who don't want any coronavirus vaccine.

From The Daily Wire, Ronald Reagan biographer Craig Shirley comes out against a full release for the man who shot him.

And from the New York Post, Facebook temporarily censors the name of a town in France.

No comments:

Post a Comment