Friday, May 7, 2021

Friday Fuss

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

From National Review, U.S. job growth in April falls well below expectations.

From FrontpageMag, what parents and patriots need to understand about critical race theory.

From Townhall, there's more to the story of the Texas Democrat who used a racist term against Senator Tim Scott (R-SC).

From The Washington Free Beacon, Milton Friedman might get his revenge.

From the Washington Examiner, President Biden calls for yet more spending.

From The Federalist, a host on CNBC thought that the April job numbers were a typo.

From American Thinker, Florida, Montana and South Carolina say "no" to the Democrat vision of "layabout nation".

From CNS News, the number of government employees grew by 48,000 in April.

From LifeZette, the founder of Project Veritas speaks about the organization's suit against CNN and the New York Times.

From NewsBusters, Roger Daltrey of The Who speaks out against the "woke generation".

From Canada Free Press, the hate shared by the Nazis and the Democrats.

From CTV News, the top doctor in the Canadian province of Alberta tells people to "stay close to home".

From TeleSUR, a teacher is polling well in the run-up to Peru's presidential elections.

From The Conservative Woman, a British doctor urges her fellow doctors to remember the Hippocratic oath.

From the (U.K.) Independent, according to a Labour parliamentcritter, party leader Keir Starmer must step down in order for the party to become electable.

From EuroNews, the U.K. tries to decide which foreign travelers to quarantine.

From Allah's Willing Executioners, the German public broadcaster ZDF lies about the Islamic conquest of Spain.  (If you read German, read the story at Die Tagespost.)

From ReMix, Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki wants more U.S. engagement with the Three Seas Initiative.

From Daily News Hungary, here's what will happen when five million people in Hungary are vaccinated against the coroanvirus.

From The Moscow Times, Amnesty International restores "prisoner of conscience" status to Russian dissident Alexei Navalny.

From Radio Bulgaria, some businesses in Bulgaria are at risk of being taken over.

From the Greek City Times, Turkish President Erdoğan doesn't like the solidarity between Greeks and Egyptians.

From Independent Balkan News Agency, Serbian Parliament Speaker Ivica Dačić announces a special session for possible constitutional changes.

From Balkan Insight, President Janez Janša is criticized for accusing the Slovenian Press Agency of murder.

From Free West Media, another jihadist is held "criminally responsible" for the murder of a professor in Haute-de-Seine, France.

From Euractiv, when Europeans fought over fish.

From The North Africa Post, Libya announces the creation of a fund to rebuild the cities of Benghazi and Derna.

From The Jerusalem Post, violent crashes break out at the Temple Mount in Jerusalem.

From The New Arab, Saudi Arabian workers will be required to be vaccinated against the coronavirus in order to return to their jobs.

From Pakistan Today, the Lahore High Court allows Pakistani opposition leader Shehbaz Sharif to travel abroad for a medical checkup.

From ANI, police in Delhi, India help deliver oxygen refills to needy people suffering from the coronavirus.

From Gatestone Institute, Iran's "drug terrorism" against Arab countries.

From The Stream, is abortion really so complicated?

From The Daily Signal, what's going on with masks in cars and other coronavirus insanity?

From The American Conservative, Big Tech has a "monopoly creep".

From Space War, Skyborg ACS has a successful first flight.

From The Daily Wire, a university performed experiments with tissue from aborted fetuses at taxpayer expense.

From Breitbart, Texas is on the verge of becoming the 21st constitutional carry state.

From Newsmax, congresscritter Henry Cuellar (D-TX) accuses the Biden administration of playing "shell games" with pictures from border facilities.

From the New York Post, a melting glacier in the Italian Alps reveals an "open-air museum" of artifacts from World War I.

And from WPVI-TV, a boy battling a rare disease is made "chief for a day" by the police department of Fair Lawn, New Jersey.

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