Wednesday, May 12, 2021

Wednesday Whatnot

As the sunny but cool weather continues on a Wednesday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, the stats show that President Biden has it wrong across the board.

From FrontpageMag, the left's war against child-bearing.

From Townhall, we'll trust the CDC when they stop lying about the coronavirus.

From The Washington Free Beacon, how Biden has failed in the Middle East.

From the Washington Examiner, over 120 retired generals and admirals post an open letter questioning the results of the 2020 presidential election.  (I would suspect that if any current generals or admirals did something like that, they would be retired very soon afterwards.)

From The Federalist, according to the science, the lockdown mongers were wrong about how to deal with the coronavirus.

From American Thinker, we should have a recount - of deaths from the coronavirus.

From CNS News, we Americans are still driving our cars.

From LifeZette, former Florida Governor Jeb Bush offers his fellow Republicans some irrelevant advice.

From NewsBusters, TV networks bury Biden's border crisis.

From Canada Free Press, death by entrapment, both recent and historical.

From CTV News, the Canadian province of Ontario works on a plan to distribute 250,000 doses of the AstraZeneca coronavirus vaccine which are due to arrive next week.

From TeleSUR, for the 13th straight day, Colombians keep on protesting.

From The Conservative Woman, how a bloody Yank named Bill Gates has influenced the U.K.'s public health policy.

From the (U.K.) Independent, a court tells U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson to pay up.

From Allah's Willing Executioners, several Arabs vandalize a synagogue in Bonn, Germany.

From Daily News Hungary, Hungary will soon start vaccinating foreigners against the coronavirus.

From The Moscow Times, Russia expels U.S. embassy spokeswoman Rebecca Ross and nine other diplomats.  (If you read Russian, read the story at Kommersant.)

From Radio Bulgaria, the Bulgarian tourism sector demands that the government pays for PCR coronavirus tests.

From the Greek City Times, according to Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, migration into Greece decreased from 72,000 people in 2019 to 15,000 in 2020.

From Independent Balkan News Agency, authorities in Bosnia and Herzegovina arrest a suspect for allegedly financing terrorism.

From Balkan Insight, Bulgaria's new caretaker government will maintain the country's blockade of North Macedonia.

From EuroNews, Bosnian Serb war criminal Radovan Karadžić will serve the rest of his life sentence in a U.K. prison.

From Euractiv, Italian ministers ask the E.U. for help in managing the influx of migrants.

From ReMix, Italian politician Matteo Salvini asks Prime Minister Mario Draghi to act as migrants again flood the island of Lampedusa.

From Free West Media, an LGBT demonstration in Tours, France will exclude whites, which decision is supported by the city's mayor.  (So much for "diversity and inclusion".)

From The North Africa Post, for the first time in ten years, the U.S. will appoint a special envoy to Libya.

From The Jerusalem Post, a six-year-old boy is injured when a rocket launched from Gaza hits an apartment building in Sderot, Israel.

From The New Arab, dozens of Israeli Arabs are detained following protests.

From Pakistan Today, Pakistan celebrates Eid-ul-Fitr.

From Pajhwok Afghan News, the Taliban capture a district headquarters in the Afghan province of Maidan Wardak.

From the Hindustan Times, at a high level meeting, Prime Minister Narendra Modi discusses India's oxygen supply.

From Al Arabiya, ISIS-linked terrorists kill four farmers in a village on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi.

From Palestinian Media Watch, a Palestinian woman claims that she and her six children are ready to die "for the sake of Jerusalem".

From HonestReporting Canada, the CBC claims that rockets fired by Palestinian terrorists were a response to airstrikes by Israel.

From Gatestone Institute, America plays with fire.

From The Stream, the New Deal's mistakes could be repeated in Poland.

From The Daily Signal, was President Biden right about unemployment benefits having no effect on jobs?

From The American Conservative, how the insulin cartel keeps the drug's prices artificially high.

From the Daily Caller, the U.S. government warns against putting gasoline in plastic bags.

From Fox News, former Minneapolis policeman Derek Chauvin could face a tougher sentence as the judge considers aggravating factors.

From Breitbart, gas prices jump to their highest level since 2014.

From Newsmax, climate czar John Kerry claims to have never leaked information about Israeli operations in Syria to Iran.

From The Daily Wire, Arizona Governor Doug Ducey (R) signs an election integrity bill.

And from NewScientist, the chalk figure known as the Cerne Abbas Giant has been determined to be over 1,000 years old.  (via the New York Post)

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