Monday, July 19, 2021

Monday Links

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

From National Review, Ben & Jerry's decides to discontinue selling ice cream in East Jerusalem and the West Bank.

From FrontpageMag, the real victims of systemic racism in the military.

From Townhall, as inflation goes up and the DOW goes down, President Biden wants even more spending.

From The Washington Free Beacon, congresscritter Brian Steil (R-WI) presses Biden on the removal of military equipment from the Middle East.

From the Washington Examiner, how pollsters got it wrong in 2020.

From The Federalist, a Georgia voting official makes excuses for residents who voted illegally in 2020.

From American Thinker, coronavirus vaccine hesitancy is not just for Trump supporters.

From CNS News, Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC) claims that he would act like the Texas state Democrats to block the $3.5 trillion "liberal wish list".

From LifeZette and the sarcastic "way to go!" department, five of those fleeing Texas Democrats test positive for the coronavirus after their maskless flight to D.C.

From NewsBusters, a panel on CNN admits admits that Democrats won't press Cuba because many support socialism.

From Canada Free Press, in reporting the 2020 election, Fox News was fake news.

From CTV News, Canada will allow fully vaccinated Americans to enter starting on August 9th.

From TeleSUR, in their primaries, Chileans choose their two presidential candidates.

From The Conservative Woman, how the climate doomsayers are wrong.

From Snouts in the Trough, is the leader of the WHO turning on his Chinese masters?

From the (U.K.) Independent, thousands of racehorses are killed in slaughterhouses in the U.K. and Ireland.

From ReMix, Belgium takes back women and children from an internment camp for ISIS terrorists in Syria.

From EuroNews, authorities in the Netherlands defend the country's digital coronavirus testing system despite security flaws.

From Free West Media, why didn't Germany's Ministry of the Interior warm about impending floods?

From Euractiv, more than 60 Greenpeace activists paddle kayaks on the Danube to protest a planned liquefied natural gas terminal in Bratislava, Slovakia.

From About Hungary, the V4 countries are working toward finding a common position on the future of Europe.

From The Moscow Times, three men named Boris Vishnevsky run for a position in the Russian parliament representing the city of St. Petersburg.

From Radio Bulgaria, Bulgarians keep protesting to demand the removal of Health Minister Stoycho Katsarov.

From the Greek City Times, Egyptian and French divers find ancient Greek artifacts off the coast of Alexandria, Egypt.

From Independent Balkan News Agency, Kosovo Prime Minister Albin Kurti accuses Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić of lying.

From Balkan Insight, more on the meeting between Kurti and Vučić.

From The North Africa Post, Morocco's Central Bureau of Judicial Investigations has dismantled 84 terror cells since it was created in 2015.

From The Jerusalem Post, an Israeli Knesset bill to annex the West Bank dies in committee.

From The New Arab, hajj pilgrims flock to Saudi Arabia's Mount Arafat.

From Iran International, Tehran enters a six-day coronavirus lockdown.

From Pakistan Today, Pakistan temporarily recalls its ambassador to Afghanistan.

From Pajhwok Afghan News, the intelligence community stresses an negotiated settlement to the conflict in Afghanistan.

From India Today, keep your coronavirus vaccination certificate or negative test results handy if you fly to the Indian state of West Bengal.

From The Organization for World Peace, Saudi Arabia releases two women's rights activists from prison.

From Coconuts Jakarta, a coronavirus-positive Indonesian man boards a plane using his wife's negative test result and wearing a burqa.

From Gatestone Institute, is western Europe really turning toward the right, as alleged by a recent survey?

From The Stream, "why is racism wrong?"

From AP News, a Capitol rioter gets eight months in prison, the first felony sentence arising from the riot.  (via the Washington Examiner)

From Space War, U.S. businesses fear internet restrictions in Hong Kong.

From The American Conservative, a reluctant case against U.S. intervention in Haiti.

From The Western Journal, a Cuban-America UFC star digs up an old photo of the original anthem kneeler and recommends that "cowards" like him are sent to Cuba.

From BizPac Review, Australia deports conservative British commentator Katie Hopkins for joking about not wearing a mask.  (What is this "freedom of speech" you speak of?)

From The Daily Wire, Senator Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) demands that the Biden administration answer five questions about "coordination with Big Tech to censor Americans".

From the Daily Caller, the Senate drops expanded IRS funding from its infrastructure bill.

From Breitbart, a look at Cuba's gun control laws.

From Newsmax, according to a survey, 63 percent of likely voters in the U.S. are not confident that Vice President Harris is ready to be president.

From the New York Post, according to one of the Texas state Democrats who fled to D.C., their stay will cost about $1.5 million.

And from CNBC, Malaysian police destroy 1,069 Bitcoin mining rigs with a steamroller.

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