Saturday, July 10, 2021

Saturday Stuff

On a partly cloudy Saturday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, Republicans are right to oppose critical race theory in public schools.

From Townhall, the longest suffering political prisoner in modern history, one of the first Cubans to oppose Fidel Castro, dies in Miami, to which the media yawns.

From The Washington Free Beacon, meet the British man who spent $200,000 to "become" Korean.

From the Washington Examiner, what we know so far about the assassination of Haitan President Jovenel Moise.

From American Thinker, France learns about 1,400 years of Islamic conquests.

From CNS News, two gay persons address this year's CPAC.

From LifeZette, former President Trump gives former Interior Secretary and would-be congresscritter Ryan Zinke (R-MT) his endorsement.

From NewsBusters, a man in Texas hyped on CNN for waiting six hours (so he claimed) to vote is arrested for allegedly voting illegally.

From Canada Free Press, is America coming to an end?

From TeleSUR, the Haitian government asks the U.S. and the U.N. to send in troops.

From The Conservative Woman, how President Biden is "a different kind of Catholic".

From Free West Media, two studies in Scandinavia find no connection between poverty and crime.

From EuroNews, the G20 endorses a global corporate tax rate of at least 15 percent.

From The North Africa Post, the Tunisian health care system "has collapsed" due to a surge in coronavirus cases.

From The New Arab, a power plant in Lebanon is set to restart after a delivery of fuel.

From Allah's Willing Executioners, a terror attack is foiled in Munich, Germany.

From Gatestone Institute, Biden must abandon negotiating with Iran over its nuclear program.

From The Stream, Spicer & Co. co-host Lyndsay Keith talks about media bias.

From The American Conservative, critical theory for defense contractors.

From the Daily Caller, after two explosions, should government oil companies be privatized?

From BizPac Review, Donald Trump the Younger "takes no prisoners" in his speech at CPAC.

From The Daily Wire, as many schools stay closed, suicide-related ER visits increase by 51 percent among teenage girls.

From Breitbart, Mississippi's health department warns against large indoor gatherings regardless of coronavirus vaccination status.

From Newsmax, according to economist Steve Forbes, Americans "see a stark contrast" between the economic, spending, and tax policies between the Trump and Biden administrations, but watch out.

And from the New York Post, an Olympic athlete is reunited with her dog, who was missing for a week.

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