Wednesday, July 7, 2021

Stories For 7/7

On the seventh day of the seventh month of 2021, here are some things going on:

From National Review, former President Trump announces a class action suit against the companies Facebook, Twitter and Google.

From FrontpageMag, the Supreme Court rules in favor of election integrity.

From Townhall, The Washington Post gives White House press secretary Jen Psaki three pinocchios for her claim that Republicans supported defunding the police.

From The Washington Free Beacon, Governor Blackface (D-VA) gets called out by Virginia's first black governor.

From the Washington Examiner, Arizona rejects President Biden's proposal proposed door-to-door search for the unvaccinated.

From The Federalist, it's critical race theory, not laws against it, that is un-American.

From American Thinker, what if audits of the 2020 were to favor Trump?

From CNS News, according to Senator Tom Cotton (R-Ark), the function of the Capitol Police is to protect the Capitol.

From LifeZette, the U.S. could learn something about dealing with illegal aliens from U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson.

From NewsBusters, a host on CNN slams The New York Times for calling the American flag "divisive".

From Canada Free Press, coal-fired power plants expand around the world while receding in the U.S.

From Global News, the University of Guelph honors Canadian health workers with its "one bench one tree" project.

From TeleSUR, world leaders condemn the assassination of Haitian President Jovenel Moise.

From The Conservative Woman, the U.K.'s coronavirus furlough is causing more problems than it solves.

From Snouts in the Trough, China gets stronger while the West destroys itself.

From the Evening Standard, the aforementioned Boris Johnson insists that households won't face "unreasonable" energy costs as gas boilers are replaced with "greener" heating systems.

From the Irish Examiner, owners of vacant homes in Ireland will have to explain to the government why they are empty.

From The Brussels Times, two armed robbers enter a scout camp for children in Temse, Belgium.  (If you read Flemish, read the story at Het Nieuwsblad.)

From Dutch News, the Dutch cabinet is given three months to repatriate five more Dutch female ISIS members.  (If you read Dutch, read the story at NOS.)

From EuroNews, the Swedish parliament appoints caretaker Prime Minister Stefan Löfven to lead a new government.

From Hungary Today, according to Foreign Minister Szijjarto, Hungary is prepared to help Ukraine, but demands respect for its Hungarian minority.  (If you read Hungarian, read the story at Mandiner.)

From Sputnik International, police arrest a man for allegedly taking hostages at a bank in Tyumen, Russia.

From The Sofia Globe, Bulgaria's electoral coalition "Rise up! Mobsters out!" drops a candidate who is accused of vote buying.

From Ekathimerini, tourism in Greece walks a thin line.

From Independent Balkan News Agency, Kosovo adopts a resolution on the genocide in Srebrenica, Bosnia, to which Bosnia and Hercegovina reacts.

From Balkan Insight, an oral history project is launched about the Srebrenica genocide.

From Malta Today, Malta will no longer allow checks for less than 20 euros.

From Italy24News, the Vesuvian Tammorra that was sung and danced in ancient Rome.

From Allah's Willing Executioners, a Chechen-born former Austrian taekwondo champion goes on trial for alleged massacres committed for ISIS in Syria.

From Euractiv, Italian prosecutors will investigate alleged firing by the Libyan coast guard at a migrant boat.

From RFI, 11 people are convicted of harassing a French teenager over her anti-Islam videos.

From Free West Media, a disproportionate number of people in France accused of burglary are foreigners.

From ReMix, the migrant rescue ship Ocean Viking waits for permission to land.

From The North Africa Post, two Moroccan irrigation companies join forces intending to expand their activities in Africa.

From Turkish Minute, Turkish President Erdoğan replaces 33 provincial police chiefs.

From The Times Of Israel, Isaac Herzog is sworn in as Israel's 11th president.

From Egypt Today, Kuwait supports dam issue internationalization.

From The New Arab, Tunisia pushes a resolution at the U.N. Security Council against Ethiopia's dam filling.

From RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty, Western countries warn that Iran's latest uranium enrichment moves endanger talks on restoring the nuclear deal.

From The Express Tribune, Pakistan's electricity production hits a record high.

From India Today, 10 things to know about Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's cabinet reshuffle.

From NewAge, 50 armed men seize a shrimp farm in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh.

From the Daily Mirror, if you're in Sri Lanka, go fly a kite.

From The Jakarta Post, Indonesia expands its nationwide coronavirus restrictions.

From The Straits Times, a Canadian who robbed a bank in Singapore gets five years in jail and six lashes.

From the Borneo Post, a runaway coronavirus patient in Malaysia is found with her boyfriend, both of whom are placed into quarantine.

From Vietnam Plus, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam will impose new social distancing measures starting on July 9th.

From Gatestone Institute, the real reason why Palestinian leaders are inciting violence against Israel.

From The Stream, we need more farmers and fewer lawyers.

From The Daily Signal, a man exposing himself in a women's spa in Los Angeles shows the consequences of transgender policies.

From SmallBizDaily, five myths about Chapter 11.

From Space War, victims of U.S.-lead raid in Mosul, Iraq still await compensation.

From The American Conservative, the decline of yours truly's adopted home state.

From The Western Journal, an Air Force base in Montana holds drag story time for kids.

From BizPac Review, two mothers keep up the fight against the private school in Ohio which expelled their kids over an anti-CRT initiative by parents.

From the Daily Caller, Business Insider compiles a database of former Trump administration officials.

From The Daily Wire, the Biden administration plans to shift almost a billion dollars in coronavirus relief funds to house migrant children at the border.

From Breitbart, according to the CDC, the delta variant comprises the majority of U.S. coronavirus cases.

From Newsmax, a weakened Tropical Storm Elsa dumps rain on Florida and heads toward Georgia.

And from the New York Post, a New York City doctor finds her missing dog locked in a neighbor's apartment.

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