Wednesday, July 14, 2021

Wednesday Wanderings

Now that I've wandered back to my home in Maryland, here are some things going on:

From National Review, alleged hate crime hoaxer Jussie Smollett returns to court.

From FrontpageMag, critical race theory wages war on history.

From Townhall, a Republican wins a special election for a Georgia state House seat.

From The Washington Free Beacon, Arizona senatorial candidate Blake Masters (R) has some strong views on Big Tech.

From the Washington Examiner, no, President Biden isn't secretly policing your text messages, but both parties have been reading them for years.

From The Federalist, calling natural law "white nationalism" is indeed racist.

From American Thinker, a brick wall bearing a mural depicting George Floyd is struck by lightning.

From CNS News, according to Senator Mitch McConnell (R-KY), Democrats are "lying" and engaging in "fake hysterics" over recently passed voter laws.

From LifeZette, the football organization formerly known as the Washington Redskins "goes insanely PC".

From NewsBusters, Facebook executives feared a win by then-President Trump in the 2020 election.

From Canada Free Press, Cubans protest to gain freedom from communism.

From TeleSUR, Chile will hold primary elections on July 18th.

From The Conservative Woman, space has become "the financial frontier".

From Free West Media, mayhem spreads in South Africa.

From EuroNews, a surge of migrants into Lithuania causes both fear and compassion.

From Euractiv, the E.U. plans to cut carbon dioxide emissions by 55 percent by 2030.

From ReMix, Lufthansa will no longer use the phrase "ladies and gentlemen".

From Independent Balkan News Agency, Turkey demands the extradition of 86 of its citizens from North Macedonia for alleged Gülen links.

From Balkan Insight, Bosnian intelligence chief Osman Mehmedagic is detained for allegedly abusing his office.

From The North Africa Post, Morocco plans to start producing green ammoniac and hydrogen by 2022.

From The New Arab, according to Lebanese President Michel Aoun, no one will be given political cover in the investigation of the explosion at the port of Beirut.

From Reuters, the Taliban seizes a border crossing between Afghanistan and Pakistan.

From Sahara Reporters, at least 33 people are killed by Fulani Herdsmen in Nigeria.

From Gatestone Institute, the withdrawal from Afghanistan by the U.S. opens the way for China.

From The Stream, a Christian group appeals an IRS decision and wins.

From Space Daily, NASA announces awards for nuclear thermal propulsion concepts.

From The American Conservative, the lingering relevance of the massacre at Katyn Forest in World War II.

From BizPac Review, longtime Democrat operative James Carville worries that the "noisy wing" of his party is more concerned about pronouns than about winning elections.

From The Western Journal, according to a report, the U.S. Navy is unprepared for war because sailors are forced to train for diversity instead of combat.

From The Daily Wire, the Fed will not change its monetary policy after another report of rising inflation.

From the Daily Caller, Olympic athletes will be forbidden to hug or shake hands, and will have to put their medals around their own necks.

From Breitbart, more on the recent inflation.

From Newsmax, former U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Nikki Haley harshly criticizes the Biden administration for inviting U.N. racism envoys to visit the U.S.

And from the New York Post, did salmon at a fish farm in Germany get high on she-don't-lie?

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