Wednesday, August 11, 2021

Wednesday Wanderings

Before I start off on a bit of my own wandering, here are some things going on:

From National Review, the current inflation keeps on inflating.

From FrontpageMag, the eviction moratorium is both unconstitutional and bad public policy.

From Townhall, after decreasing U.S. energy production, President Biden asks OPEC to pump more oil.

From The Washington Free Beacon, lawmakers accuse State Department officials of blocking efforts to bring wireless internet to Cuban dissidents.

From the Washington Examiner, census data and the resulting redistricting could help Republicans win back the House in 2022.

From The Federalist, how many other Andrew Cuomos are the elites protecting?

From American Thinker, science provides evidence of Islamic aggression.

From CNS News, congresscritter Andy Biggs (R-AZ) files impeachment papers against DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas.

From LifeZette, gun owners are no longer a Republican bloc to take for granted.

From NewsBusters, according to a guest host on CBS, some think that Governor Cuomo (D) did a great job handling the coronavirus.

From Canada Free Press, the FDA reportedly knew that some fully vaccinated people could catch the coronavirus, and "buried that knowledge".

From TeleSUR, Tropical Storm Fred approaches the Dominican Republic.  (I remember his wife Hurricane Wilma striking Florida in 2005.)

From TCW Defending Freedom, five key truths about the coronavirus that could have saved us all from self-destruction.

From Snouts in the Trough, U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson's COP26 "climate con".

From Free West Media, why aren't coronavirus vaccine-related injuries being disclosed?

From EuroNews, in a U-turn, Germany and the Netherlands suspend the deportation of Afghan migrants.

From Euractiv, Lithuania and Latvia take emergency actions on their respective borders with Belarus.

From ReMix, Slovakia ends its blanket coronavirus measures.

From The North Africa Post, Morocco offers to help Algeria fight its wildfires.

From The New Arab, Sudan decides to hand former President Omar Al-Bashir over to the ICC for alleged war crimes.

From The Jerusalem Post, Hamas protects one of its tunnels from a U.N. team looking for unexploded munitions.

From Gatestone Institute, in Pakistan, forced conversions and child marriages are an "everyday event".

From The Stream, the new climate change report promises that we only have a few year left, just like an earlier such report did in 1990.

From The Daily Signal, CNN reporter Chris Cuomo should resign.

From SmallBizDaily, "solo-commerce is taking over the gig economy".

From Space Daily, the U.S. will reopen the bidding war between Boeing and Airbus over refueling aircraft.

From The American Conservative, Andrew Cuomo was involved in the subprime mortgage crisis when he was Mr. Bill's HUD Secretary.

From The Western Journal, President Biden is sued for allegedly feeling illegal alien children "raw" and "undercooked" food at migrant detention centers.

From BizPac Review, according to some of his critics, Biden looked like a nursing home patient as he returned to the White House.

From the New York Post, New York Lieutenant Governor (and Governor-to-be) Kathy Hochul (D) distances herself from the Cuomo administration.  (She will become New York's first female governor.  Like yours truly, she was born in the western part of New York state, but unlike me, she stayed there.  She also was a one-term congresscritter.)

From The Daily Wire, the media ignore the "biggest illegal wealth transfer" ever, from the U.S. to China.

From the Daily Caller, former President Trump blasts the budget bill passed by the Senate.

From Breitbart, Senator Joe Manchin (D-WV) publicizes his concerns about the Senate budget bill.

From Newsmax, according to a survey, voters believe that Biden break his promise to not raise taxes on middle class Americans.  (I remember another President who broke a similar promise.)

And from the Eastbourne Herald, a would-be bank robber in Eastbourne, England is foiled by his own poor handwriting.  (Yours truly once stayed in Eastbourne, but did not attempt any sort of robbery.)

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