Monday, September 6, 2021

Labor Day Links

As people who normally work get to take a break, here are some things going on:

From National Review, as unions look to Congress for their survival, they should instead listen to the workers they're supposed to represent.

From FrontpageMag, the history of the Armenian genocide.

From Townhall, President Biden won't like the latest chant from fans of college football.  (Even my alma mater got involved.)

From The Washington Free Beacon, a review of how the coronavirus pandemic shook the world's economy.

From the Washington Examiner, Satanists condemn the new abortion law in Texas.

From The Federalist, three more Americans die from fentanyl as it keeps coming across our southern border.

From American Thinker, a political scientist who once all but guaranteed Democrats one-party power now tells them that they have blown it.

From CNS News, according to the Catholic archbishop of the area where Speaker Pelosi (D-Cal) lives, you can't be a good Catholic and support expanding abortion.

From LifeZette, do business executives also get a day off?

From NewsBusters, the media show their bias about American governors.

From Canada Free Press, it's illegal in the U.S. to know whether you have the delta coronavirus variant.

From CTV News, everything you need to know about Canada's eased travel restrictions starting tomorrow.

From TeleSUR, the statue of Christopher Columbus in Mexico City will be removed and replaced by one of an Olmec woman.  (Will she resemble like someone from Africa?)

From the (U.K.) Independent, a pub in Reading, England will change its name from "The Black Boy".

From ReMix, according to Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki, no one will teach Poland the meaning of democracy and the rule of law.

From About Hungary, Pope Francis will hold Mass in Heroes' Square in Budapest next Sunday.

From EuroNews, Belarusian activist Maria Kolesnikova is given 11 years in jail.

From The Moscow Times, Russia tells a Tajik-born opposition activist to stay away for the next 40 years.

From Radio Bulgaria, Bulgaria's unification is honored in the cities of Sofia and Veliko Tarnovo.

From Euractiv, Bulgarians will soon head back to the polls.

From the Greek City Times, Greek Foreign Minister Nikos Dendias calls for all foreign troops to leave Libya.

From Independent Balkan News Agency, foreign diplomats express their concerns about developments in Montenegro.

From Balkan Insight, the Montenegrin opposition is accused of a coup attempt over riots in the city of Cetinje.

From Free West Media, serious side effects of coronavirus vaccination increase greatly in Switzerland.

From The North Africa Post, the Moroccan Islamist party PJD braces for defeat in upcoming elections.

From The New Arab, six Palestinian prisoners who escaped from an Israeli jail.

From Iran International, Iran slams Pakistan's alleged role in supporting the Taliban as it attacks in the Afghan region of Panjshir.

From Pakistan Today, Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan approves two appointments in the province of Sindh.

From Pajhwok Afghan News, thousands of people are stranded in the Afghan province of Kandahar, in the district of Spin Boldak, trying to enter Pakistan.

From India Today, according to Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh leader Mohan Bhagwat, Indian Hindus and Muslims share the same ancestry.

From the Jakarta Globe, ten people are arrested for allegedly vandalizing an Ahmadiyya mosque in the Indonesian province of West Kalimantan.

From Gatestone Institute, Turkish President Erdoğan's plans for the future of Afghanistan.

From The Stream, has a "new axis of evil" been created?

From The American Conservative, what was the worst day of the war in Afghanistan?

From The Daily Signal, President Biden's chief of staff backs the Green New Deal despite his role in the Solyndra scandal.

From The Western Journal, the mother of a U.S. Marine gets her message onto ESPN.

From BizPac Review, the Taliban paints its flag on walls in front of the former U.S. embassy in Kabul.

From The Daily Wire, NASA administrator and former Senator (D-FL) Bill Nelson admits that his agency has no plans for dealing a UFO that really contains aliens.

From the Daily Caller, Notre Dame football coach Brian Kelly claims that his comment about he team needing to be executed was a joke.

From the New York Post, Virginia Tech alumnus Tyrod Taylor is named starting quarterback for the Houston Texans due to Deshaun Watson's legal troubles.

From Breitbart, the U.K. government moves toward mandatory coronavirus vaccination for its NHS staff.

From Newsmax, according to a poll, 40 percent of U.S. voters blame Biden for the tragedy in Afghanistan.

And from The Babylon Bee, a liberal is disappointed to learn that in order to join a union, he would have to get a job.

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