Thursday, September 30, 2021

Stories For The End Of September

On a sunny and cool Thursday which is the last day of September, here are some things going on:

From National Review, a group of Republican Senators led by Mitt Romney (UT) writes a letter opposing "harmful marriage penalties" in the Democrat "reconciliation" bill.  (The "Romney" label, which I created when he ran for president in 2012, continues to be relevant.)

From FrontpageMag, how is everyone enjoying being governed by the "anti-Trump"?

From Townhall, the Democrats choose their "secret weapon" for the 2022 midterm elections.

From The Washington Free Beacon, Laredo, Texas Mayor Pete Saenz (D) has had enough of President Biden's border policies.

From the Washington Examiner, according to an opinion column, Virginia parents should have the right to tell schools what to teach their kids.

From The Federalist, the Del Rio, Texas madness proves that Biden can stop the border crisis whenever he wants to.

From American Thinker, as left-wing policies disrupt global supply chains and cause shortages, prepare for capitalism to get the blame.

From CNS News, Senator Mike Manchin (D-WV) wants the Hyde Amendment put into the "reconciliation" bill.

From LifeZette, military generals through their commander-in-chief under the bus.

From NewsBusters, journalist Andrea Mitchell demands that Biden tells moderate Democrats to "get in line".

From Canada Free Press, voting my mail is "safe", mainly for Democrats.

From CTV NewsCanada observes its first National Day for Truth and Reconciliation.

From TeleSUR, 12 migrants from Venezuela heading to Chile have died this year.

From TCW Defending Freedom, families need more grandparents and less state.

From the (U.K.) Independent, 58 percent of GP appointments in England during August were face-to-face.

From EuroNews, a former Nazi concentration camp secretary, now 96 years old, is found after absconding on the day her trial was supposed to begin.

From Free West Media, according to a report, children of immigrants in Sweden commit more crimes than their parents.

From Hungary Today, Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto and Serbian Interior Minister Aleksandar Vulin inaugurate a gas pipeline between their two countries.  (If you read Hungarian, read the story at Delmagyar.)

From ReMix, a record number of illegal migrants are caught at the Hungarian border.

From The Moscow Times, Russian authorities charge journalist Roman Dobrokhotov with illegally crossing the border into Ukraine.

From Radio Bulgaria, the Bulgarian party whose name translates to "there is such a people" proposes a program that includes 18 anti-crisis measures.

From the Greek City Times, UNESCO calls on the U.K. to return the Parthenon marble sculptures to Greece.

From Independent Balkan News Agency, Serbia and Kosovo reach an agreement to facilitate movement across their mutual border.

From Balkan Insight, the bodies of seven ethnic Albanian war victims found in a mass grave in Serbia are repatriated to Kosovo.

From Euractiv, former French President Nicolas Sarkozy is given a one-year sentence for illegal campaign financing, but is unlikely to actually go to jail.

From Allah's Willing Executioners, a man goes on trial in Valence, France for allegedly raping and torturing a group of lesbians, one being his sister.  (If you read French, read the story at Les Observateurs, which is a Swiss site.)

From The North Africa Post, Algeria's weakening ability to export oil and gas casts a shadow on its social peace.

From The Jerusalem Post, in separate incidents, three Palestinians take on the IDF and lose.

From The New Arab, more on those three incidents.

From Iran International, on orders from Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi bans the importation of appliances from South Korea.

From Pakistan Today, the Pakistani province of Punjab reports 223 new cases of dengue.

From Pajhwok Afghan News, women's rights activist Mehbouba Siraj urges the international community Afghan women as their situation deteriorates.

From ANI, according to the director of the Indian Council for Medical Research, India plans to conduct rigorous trials of vaccines for dengue.

From the Daily Mail, Taliban terrorists break up a protest calling for girls to be allowed to attend school.  (What is this "right to peaceably assemble" you speak of?)

From Gatestone Institute, Palestinians regard terrorists as "heroes".

From The Stream, it's time to take a stand as coronavirus vaccine mandates target Americans of faith.

From Space War, the U.S. government claims to have "no hostile intent" toward North Korea.

From The Daily Signal, according to Australian citizen Evan Mulholland, his government's strategy of zero coronavirus cases means zero freedom.

From The American Conservative, navigating through New York City's coronavirus mandates.

From The Western Journal, 11 American states have populations less than the number of new illegal aliens entering the U.S. in fiscal year 2021.

From BizPac Review, Democrats block a Republican bill that would require coronavirus tests for migrants being released into the U.S.  (For healthy law-abiding U.S. citizens, coronavirus tests and mandated vaccines.  For illegal aliens, neither.)

From The Daily Wire, the CDC gets "blistered" for issuing vaccine guidance to "pregnant people".

From the Daily Caller, George Orwell and the hypocritical "woke".

From Breitbart, according to congresscritter Tom Malinowski (D-NJ), the Democrats might lose their House majority in 2022.

From Newsmax, former President Trump finds "unlimited money" for unvetted Afghans being "snuck" into a Continuing Resolution proposed by Democrats.

And from the New York Post, Californians fight wildfires with goats.

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