Sunday, September 19, 2021

Sunday Stories

On a warm cloudy Sunday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, the Democrat reconciliation bill includes some immigration radicalism.

From Townhall, what President Biden is doing to address his border crisis.

From The Washington Free Beacon, author Harry V. Jaffa's love-hate relationship with moderation.

From the Washington Examiner, federal prosecutors start cracking down on U.S. citizens who help transnational gangs smuggle illegal migrants.  (I've come to believe that to some extent, the real villains in illegal immigration are not the illegal migrants, but the Americans who betray their fellow Americans by aiding and abetting illegal immigration.  This includes not only those who help migrant smugglers, but also those who hire illegal aliens for jobs that should go to U.S. citizens or to legal immigrants.)

From The Federalist, Interior Secretary Deb Haaland announces that headquarters of the Bureau of Land Management will return to Washington, D.C.

From American Thinker, how did 15,000 illegal migrants from Haiti suddenly find their way to northern Mexico, across the Rio Grande from Del Rio, Texas?

From LifeZette, the Ayn Rand book Anthem is a "literary gateway drug to libertarianism".

From Red Voice Media, coronavirus vaccine mandates for air travel are on the table.  (via LifeZette)

From NewsBusters, meet the liberal media types trying to explain Biden's incompetence.

From Canada Free Press, FBI agents sport their Ray-Bans at the "Justice for J6" rally.

From TeleSUR, one of the world's few remaining communist countries will present an award to the president of another communist country.

From TCW Defending Freedom, in rural England, hypocrisy is "on tap".

From Free West Media, in Sweden, interest in getting vaccinated against the coronavirus is "plummeting".

From EuroNews, President Putin's party Russia United is expected to hold onto its majority in the Duma.

From ReMix, French right-wing commentator Éric Zemmour gets censored as France's presidential election approaches.  (What is this "freedom of speech" you speak of?)

From The North Africa Post, Moroccan Sahara could attract Polish investment in the African market.

From The New Arab, the Moroccan Islamist Justice and Development Party allege violations and irregularities at the polls.

From Gatestone Institute, the record of the "war on terror" isn't all that bad.

From The Stream, the revisionist history of 9/11.

From Space War, France accuses the U.S. and Australia of "lying" over a discontinue Australian contract to buy French submarines, and Australia rejects France's accusations.

From The Western Journal, the Minnesota Supreme Court, by its ruling in the murder case of former officer Mohamed Noor, could affect the case of former officer Derek Chauvin.

From BizPac Review, according to a poll, a majority Americans think that the U.S. is less united under President Biden.

From The Daily Wire, the Biden administration reportedly will release family units of illegal migrants in Del Rio, Texas into the U.S.

From the Daily Caller, migrants in Del Rio camp under a bridge with their own makeshift shelters.

From Breitbart, the Haitian migrant crisis brings chaos to both Del Rio, Texas, U.S. and Acuna, Coahuila, Mexico.

From Newsmax, according to polls, the Canadian Liberal and Conservative parties are in a close race.

From AP News, in Kabul, Afghanistan, the Taliban tell women to stay home.  (via the Washington Examiner)

And from the New York Post, some Taliban terrorists have too much time on their hands.

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