Wednesday, September 15, 2021

Wednesday Whatnot

On a warm sunny Wednesday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, if the story about China and General Mark Milley is true, he has to go.

From FrontpageMag, a moral history of the American Revolution and the Declaration of Independence.

From Townhall, is President Biden politicizing the coronavirus?

From The Washington Free Beacon, the ACLU becomes the top legal advocate for the BDS campaign against Israel.

From the Washington Examiner, Democrats seeking to increase taxes are warned that Americans are already suffering from "inflation tax".

From The Federalist, as California Governor Gavin Newsom (D) survives recall, the war against him is not over.

From American Thinker, "a tale of two charts" about the coronavirus.

From CNS News, according to Senator John Kennedy (R-LA) General Milley is a politician when we need a military leader.

From LifeZette, the liberal media does not hide there bias over the Texas abortion law.

From NewsBusters, the media show their double standards about recall elections.

From Canada Free Press, more on Newsom's win in the recall and his left-wing support.

From CTV News, 27 ridings to watch in Canada's 2021 federal elections.  (A riding is the Canadian equivalent of a U.S. congressional district.)

From TeleSUR, Salvadorians protest President Nayib Bukele's efforts to modify the country's constitution so that he can be reelected.

From TCW Defending Freedom, six elephants in the coronavirus room.

From Snouts in the Trough, will the U.K. have its "worst winter ever" - again?

From the (U.K.) Independent, U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson reshuffles his cabinet.

From Allah's Willing Executioner, a Eritrean refugee in Germany shouts "Allahu akbar" an threatens to kill a child.  (If you read German, read the story at Bild.)

From ReMix, according to former Polish Foreign Minister Beata Szydło, the E.U.'s "Fit for 55" project will harm Europe's economy.

From About Hungary, according to Hungarian Foreign Minister Szijjarto, Europe now faces migration pressure from multiple directions.

From Free West Media, Hungarian Prime Minister Orban offers Pope Francis a copy of a letter from 1250 in which a Hungarian king pleads for help against a Tartar invasion.

From The Moscow Times, 28-year-old Anastasia Bryukhanova runs for a seat in the Russian Duma.

From Radio Bulgaria, Bulgaria's 46th National Assembly steps down.

From the Greek City Times, Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis boosts Greece's new bill on pet ownership.

From Independent Balkan News Agency, North Macedonia carries out its census without any technical difficulties.

From EuroNews, Serbia triggers unease in the Balkans with a new national holiday.

From Balkan Insight, Albania has a shortage of magistrates.

From Euractiv, Austrian Interior Minister Karl Nehammer criticizes the E.U. over migration.

From The North Africa Post, forces loyal to Marshal Khalifa Haftar conduct an operation against Chadian opposition groups in Libyan territory.

From The Jerusalem Post, a former neo-Nazi talks with the son of Holocaust survivors.

From The New Arab, a Yemeni military official claims that more than 80 Houthi rebels were killed in a recent offensive.

From Iran International, Amnesty International urges accountability for 72 suspicious deaths in Iranian prisons.

From Pakistan Today, according to Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan, the world should incentivize the Taliban instead of trying to control them.

From Pajhwok Afghan News, Shahr-i-Naw Park in Kabul becomes an abode of internally displaced persons in Afghanistan.

From the Hindustan Times, India criticizes Pakistan and the Organization of Islamic Cooperation at the U.N. Human Rights Council.

From BBC News, at a Taliban meeting in Kabul, a hockey game allegedly breaks out.

From 24Matins, the Afghan national girls soccer team flees to Pakistan.

From Malay Mail, a fatwa gives Muslim women the right to get a coronavirus vaccine without the agreement of their respective husbands.

From Gatestone Institute, why Arabs don't trust President Biden's administration.

From The Stream, where have we previously heard "tax the rich"?

From The Daily Signal, the FEC giving Twitter a pass on blocking a story in the New York Post about Hunter Biden's laptop is a travesty.

From Space War, according to South Korea's military, North Korea has fired two ballistic missiles, and for the first time, South Korea fires a ballistic missile from a submarine.

From The American Conservative, former President George Bush the Younger and others want to bring the war on terror home.

From The Western Journal, when recently departed SNL star Norm MacDonald scolded another comedian for a blasphemous joke on national TV.

From BizPac Review, an ethics complaint is filed against congresscritter AOC (D-NY) over her appearance at the Met gala with her boyfriend.

From The Daily Wire, according to former acting Secretary of Defense Chris Miller, the aforementioned General Milley should resign or be fired.

From the Daily Caller, the Department of Justice asks a federal judge to block the new Texas abortion law.

From the New York Post, demand for Balenciaga products plunges due to outrage over its "racist" sweatpants.

From Breitbart, congresscritter Karen Bass (D-Cal) claims that Democrats don't raise questions about election integrity, apparently forgetting those from gubernatorial candidate Stacy Abrams (D-GA).

From Newsmax, Republican senators unveil a bill to truthfully label the Taliban.

And from Patriot Alerts, a young child in Golden, Colorado does not allow Biden to kiss him.

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