Saturday, October 2, 2021

Saturday Stories

On a mild and sunny Saturday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, the January 6th committee will issue "criminal referrals" for uncooperative witnesses.

From Townhall, a UCLA professor sues the school after refusing to grade black students more leniently.

From The Washington Free Beacon, under a rule proposed by President Biden, Medicare funds for caregivers may go to unions.

From the Washington Examiner, $2 million has been raised for the Marine now in the brig for speaking out about the failure in Afghanistan.

From The Federalist, the U.K.'s Sports Council Equality Group comes out against transgenders in sports.

From American Thinker, Democrats are surprised to find their sneaky attempts to give illegal aliens amnesty going down in flames.

From LifeZette, generals predictably danced their kabuki in front of congress.

From NewsBusters, NPR shows its double standards on abortion marches.

From Canada Free Press, we are in a class war.

From TeleSUR, 128 social leaders in Colombia have been murdered so far this year.

From TCW Defending Freedom, U.K. Labour Party leader Keir Starmer is an agent "licensed to thrill".

From Free West Media, a 16-year-old immigrant who allegedly attacked a German Jew was an actor in a film about a family of Holocaust survivors.

From EuroNews, a plane used by the Belgian coast guard "sniffs out" pollution from ships.

From Euractiv, what some European countries expect from post-Merkel Germany.

From The North Africa Post, after French President Emmanuel Macron makes some "candid" remarks about the Algerian government, it recalls its ambassador to France.

From YNetNews, the last survivor of the Babi Yar massacre, which took place in 1941, remembers "every little detail" of it.  (Babi Yar is a ravine on the outskirts of Kiev, Ukraine, in which Nazi soldiers slaughtered about 34,000 Jews.)

From The New Arab, three years after the death of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, his widow calls on the U.S. to hold Saudi Arabia accountable.

From Gatestone Institute, back to before 9/11, but worse.

From The Stream, escaping the language traps.

From The American Conservative, how to make a constitutional crisis.

From The Western Journal, what General Mark Milley told congress shows that he should be running nothing more than a mess hall.

From BizPac Review, according to Trade Representative Katherine Tai, the U.S. will build on tariffs created by former President Trump to deal with China.

From The Daily Wire, as Vice President Harris takes an "unexplained" trip to Palm Springs, California, journalists are "not allowed" to watch her departure.

From the Daily Caller, Harris goes into damage control mode over her failure to push back against anti-Israel comments made by a student at George Mason University.

From Breitbart, President Biden insists that his multi-trillion-dollar spending agenda is not radical.

From Newsmax, Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte announces his retirement from politics.  (There are some American politicians whom I wish would do the same.)

And from the New York Post, if you're in New York City, watch out for Mole Man.

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