Wednesday, November 24, 2021

A Few Things From A Traveling Sasquatch

I've come down here to Virginia to meet with some family members for Thanksgiving, and thus spent much of the day driving.  Now that I've arrived in my undisclosed location, here are some things going on:

From National Review, congresscritter Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) is right about attorney Lin Wood, of whom Kyle Rittenhouse was a client.

From FrontpageMag, the Democrats don't want to defeat China, but to replicate its system here.

From Townhall, the three men in Georgia who killed Ahmaud Arbery are all convicted of murder and other charges.

From The Washington Free Beacon, everything the media said about Rittenhouse was wrong.

From the Washington Examiner, the committee to investigate the Capitol riot reportedly makes a false accusation against a witness who worked for Rudy Giuliani, at the time an attorney for President Trump.

From The Federalist, the Waukesha, Wisconsin mass killing suspect is the latest violent criminal unchecked by a soft-on-crime district attorney.

From American Thinker, ice in the Arctic is not behaving as climate believers think that it should.

From CNS News, Energy Secretary Jennifer Grantholm is unable to say how much oil the U.S. consumes every day.

From LifeZette, Republicans are confident about 2022.

From NewsBusters, CBS commentators wonder why people aren't praising President Biden and the Democrats for helping them.

From Canada Free Press, the American Heart Association Journal publishes information from the U.K. that coronavirus vaccines have negative effects.

From TCW Defending Freedom, questions which the U.K. media should be asking Prime Minister Boris Johnson.

From Free West Media, German clinics get up to €9,500 for each coronavirus case.

From EuroNews, at least 31 migrants die as their boat sinks near Calais, France.

From Euractiv, three German parties reach a deal on a "traffic light" coalition government.

From ReMix, according to Hungarian Prime Minister Orban, the E.U. is under "unprecedented" migration pressure.

From The North Africa Post, Morocco and Israel sign a historic memorandum of understanding on defense.

From The New Arab, a Libyan military commission meets in Tunisia to discuss the departure of mercenaries from Libya.

From Allah's Willing Executioners, a "House of Integration" in Bonn, Germany becomes a Salafist meeting place.  (If you read German, read the story at Humanistischer Pressedienst.)

From Gatestone Institute, the migrant crisis in Europe shows U.S. President Biden's weakness.

From The Stream, the huge difference between Dr. King and the BLM movement.

From HistoryNet, an iron mask worn by a Roman cavalryman is discovered in Turkey.

From The American Conservative, the Taliban tries to rebrand itself.

From RedState, Senator Joe Manchin (D-WV) finds the perfect piece of leverage against Biden.

From The Western Journal, the Biden administration continues to push bail reform despite the Waukesha Christmas Parade massacre.

From BizPac Review, in his response to Rittenhouse meeting Trump, filmmaker and former actor Rom Reiner shows that he still deserves the term "meathead".

From The Daily Wire, congresscritter Dan Crenshaw (R-TX) unloads on the aforementioned lawyer Lin Wood for how he treated Rittenhouse.

From the Daily Caller, some "random thoughts" on the 400th anniversary of Thanksgiving.

From Breitbart, Santa Cruz County, California mandates masks indoors, even for private residences.

From Newsmax, abortions in the U.S. may be slowly increasing after decades of decline.

And from the New York Post, a cryptocurrency-trading hamster named Mr. Goxx, who lived somewhere in Germany and once outdid Warren Buffett, has gone to rodent heaven.

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