Monday, November 22, 2021

Monday Mania

On a cool partly sunny manic Monday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, was the alleged mass murderer in Waukesha, Wisconsin a "stoner"?

From FrontpageMag, are the Democrats digging their own political graves?

From Townhall, Virginia Governor-elect Winsome Sears (R) responds to a medical question from a CNN reporter.

From The Washington Free Beacon, as illegal border crossings reach an all-time high, the Department of Homeland Security is concerned about "diversity, equity and inclusion".

From the Washington Examiner, according to an opinion column, Kyle Rittenhouse "has every right to sue the media for defamation".

From The Federalist, Rittenhouse and every able-bodied man had a duty to protect Kenosha, Wisconsin from rioters.

From American Thinker, thanks to Rittenhouse, the left suddenly cares about borders and the people who cross them.

From CNS News, President Biden calls transgender people some of the "bravest" Americans he knows.

From LifeZette, the Democrats are deservedly heading over a cliff.

From the eponymous site of Steve Gruber, their reaction to the Rittenhouse verdict shows that the Democratic Party supports domestic abusers.  (via LifeZette)

From Red Voice Media, Colorado decides that it's offensive to call sex offenders "sex offenders".  (via LifeZette)

From NewsBusters, recent gubernatorial candidate Larry Elder (R-Cal) how liberal policies enable "brazen" robberies in San Francisco.

From Canada Free Press, Kenosha rioter Joseph Rosenbaum might have committed "suicide-by-Rittenhouse".

From CTV News, shipments of potatoes from two farms in the Canadian province of Prince Edward Island are suspended due to the detection of a fungus known as the potato wart.

From TeleSUR, two North American missionaries kidnapped by a criminal gang in Haiti are released.

From TCW Defending Freedom, how many stupid pills have you swallowed, Mr. Prime Minister?  (The article addresses him as "Bo Jo".  I still say that the British should call him "Boris the Spider".)

From Snouts in the Trough, some discussion on coronavirus vaccines.

From the (U.K.) Independent, former U.K. House of Commons Conservative party whip Mark Harper urges Prime Minister Johnson to withdraw some of his plans.

From Euractiv, according to an expert, carbon farming is ideal to boost yields in Poland.  (Jeżeli czytasz po polsku, I mean, if you read Polish, read the story at the Polish section of Euractiv.)

From ReMix, will the new government in the Czech Republic abandon Hungary and Poland?

From About Hungary, Chief Medical Officer Cecilia Müller urges Hungarians to get coronavirus booster shots.

From The Moscow Times, the Russian company Gazprom threatens to cut off gas to Moldova if it doesn't pay for deliveries made last month.

From Radio Bulgaria, nurses protest in front of the Bulgarian Ministry of Health.

From the Greek City Times, blindness does not stop a man in Kato Nevrokopi, Greece from chopping wood.

From Balkan Insight, a bar in Gjakove/Djakovica, Kosovo is condemned for refusing to serve minority youngsters.  (The town's name is shown in Albanian before the slash and in Serbo-Croatian after it.)

From Free West Media, "the strange link between the sterilization of wild horses and mRNA vaccines".

From EuroNews, human smugglers use luxury sailboats to bring migrants across the Mediterranean.

From The North Africa Post, Morocco purchases the Israeli-made "Skylock Dome" defense system.

From The Jerusalem Post, according to an E.U. envoy, Israel is about to sever the West Bank from Jerusalem.

From The New Arab, Tunisian President Kais Saied revokes a job creation law, sparking widespread protests.

From Iran International, the trial of 10 Iranian military personnel allegedly involved in the shooting down of a Ukrainian airliner begins in Tehran.

From Pakistan Today, as a "goodwill gesture", the Pakistani government releases 100 Taliban prisoners.

From Pajhwok Afghan News, during the first 10 months of this year, Afghanistan imported 26,000 tonnes of fruits and vegetables from Uzbekistan.  (A tonne, a.k.a. metric ton, is 1000 kilograms, and thus about 2,200 pounds, which is larger than the standard ton of 2,000 pounds.  My spellchecker rejects the term "tonne", both in the singular and the plural.)

From ANI, according to Bihar state Chief Minister Nitish Kumar, the people of his state will take an oath that they will not consume liquor.

From Gatestone Institute, Iran and Hezbollah have a presence in Colombia.

From The Stream, Kyle Rittenhouse is still innocent and Hollywood is still silly.

From The Daily Signal, why has the media had no "reckoning" over the over the phony Steele dossier?

From The American Conservative, on Thanksgiving, don't be "that guy".

From BizPac Review, according to a "stunning" new poll, actor Matthew McConaughey is leading the Texas governor's race, which is bad news for candidate Bob O'Rourke (D).

From The Western Journal, according to a former reporter for The New York Times, the paper held up a story about what really happened in Kenosha, Wisconsin until after the 2020 election.

From The Daily Wire, closing arguments begin in the trial of three men accused of murdering Ahmaud Arbery, who ran through their neighborhood in Glynn County, Georgia.

From the Daily Caller, a report commissioned by the New York State Assembly finds "overwhelming evidence" that former Governor Andrew Cuomo (D) sexually harassed state employees.

From the New York Post, the cereal company Kellogg and more than 1,000 of its workers now on strike restart contract negotiations.

From Breitbart, President Biden renominates Jerome Powell for a second term as chairman of the Federal Reserve System.

From Newsmax, investigators in Waukesha, Wisconsin are considering whether the man who drove his SUV into participants at its Christmas parade was fleeing from another crime.

And from The Bablyon Bee, black and white Americans join hands for the cause of launching journalists into the sun.

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