Monday, November 1, 2021

Stories For The Start Of November

On a cool sunny day at the beginning of November, here are some things going on:

From National Review, whatever happened to investigating those Border Patrol agents who allegedly whipped Haitian migrants?

From FrontpageMag, a look at Senator Socialism's (I-VT) favorite socialist regime.  (If you think it's the one in Cuba, you'd be wrong.)

From Townhall, you may now float in the cesspool made by liberals.

From The Washington Free Beacon, President Biden appears to nap at the U.N. climate conference in Scotland.  (This time, as the article points out, his motorcade only included 20 vehicles.)

From the Washington Examiner, right-wing commentator Byron York tells the Democrats that it's not 2020 anymore.

From The Federalist, Democrats are using the same shenanigans this year in Virginia that they used in 2020.

From American Thinker, activist Ibram X. Kendi gives away the con.

From CNS News, according to Secretary of State Antony Blinken, China must decide whether it will do the right thing on climate change.  (Finally, someone to the left of myself recognizes that China is the world's largest emitter of carbon dioxide.)

From LifeZette, The Washington Post defends another sex offender.

From NewsBusters, punishing achievement punishes everyone.

From Canada Free Press, reports of Facebook's "Meta death" are not greatly exaggerated.

From CTV News, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau moves on his pledge to put a cap on emissions from Canada's oil and gas sector.

From TeleSUR, 15 people are injured when a gas line explodes in Puebla, Mexico.

From TCW Defending Freedom, Prince Charles of the U.K. should stand up for his people and not for the global elite.

From Snouts in the Trough, how the climate "crisis" became a "catastrophe".

From the (U.K. Independent), according to parliamentcritter Afzal Khan, U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson has insulted Muslims by failing to answer questions on Islamophobia for a year.

From Allah's Willing Executioners, the dome of the city palace in Berlin will no longer display a Bible verse because it could possibly anger Muslims.  (If you read German, read the story at Free the Words.)

From About Hungary, Hungarian Prime Minister Orban is re-elected president of the Centrist Democrat International.

From The Moscow Times, according to President Putin, Russia is decarbonizing faster than the G7 countries.

From Radio Bulgaria, the price of natural gas in Bulgaria decreases.

From the Greek City Times, according to Greek parliamentcritter Notis Mitarachi, Greece's Ministry of Immigration and Asylum will attempt to return Pakistani and Bangladeshi migrants aboard a Turkish-flagged ship back to their respective countries.

From Independent Balkan News Agency, the Romanian party PSD decides to vote against the proposed government led by Prime Minister-designate Nicolae Ciucă.

From Balkan Insight, North Macedonian Prime Minister Zoran Zaev resigns after his party loses in local elections.

From The North Africa Post, Morocco's King Mohammed VI sends a speech to the aforementioned U.N. climate conference.

From The Jerusalem Post, Israel's coronavirus situation is back to where it was this past spring, but will it last?

From The New Arab, according to their lawyer, the whereabouts of Sudan's deposed civilian leaders are unknown.

From Iran International, "conservative" media in Iran attack Saudi Arabia's policy toward Lebanon.  (I get the impression that the article's definition of "conservative" is something like "biased towards the Iranian regime".)

From Pakistan Today, Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan directs the relevant authorities to take all necessary measures to bring down the prices essential commodities.

From India Today, speaking at the aforementioned climate conference, Prime Minister Narendra Modi outlines India's climate goals.

From SheThePeople, Bangladeshi writer Taslima Nasreen Tweets about her suspension on Facebook.

From Gatestone Institute, could China's "satellite crusher" lead to a "space Pearl Harbor"?

From The Stream, race hoaxsters and hustlers just had a bad weekend.

From The American Conservative, the Bush family has had an affair with China.

From The Daily Signal, Presidents Putin (Russia) and Xi (China) do not show up in person at the aforementioned climate conference.

From Reuters, critics of coronavirus vaccine mandates use a little-known procedure against the Biden administration.  (via The Western Journal)

From The Western Journal, the numbers in President Biden's spending bill don't add up.

From BizPac Review, Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer (D) vetoes three voter integrity bills.

From The Daily Wire, the aforementioned Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is slammed for his promise to cap oil and gas sector emissions.

From the Daily Caller, according to experts, vaccinating kids against the coronavirus isn't the way to end the pandemic.

From the New York Post, for the right bid, you can have Henry Winkler's original Fonzie jacket.

From Breitbart, according to Richmond Mayor Levar Stoney (D), Virginia gubernatorial candidate Glenn Youngkin (R) and his supporters deny both the Holocaust and slavery.

From Newsmax, according to a poll, over 40 percent of Democrats want a presidential candidate in 2024 other than Joe Biden.

And from The Babylon Bee, the original anthem kneeler starts a new Underground Railroad to help fellow NFL millionaires escape to freedom.

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