Friday, January 14, 2022

Friday Fuss

As the cloudy but mild weather continues on a Friday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, President Biden is in over his head.

From FrontpageMag, diversity and inclusion don't appear to apply to Jews.

From Townhall, did Virginia Governor Ralph Northam (D) admit that he is dressed as a Klansman in his medical school yearbook.

From The Washington Free Beacon, texts show that two Virginia school board members acknowledged anti-Asian bias in admissions.

From the Washington Examiner, congresscritter Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich) is blasted for "antisemitic rhetoric" by primary challenger Shanelle Jackson.

From The Federalist, nine times when Senator Ron Johnson (R-Wis) triggered the left and turned out to be right.

From American Thinker, it's time to admit failure in the effort against the coronavirus.

From CNS News, do not take religious freedom for granted.

From LifeZette, the Democrat voting bill is corrupt, bad for America, and a power grab.

From the eponymous site of Drew Berquist, Biden advises businesses to require coronavirus vaccines even though the Supreme Court didn't uphold his mandate.  (via LifeZette)

From NewsBusters, according to a poll, only 10 percent of Americans trust the media about the coronavirus.

From Canada Free Press, are the Canadian and American governments playing "hunger games" with their respective people?

From TeleSUR, Uruguay allowed coronavirus-infected residents to enter.

From TCW Defending Freedom, the renewal obligation from the climate scaremongers.

From Free West Media, a life insurer in France refuses to cover a death allegedly resulting from a coronavirus vaccine.

From EuroNews, ski bookings in France greatly increase as the ban on U.K. tourists is lifted.

From Euractiv, "the party's over" for U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson.

From ReMix, French teachers go on strike against coronavirus restrictions.

From Balkan Insight, the population of Croatia shrank by 10 percent from 2011 to 2021.

From The North Africa Post, Libyan Prime Minister Abdulhamid Dbeibeh debunks reports that he met with Israeli Mossad Director David Barnea in Jordan.

From The New Arab, the U.S. exempts imports of gas and electricity into Lebanon from the Caesar sanctions.

From the Saudi Gazette, the Prophet's Mosque in Medina, Saudi Arabia will again allow mass iftar meals after a two-year hiatus.

From IranWire, at least 10 Iranian teachers are arrested in protests for fair pay and other demands.

From Iran International, $6 billion worth of capital was taken out of Iran in six months during 2021.

From Khaama Press, according to a Taliban official, their government inherited ethnic conflicts in Afghanistan from the previous government.

From Pajhwok Afghan News, security personnel rescue a teenage boy in the Afghan province of Herat and kill one of the kidnappers.

From the Afghanistan Times, according to U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, millions of people in Afghanistan are on the "verge of death".

From Dawn, a magnitude-5.6 earthquake occurs in northern Pakistan.

From The Express Tribune, Pakistan promises not to abandon the people of Afghanistan.

From Pakistan Today, Prime Minister Imran Khan launches a public version of Pakistan's national security policy.

From The Straits Times, the Hong Kong airport bans transit passengers from 153 countries.

From Free Malaysia Today, a murder suspect from the Malaysian state of Sabah is caught in the neighboring state of Sarawak.

From Vietnam Plus, Vietnam opposes claims in the East Sea that are inconsistent with international law.  (The East Sea is also known as the South China Sea.)

From The Mainichi, a woman in Yamatotakada, Japan is arrested for attempting to raise funds for her sick dog, who was already dead.

From Bernama, Muslim civil society organizations send a protest letter to the U.K. over its designating Hamas as a terrorist organization.

From Gatestone Institute, China tries to buy up Europe.

From The Stream, Congress must strike at the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline while the iron is hot.

From The American Conservative, the failure of progressivism.

From Space War, North Korea fires two more ballistic missiles.

From The Daily Signal, free speech social media sites emerge online in response to Big Tech censorship.

From The Patriot Post, sedition is not the same thing as insurrection.

From The Western Journal, a look at President Biden's loosing streak at the Supreme Court.

From BizPac Review, after insulting a Republican congresscritter, Dr. Fauci could have inspired a namesake law.  (Speaking of insulting congresscritters, if you accuse me of using the term "congresscritter" as an insult, I plead guilty.  That's the whole point.)

From The Daily Wire, the Moline, Illinois school district defends its "after-school Satan club".

From the Daily Caller, Democrats in Washington, D.C. brace for two winter storms.

From ZeroHedge and the "rules are for little people" department, the E.U.'s carbon pricing plan will exempt yachts and private jets.

From the New York Post, Biden's nominations for the Federal Reserve's Board of Governors includes its potential first black woman.

From Breitbart, Sirhan Sirhan, who assassinated Senator Robert Kennedy, is denied parole.

From Newsmax, the Ohio Supreme Court strikes down a redistricting plan as illegally favoring Republicans.

And from AP News, Baltimore prosecutor Marylin Mosby is indicted for perjury and making false mortgage applications.

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