Monday, January 3, 2022

Links For A Snowy Monday

The first snow of this winter showed up today, but easily managed by plows and shovels.  Besides actual winter weather, here are some things going on:

From National Review, no, every day is not January 6th.

From FrontpageMag, Senator Fake Cherokee (D-MA) is not alone.

From Townhall, New York state's coronavirus guidelines are racist.

From The Washington Free Beacon, a university offers professors money to go woke.

From the Washington Examiner, Governor Ron DeSantis (R-FL) blasts "lockdown politicians" for vacationing in Florida while enforcing coronavirus restrictions in their own states.

From The Federalist, why the omicron coronavirus variant is actually good news.

From American Thinker, six basic concepts that liberals don't understand.

From CNS News and the "good luck with that" department, new New York City Mayor Eric Adams (D) claims that the city "is going to be safe".

From LifeZette, can Mayor Adams actually clean up New York City's crime?

From the eponymous site of Steve Gruber, President Biden wants criminals to pay the taxes on their illegally acquired income.  (via LifeZette)

From NewsBusters, CNN's coverage of rising gasoline prices is "all over the place".

From Canada Free Press, a year of living dangerously in urban America.

From CBC News, the Canadian province of Ontario implements new coronavirus restrictions.

From TeleSUR, Argentina observes the 40th anniversary of the Malvinas War.  (The Malvinas are also known as the Falkland Islands, and are under British rule, which Argentina unsuccessfully tried to challenge in 1982.)

From EuroNews, five stories to understand what has happened since Brexit took effect.

From the (Irish) Independent, Irish train services are hit by staff shortages due to a surge in coronavirus cases.

From VRT NWS, coronavirus cases in Belgium increase by 52 percent.

From Deutsche Welle, German prosecutors investigate a soldier over a video allegedly containing threats.

From ReMix, Germany becomes isolated by its anti-nuclear climate hysteria.

From Russia Today, new German Chancellor Olaf Scholz will meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

From Novinite, according to sociologist Parvan Simeoniv, Bulgaria's new government will try to make the country look more Western.

From Total Croatia News, will Croatian olive oil prices rise this year?

From Euractiv, mass emigration batters Balkan countries.

From ANSA, Padua, Italy is set to get its first statue that portrays a female.

From El País, one of Europe's biggest suspected cryptocurrency fraudsters is arrested in Valencia, Spain.

From Free West Media, four soccer players die from heart attacks over the Christmas holidays.

From The North Africa Post, former U.S. Ambassador to Tunisia Gordon Gray advises Tunisian President Kais Said against following the footsteps of the late autocrat Ben Ali.

From Turkish Minute, according to a report, not all Turkish purge victims have Gülen links.

From Arutz Sheva, Israeli Foreign Minister Yair Lapid does not rule out meeting with Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas, but does not see any point in doing so now.

From the Saudi Gazette, pirates linked to the Houthis hijack a ship carrying field hospital equipment.

From The New Arab, the Jordanian parliament grants King Abdullah II new powers.

From Iran International, the governor of the Iranian province of Fars tells doctors "if you don't like it, leave Iran".

From the Dhaka Tribune, the Bangladeshi government will soon issue new coronavirus guidelines.

From The Times Of India, three Hindu temples in Bangladesh are allegedly desecrated.

From the Colombo Page, rumors of Sri Lankan Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa resigning have been greatly exaggerated.

From Gatestone Institute, China's hostile takeover of the South Pacific.

From The Stream, predictions, prayers, and laughs for 2022.

From The Daily Signal, a Trump appointee shows how to transform a massive government agency.

From The American Conservative, loan forgiveness won't solve America's debt crisis.

From The Western Journal, Hillary Clinton gets blasted on Twitter after putting out a fundraising request for the Clinton Foundation.

From ABC News, New York Attorney General Letitia James subpoenas Donald Trump the Younger and Ivanka Trump, neither of whom intend to comply.  (via BizPac Review)

From BizPac Review, NFL player Tom Brady weighs in on the behavior of fallen NFL player Antonio Brown.

From The Daily Wire, CNN is mocked for reporting on a study linking obesity to coronavirus deaths.

From the Daily Caller, according to former NFL player Terry Bradshaw, the aforementioned Antonio Brown should be put "in a straightjacket".

From the New York Post, the car company Tesla, owned by Elon Musk, opens a showroom in the Chinese province of Xinjiang, despite allegations of genocide against the Uyghur Muslims.  (Has anyone accused the Chinese government of Islamophobia due to its treatment of the Uyghurs?)

From Breitbart, the platform Facebook suspends congresscritter Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA).

From Newsmax, Capitol Physician Rear Admiral Brian Patrick Monahan requires more effective masks to be worn inside the building.

And from The Babylon Bee, a deceased veteran would fought in World War II looks down from Heaven in disappointment to see his descendant kiss his girlfriend as both wear masks.

No comments:

Post a Comment