Saturday, January 29, 2022

Saturday Links

On a sunny but cold Saturday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, Georgetown Law School should not fire Ilya Shapiro.

From Townhall, according to a co-host on The View, any black woman who graduated from Harvard would be "overqualified" to serve on the Supreme Court.

From the Washington Examiner, two nurses in New York state are arrested for allegedly forging coronavirus vaccination cards.

From The Federalist, more on the attempted leftist cancellation of Ilya Shapiro.

From American Thinker, what should be made of President Biden secretly transporting illegal aliens U.S.?

From LifeZette, Democrats slit their own throats by going after Senators Joe Manchin (D-WV) and Kirsten Sinema (D-AZ).

From NewsBusters, a look back at media reaction to the death of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

From Canada Free Press, coronavirus vaccine secrets.

From TCW Defending Freedom, the Lancaster (England) District Council offers free electricity to people rich enough to own electric vehicles.

From Free West Media, a "historic" number of irregularities occurred in the German election of 2021.

From EuroNews, after eight rounds of voting, Italian President Sergio Mattarella is reelected.

From ReMix, according to an opinion column, Poland must keep debunking propaganda put out by Russia.

From The North Africa Post, Algerian President Abdelmedjid Tebbourne returns from Egypt empty-handed.

From The New Arab, the UAE-trained Giants Brigades militia claim to be ready to "repel" attacks by the Houthi rebels of Yemen.

From the British Asian Christians Association, two Muslim men in Pakistan are given life sentences for murdering a Christian.

From the Metro, the youngest Islamist terrorist in Britain is back in prison after violating the terms of his release.

From Allah's Willing Executioners, over 200 graves are vandalized in a cemetery in Houdain, France.  (If you read French, read the story at FDeSouche.)

From the Sowetan Live, according to the U.N., killings by Islamist militias in the Democratic Republic of Congo increased by almost 50 percent in 2021.  (The article does not use the full name of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, but just the name "Congo", so at first I didn't know which of the two countries whose names include this word is intended.  However, the article refers to the city of Beni, which is in the eastern part of the DRC, near the border with Uganda.  Thus, the "Congo" in the article would be the DRC.  The last four articles come via The Religion Of Peace.)

From Gatestone Institute, the Mayor of İstanbul becomes Turkish President Erdoğan's worst nightmare.  (The Turkish language has a letter similar to "i", but with a dot over the capital and not over the small, as in "ı".  As to how these differ with respect to the sounds they represent, I have no idea.)

From The Stream, "what pro-life really means".

From Space War, the "cheap and nasty" homemade drones used by the Houthi rebels in Yemen.

From The American Conservative, the IRS wants you to scan your face.

From The Western Journal, a rancher explains how the Biden administration, not meat packers, are responsible for the rising meat prices.

From BizPac Review, right-wing commentator Tucker Carlson warns that drivers will get more speeding tickets thanks to Transportation Secretary "Pothole Pete" Buttigieg.

From The Daily Wire, White House press secretary Jen Psaki uses some whataboutism to justify Biden's promise to only consider black women for his first SCOTUS nomination.

From the Daily Caller, a "bomb cyclone" hits the east coast of the U.S., leaving 100,000 people without power.

From the New York Post, New York City Mayor Eric Adams (D) shovels snow.

From Breitbart, Pat Sajak appears to mock Neil Young's decision to leave Spotify by likewise pulling his Sajak Sings Sinatra from the service.

From Newsmax, the aforementioned reelection of Italian President Mattarella is "a relief to official Washington".

And from ESPN, Tampa Bay Buccaneers (and former New England Patriots) quarterback Tom Brady decides that he has had enough for one lifetime.

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