Tuesday, January 11, 2022

Tuesday Tidings

On yet another sunny but cold day, here are some things going on:

From National Review, leave Senator Ted Cruz's (R-TX) daughter alone, you [bleep]s.

From FrontpageMag, former First Lady/Senator (D-NY)/Secretary of State/presidential candidate Hillary Clinton hints at running again in 2024.  (I've come to believe that Hillary will not stop desiring the presidency until she kicks the bucket, and even then, I'm not sure.)

From Townhall, when Senator Chuck Schumer (D-NY) realized that he screwed up.

From The Washington Free Beacon, two Chinese communists serve on the board of Yale University's academic center in Beijing.

From the Washington Examiner, the aforementioned Senator Cruz asks the FBI about any informants present during the Capitol riot.

From The Federalist, those who pushed coronavirus lockdowns should not be allowed to hide from their consequences.

From American Thinker, let's not give illegal aliens a path to citizenship.

From CNS News, SCOTUS Justice Stephen Breyer tries to do the math on the coronavirus in America.

From LifeZette, then-President Trump's economy was better than the economy under President Biden.

From Red Voice Media, California Governor Gavin Newsom (D) wants universal health care, including state-funded abortions, for illegal aliens.  (via LifeZette)

From NewsBusters, as coronavirus cases hit record highs in the U.S., the three major networks won't say the president's name.

From Canada Free Press, ready of not, here she comes.

From TeleSUR, according to a Haitian drug trafficker, Prime Minister Ariel Henry was involved in the assassination of President Jovenel Moise.

From TCW Defending Freedom, U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson calls coronavirus vaccine skepticism "mumbo jumbo".

From Polskie Radio, Polish scientists identify a genetic profile that makes some humans more predisposed to a severe form of the disease caused by the coronavirus.

From ReMix, according to Polish General Waldemar Skrzypczak, actions by Germany could tear NATO apart.

From Radio Prague, former Czech minister David Rath is released from prison after serving half his term.

From The Slovak Spectator, the Slovak Health Ministry has to debunk a hoax about a coronavirus-related decision by Slovakia's Constitutional Court.

From Daily News Hungary, President János Áder sets the date for Hungary's next general election.

From Hungary Today, Hungarian Foreign Minister Szijjarto comments on the situation in Kazakhstan.  (If you read Hungarian, read a related story at Hirado.)

From About Hungary, Hungarians are evacuated from Kazakhstan.

From Russia Today, Russian-led forces in Kazakhstan are expected to soon leave.

From Sputnik International, the Russian government does not appreciate being called an "aggressor" in Kazakhstan by the West.

From The Moscow Times, an anti-Kremlin satirist flees Russia after being sued for libel by "Putin's chef".

From Romania Insider, Romania shortens its coronavirus quarantine period.

From Novinite, Bulgaria shortens its coronavirus quarantine period.

From The Sofia Globe, most of Bulgaria's leadership self-isolates after one of them tests positive for the coronavirus.

From Radio Bulgaria, Bulgaria does not commit to any deadlines for E.U. membership to be extended to North Macedonia.

From Balkan Insight, Serbian authorities investigate alleged hate incidents against ethnic Bosniaks in the town of Priboj.

From Free West Media, vaccinated and boosted Swiss marathoner Fabienne Schlumpf is diagnosed with myocarditis.

From EuroNews, the Catholic Church in Rome condemns the draping of a funeral casket with a Nazi flag.

From Euractiv, according to Vice-Chancellor Robert Habeck, Germany will miss its climate targets in 2022 and 2023.

From The North Africa Post, Algeria bans people under the age of 18 from buying cooking oil.

From The New Arab, is Saudi Arabia, with help from China, developing ballistic missiles.

From Arab News, "funerary avenues" from the third millennium B.C. are discovered in northwestern Saudi Arabia.

From Gatestone Institute, Arabs are "frustrated" with U.S. President Biden's policy on Iran.

From The Stream, don't let Biden off the hook for what happened in Afghanistan.

From The Daily Signal, the media figure America needs is Joe Rogan.

From Space War, North Korea fires a second suspected ballistic missile less than a week after the first one.

From Sino Daily, Taiwan passes an $8.6 billion increase to its defense budget as the threat from China grows.

From The American Conservative, Pacific regional powers face the rise of China.

From BizPac Review, the "tyranny of the minority".

From The Daily Wire, a group of Arizona college students threaten a hunger strike if a federal voting rights bill is not passed.

From the Daily Caller, Republican congresscritters demand oversight of spending related to the "infrastructure" bill.

From the New York Post, the building in the Bronx which recently caught fire was noted for safety lapses after a fire in 1986.

From Breitbart, Border Patrol agents in the southwest continue to arrest previously deported illegal aliens.

From Newsmax, scientists see signals that the omicron coronavirus variant has peaked in the U.K. and may soon peak in the U.S., each to be followed by a rapid drop.

And from The Western Journalwhat Biden gets to see every time he goes to his Delaware beach house.

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