Friday, February 11, 2022

Friday Fuss

On a sunny and mild Friday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, as seen from his interviews, it's amazing that President Biden ever takes any questions.

From FrontpageMag, how to destroy the U.S. economy with one socialist trick.

From Townhall, Biden "rejects" a report from the army detailing the botched withdrawal from Afghanistan.

From The Washington Free Beacon, a group of congresscritters will host an event celebrating communist activist and terror accomplice Angela Davis.

From the Washington Examiner, former congresscritter Anthony Weiner (D-NY) and Guardian Angels founder Curtis Sliwa will jointly host a new radio talk show.

From The Federalist, Senator Mitch McConnell (R-KY) should not promote media lies about the RNC censure of congresscritter Liz Cheney (R-WY).

From American Thinker, if D.C. fears former President Trump, he deserves to be put back in office.

From CNS News, several Republican Senators introduce a bill to prevent taxpayer money from being used to distribute crack pipes or similar paraphernalia.

From the eponymous site of Drew Berquist, BLM means more crime and dead police officers.  (via LifeZette)

From the eponymous site of Steve Gruber, "we've had enough".  (via LifeZette)

From NewsBusters, morning news networks largely ignore 40-year-high inflation.

From Canada Free Press, since the FDA is ready to permit coronavirus vaccinations for babies, why not just sacrifice them to a volcano?

From TeleSUR, a Mexican journalist who reported on corruption is murdered in the city of Salina Cruz.

From TCW Defending Freedom, unvaccinated U.K. healthcare workers may see patients, but vaccinated relatives of those patients may not.

From Snouts in the Trough, the author of SitT agrees with Russia President Putin.

From EuroNews, the U.K. and Norway call for their citizens in Ukraine to get out of there.

From Free West Media, a Dutch parliamentary committee blocks a request for coronavirus-related data.

From Russia Today, Russian envoy Dmitry Kozak is frustrated after nine hours of failed negotiations in Berlin.

From Sputnik International, Ukrainian military weapons are reportedly near the city of Donbass.

From The Moscow Times, satellite images show Russian military equipment near the Ukrainian border.

From Euractiv, tensions over Ukraine bring back painful war memories for Georgians.

From Romania-Insider, NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg visits a Romanian military base as U.S. troops arrive in the country.

From Novinite, Bulgaria's Health Commission rejects the removal of the Green Certificate.

From The Sofia Globe, four parties in the Bulgarian National Assembly condemn this year's planned Lukov March.

From Radio Bulgaria, students at Bulgarian universities want in-person learning and the removal of the Green Certificates.

From the Greek Reporter, 18,000 "notepads", many written in Greek, are found in the Egyptian archaeological site of Athribis.

From Ekathimerini, the U.S. State Department supports Greece's sovereignty over its islands in the Aegean Sea.

From the Greek City Times, an earthquake early warning system could save lives in Greece.

From Balkan Insight, according to NGOs, Islamism is fading in Serbia while far-right extremism is growing.

From Total Croatia News, according to state reconstruction secretary Gordan Hanžek, 100 houses per week are being reconstructed in the earthquake-stricken Croatian region of Banovina.

From Total Slovenia News, a new group organizes in Maribor, Slovenia to oppose all of the country's coronavirus-related restrictions.

From The Slovenia Times, according to the paper Dnevnik, the Slovenia healthcare system is full of injustices but no actions are being taken.

From The Malta Independent, according to Maltese Home Affairs Minister Byron Camilleri, voting plans for police officers are the responsibility of the country's Election Commission.

From Malta Today, picnickers in Malta's l-Aħrax woodland are fined for chopping trees and holding barbeques.

From ANSA, according to Prime Minister Mario Draghi, it's important for Italy to continue its economic growth.

From ReMix, dozens of Italian cities turn off the lights in their government buildings and landmarks to protest rising electricity prices.

From SwissInfo, a court in Lausanne, Switzerland fines 12 environmental activists for public order offenses committed during an Extinction Rebellion protest in 2019.

From France24, female Muslim soccer players clash with the French government over its ban on the hijab in their sport.

From RFI, French equality minister Elisabeth Moreno sides with the female Muslim soccer players.

From El País, how did a cross made in Spain 350 years ago get to the U.S. state of Maryland?

From The Portugal News, Portuguese President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa invites U.S. climate czar and former Senator (D-MA) John Kerry to visit Lisbon.

From The North Africa Post, the U.N. rejects the Libyan parliament's appointment of former Interior Minister Fathi Bashagha as the country's new prime minister.

From The New Arab, Israel and Lebanon are considering a "gas resource swap" to settle their maritime border dispute.

From Gatestone Institute, the U.S. should go either all in or all out on the Middle East.

From The Stream, mysteries and botched manipulations of January 6th.

From The Daily Signal, it's now time to win the war against Big Tech.

From Space War, a look at the Quad Alliance.

From Sino Daily, according to Somaliland's top diplomat, China cannot dictate its relation with Taiwan.

From The American Conservative, NATO should be thanked for the new Russia-China pact.

From The Western Journal, under President Biden, the USCIS's mission statement changes.

From BizPac Review, a former advisor to former First Lady/Senator/Secretary of State Hillary Clinton suggests that Biden should pardon January 6th protesters who were not violent.  (I'd settle for putting them on trial and thus ending their apparently indefinite confinement.)

From The Daily Wire, according to retired Lieutenant General Greg Newbold, teaching CRT leads to military failure.

From the Daily Caller, Democrats in Kentucky exploit a 12-year-old transgender child to oppose a bill that would ban boys from girls' sports.

From Breitbart, how Bidenflation has made your Super Bowl party more expensive.

From Newsmax, congresscritter Lauren Boebert (R-CO) blasts gubernatorial candidate Bob O'Rourke (D-TX).

And from the New York Post, on the Italian island of Sicily, Mount Etna's eruption gets electric.

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