Wednesday, February 2, 2022

Links For Groundhog Day

Now that a famous rodent residing in Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania has indicated that we're in for six more weeks of winter, here are some things going on:

From National Review, hiding President Biden's border mess won't fix it.

From FrontpageMag, double standards about questioning the results of elections.

From Townhall, according to an opinion column, Biden is dragging down his fellow Democrats.

From The Washington Free Beacon, a coalition of Republican congresscritters call for a ban on taxpayer money for implementing coronavirus vaccine mandates on the military.

From the Washington Examiner, according to Indiana Attorney General Todd Rokita (R), BLM's "house of cards" might be starting to fall.

From The Federalist, young people show get out of the college coronavirus camps and start their own careers.

From American Thinker, documents reveal the big lie behind then-President Trump's first impeachment.

From CNS News, to send an "unmistakable signal", Biden sends 3,000 U.S. troops to Romania, Poland and Germany.

From LifeZette, when it comes to national security, what difference a year makes.

From the eponymous site of Drew Berquist, protesting Canadian truckers panic the left.  (via LifeZette)

From NewsBusters, evening network broadcasts go Sgt. Schulz about the U.S. national debt reaching $30 trillion.

From Canada Free Press, Trudeau is the "pretender in the prime minister's office".

From TeleSUR, Peruvian President Pedro Castillo presents his new cabinet.

From TCW Defending Freedom, may the U.K. get rid of Prime Minister Boris Johnson and his "putrid" parliament.

From Snouts in the Trough, it's going to be fun watching society collapse.

From Free West Media, the coronavirus pandemic has resulted in tons of hazardous waste.

From EuroNews, the European Commission controversially labels natural gas and nuclear power as "green energy".

From Euractiv, Ukraine tells the E.U. to share its sanction plans with Russia to show that the plans are not a "bluff".

From ReMix, what was discussed at the meeting between Hungarian Prime Minister Orban and Russian President Putin?

From Balkan Insight, Hungarian police ban an annual neo-Nazi gathering in Budapest.

From Allah's Willing Executioners, French politician Jordan Bardella is indicted for allegedly comparing the town of Trappes with an "Islamic republic".  (If you read French, read the story at Valeurs Actuelles.)

From Morocco World News, a 5-year-old boy falls into a 60-meter deep well near Chefchaouen, Morocco.

From The North Africa Post, Tunisia recovers part of its money that was stolen and deposited in Swiss banks.

From the Libyan Express, the Libyan House of Representatives sets a date for replacing interim Prime Minister Abdulhamid Dbeibah.

From Hürriyet Daily News, according to Interior Minister Süleyman Soylu, bodies of migrants pushed back into Turkey from Greece have been recovered near their mutual border.

From Turkish Minute, former Ankara, Turkey Mayor Melih Gökçek will not be investigated for any links to the Gülen movement.

From Rûdaw, the bodies of three Kurdish migrants who drowned while trying to cross the Aegean Sea are returned to Kirkuk, Iraq.

From Armenpress, Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan  presents Armenia's "red lines" for a peace treaty with Azerbaijan.

From In-Cyprus, the Cypriot cabinet approves small changes to Cyprus's coronavirus measures.

From The Syrian Observer, the al-Rukban camp for internally displaced persons in Syria receives healthcare for the first time in two years.

From Arutz Sheva, Israeli police reportedly used spyware without a warrant on a case involving former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

From The Times Of Israel, according to Defense Minister Benny Gantz, Israel offered aid to the Lebanese military four times in the past year.

From The Jerusalem Post, the Biblical Zoo in Jerusalem revives its tiger exhibit with a new resident, a Sumatran tiger.

From YNetNews, Israeli Attorney General Avichai Mandelblit upholds the security agency Shin Bet's use of mobile phone tracking technology on Palestinian protesters.

From the Egypt Independent, South Korea will export K9 self-propeller howitzers to Egypt.

From Egypt Today, Egypt reports 2,291 new coronavirus cases today.

From the Sudan Tribune, human rights defenders in South Sudan receive an assortment of digital equipment.

From the Ethiopian Monitor, a meeting of foreign ministers from members of the African Union starts in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

From the Saudi Gazette, filming for the Hollywood movie Kandahar wraps up in Al-'Ula, Saudi Arabia.  (The article spells the city's name "AlUla", including a capital "U" in the middle.  The Wiki article spells it "Al-'Ula", with a hyphen and an apostrophe before the "U".)

From The New Arab, Syrians remember the 1982 Hama massacre.

From RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty, an Iranian state TV streaming website is targeted with a message from dissidents.

From IranWire, the Chinese flag is projected onto a tower in Azadi Square in Tehran, which does not go over well with Iranians.

From Iran International, Iran's oil revenue has reportedly increased by almost 500 percent since last August.

From Khaama Press, according to Deputy Minister Zabiullah Mujahid, Afghanistan's media law from before the Taliban takeover is still in effect.

From the Afghanistan Times, the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan reopens universities in "hot" areas.

From Eurasia Review, Muslim groups in Indonesia demand the closing of a newly opened Holocaust museum in the country's only synagogue.

From Gatestone Institute, Amnesty International, wants the Jewish state to come to an end.

From The Stream, the fast food business Chik-fil-A has a secret weapon.

From The Daily Signal, schools and outside groups conspire behind the backs of parents to counsel kids on "myriad gender choices".

From HistoryNet, a Civil War veterans organization closed for 50 years turns out to be an "amazing" repository for Civil War stories.

From The American Conservative, Big Tech owns you, even after you die.

From BizPac Review, New York City's Department of Corrections admits that sick inmates are not getting proper medical care despite a court order.

From The Western Journal, the Biden administration calls for further clamping down on podcaster Joe Rogan.  (What is this "freedom of speech" you speak of?)

From The Daily Wire, CBS White House reporter Weijia Jiang asks press secretary Jen Psaki if President Biden will appoint an Asian-American or a LGBTQ person to the Supreme Court.

From the Daily Caller, according to "sources", Chinese salvage vessels are heading toward the location of a sunken American F-35C Lightning II fighter jet.

From Breitbart, Team USA runner Cynthia Monteleone claims to have been told to "keep her mouth shut" about transgender athletes.  (Again I ask, what is this "freedom of speech" you speak of?)

From Newsmax, according to Senator Marco Rubio (R-FL), NBC should not be allowed to profit from covering the Winter Olympics in Beijing.

From Yahoo Sports, meet the Washington Commanders of the NFL.

And from the New York Post, an intruder caught sneaking around a secure area at the Pentagon might just lay an egg.

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