Saturday, March 19, 2022

Saturday Stories

As the mild weather continues on a Saturday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, neither the crowd nor his teammates appear to be pleased with NCAA swimmer Lia Thomas.  (I say "his" because, as far as I know, Lia still has William Thomas's original equipment.)

From Townhall, The New York Times still glorifies Communist murderer Che Guevara.

From the Washington Examiner, former President Trump's spy chief John Ratcliffe gets his revenge.

From The Federalist, Lia Thomas's "inclusion" tramples inclusion for swimmers who really are female.

From American Thinker, Vice President Harris loses her ninth senior staffer.

From LifeZette, will President Biden sell out Ukraine like the second President Roosevelt sold out Eastern Europe?

From NewsBusters, tracking the media spin on Democrat disasters in 2021.

From Canada Free Press, dealing with the truth about the West versus Russian President Putin.

From TCW Defending Freedom, the U.K. is nice to its enemies and nasty to its friends.  (As a bloody Yank, to use a British term, I'm not sure that I would have much of a standing to make this accusation, if it had come from me.)

From Snouts in the Trough, are more lockdowns coming?  (The article has yesterday's date, but apparently has only shown up today.  Since it's intended for the weekend, I'll let the dating matter slide.)

From Free West Media, Turkish Interior Minister Soylu claims that NATO is bankrupt and that the E.U. is under the control of billionaire George Soros.

From EuroNews, "otherworldly" underwater sculptures keep the sea off the coast of Talamone, Italy free of illegal fishing trawlers.

From The North Africa Post, Moroccan authorities again as Amnesty International to provide evidence to support its allegations that Morocco has misused Pegasus software.

From The New Arab, Egypt unveils five tombs of ancient senior royal officials in the archaeological site of Saqqara.

From The Courier, a Muslim delivery driver suspected of being under the influence of drugs refuses to give a blood sample to police due to his claim that it would violate Ramadan rules.

From Stuff, the Hindi film The Kashmir Files is censored in New Zealand due to concerns of Muslims.

From British Asian Christian Association, a Muslim man in Lahore, Pakistan almost kills himself while trying to vandalize a cross on top of a church, and is rescued by local Christians.

From Gatestone, the Biden administration wants to "make anti-American dictatorships great again".

From The Stream, a new study sheds light on whether mRNA coronavirus vaccines can alter human DNA.

From Space War, in Ukraine, Russia uses its hypersonic missiles for the first time.

From Space Daily, four U.S. troops are killed in a military plane crash during a NATO exercise in Norway.

From The American Conservative, can Presidents Putin (Russia) and Zelensky (Ukraine) broker a ceasefire?

From The Daily Signal, how Stanton Evans helped build the conservative movement.

From The Western Journal, Russian troops from Chechnya shoot into an apartment building that's already on fire.

From BizPac Review, White House press secretary Jen Psaki "plays clean-up" on President Biden's call to Chinese President Xi.

From The Daily Wire, Demand Justice board member Elie Mystal accuses Senator Josh Hawley (R-MO) of trying to get SCOTUS nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson killed.

From the Daily Caller, senatorial candidate John Mandel (R-OH) gets unpleasant with fellow candidate Mike Gibbons (R-OH).

From Breitbart, The New York Times disgracefully deceived its readers about Hunter Biden's laptop.

From Newsmax, Trump endorses congresscritter John Joyce (R-PA) for reelection.

And from the New York Post, a TikTok user finds a feature on her iPhone that allows her to hear what people say behind her back.

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