Sunday, March 27, 2022

Sunday Links

As the cool cloudy weather continues on a Sunday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, no, President Biden's "gaffes" are not "endearing".

From Townhall, over a month after getting drunk at a slumber party for pre-teen girls, would-be congresscritter candidate Abby Broyles (D-OK) ends her campaign.

From The Washington Free Beacon, a review of a book on gardening.

From the Washington Examiner, according to congresscritter Jim Jordan (R-OH), Biden's speech in Poland was "more than confusing" but "dangerous".

From American Thinker, even Republican presidents such as Trump have a right to free speech.

From LifeZette, SCOTUS nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson can't understand simple facts.

From the eponymous site of Drew Berquist, more on Biden's gaffes being dangerous.  (via LifeZette)

From NewsBusters, Meet the Press host Chuck Todd panics over the Republican lead in NBC's generic congressional midterm poll.

From Canada Free Pressthe "Great Reset" is old and doddering like the men who would impose it.

From TCW Defending Freedom, in the world of New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinta Ardern, a family not vaccinated against the coronavirus is a feral gang.

From Free West Media, Switzerland decides against banning swastikas.

From EuroNews, Malta's governing Labour Party is expected to remain in power.

From The North Africa Post, the World Bank loans Morocco $180 million to support sustainable agriculture.

From The New Arab, thousands of Palestinians volunteer to clean the Al-Aqsa mosque and prepare it for Ramadan.

From OpIndia, a Maulvi from the Indian territory of Jammu and Kashmir demands that the movie The Kashmir Files is banned.  (The title "Maulvi", which term can also be spelled "Mawlawi", "Moulvi" and "Mawlvi", is given to highly qualified Islamic scholars.  My spellchecker accepts only the "Maulvi" spelling.)

From Gatestone Institute, from Guernica, Spain to Mariupol, Ukraine.

From The Stream, the West's psychogenic mass illness.

From Fox News, according to businessman Elon Musk, it's not good for humans to live longer.  (The article indicates that Musk believes that the American founders should have established maximum ages for holding public office.  Considering the ages of President Biden, Speaker Pelosi, former President Trump, former Senator/Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and many others, I can see his point.)

From BizPac Review, the band Genesis puts on their last show.

From The Western Journal, billionaire Bill Gates wants people in rich countries to eat synthetic beef.  (His idea is worthwhile, in my opinion, only because real beef from real cattle is getting so expensive these days.)

From The Daily Wire, according to an opinion column, self-admitted "gaffe machine" Biden made three major mistakes while in Europe.

From the Daily Caller, U.S. Ambassador to NATO Julianne Smith praises Biden's "pitch perfect" speech in Poland and then walks back his call for regime change.

From Breitbart, the U.K. government claims that it will give free speech of "trump card" even while legislating to increase online censorship.  (About 240 years ago, a bunch of former U.K. subjects on the west side of the Pond gave free speech some real protection.)

From Newsmax, according to Senator Marco Rubio (R-FL), if Russia were to use chemical or biological weapons in Ukraine, President Putin would try to blame it on the U.S. or NATO.

And from the New York Post, 13 times when Oscar winners got obnoxiously political on the podium.

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