Tuesday, May 17, 2022

Tuesday Tidings

On a warm and partly cloudy Tuesday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, "the Buffalo massacre" should not be politicized.

From FrontpageMag, how the IRS and Democrats enabled BLM criminals.

From Townhall, the pro-abortion "summer of rage" is already getting violent.

From The Washington Free Beacon, Democratic Senators cancel a hearing after embarrassing videos of the new Minister of Truth are found.

From the Washington Examiner, according to an IRS filing, Big Luxurious Mansions doled out millions of dollars to founder Patrice Cullors's family and friends.

From The Federalist, the media deserve congratulations for finally finding a genuine white supremacist.

From American Thinker, President Biden gonna be himself again.

From CNS News, Biden sends American troops back to Somalia to deal with a growing terror threat.

From LifeZette, some major American defense firms also do business with the Chinese military.

From the eponymous site of Drew Berquist, congresscritter Liz Cheney (R-WY) accuses Republicans of "harboring racism".  (via LifeZette)

From Red Voice Media, will the Dinesh D'Souza film 2000 Mules bring about arrests in Arizona?  (Should I hold my breath?  The story comes via LifeZette)

From NewsBusters, new White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre beings on "gooey intros" and left-wing demands to attack TV host Tucker Carlson and congresscritter Elise Stefanik (R-NY).

From Canada Free Press, pull the plug on Biden's teleprompter.

From TeleSUR, Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro claims that Colombia had plans to undermine security in Venezuela.

From TCW Defending Freedom, is there any truth to the "surge in pilot deaths" after the coronavirus vaccine rollouts?

From Free West Media, a U.S. 4-star general Tweets video game footage as if it were a real battle in the war in Ukraine.

From EuroNews, a noted World War II-era truck mechanic officially opens a new passenger rail line named after herself.

From Euractiv, the Netherlands will ban new heating systems that use fossil fuel by 2026.

From ReMix, new Hungarian President Katalin Novák's inauguration speech dispels the left-wing myth that Hungary is Russian President Putin's "puppet".

From Balkan Insight, it's now time to incentivize the dialogue between Serbia and Kosovo.

From The North Africa Post, Gambia renews its support for the "Moroccanness" of the region of Sahara.

From The New Arab, according to E.U. observers, Lebanon's election was marred by vote-buying.

From Reuters, Iran state TV shows footage of a French couple accused of spying.

From Dawn, former Prime Minister Imran Khan thanks the Pakistani Supreme Court for "safeguarding" Pakistan's moral standards with its verdict under constitutional Article 63-A.

From The Express Tribune, more on the Pakistani Supreme Court's interpretation of Article 63-A.

From Pakistan Today, the Election Commission of Pakistan reserves its verdict on a request to disqualify 25 legislators who voted against their party in electing a chief minister for the province of Punjab.

From The Hans India, West Bengal state Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee expresses concern about armed miscreants entering West Bengal from the neighboring Indian states of Jharkhand and Bihar.

From the Hindustan Times, according to External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar, India is working with several African countries against terrorism.

From ANI, according to Health Minister Dr. Mansukh Mandaviya, the Indian government is committed to providing the best health care for everyone.

From India Today, a group of lawyers and law students file a plea in court in an attempt to stop Muslims from praying at the Shahi Idgah mosque in Mathura, India, because it was allegedly where the Hindu divine incarnation Krishna was born.  (What is this "freedom of religion" you speak of?)

From The New Indian Express, 25 members of the Muslim League receive life sentences for the murder of two brothers in Palakkad, Kerala, India who belonged to a different faction.

From the Dhaka Tribune, ships carrying imported wheat anchor at the Bangladeshi port of Chittagong.

From New Age, Sylhet, Bangladesh gets flooded.

From the Colombo Page, Sri Lankan governing parliamentcritters seize mobile phones from two journalists.  (What is this "freedom of the press" you speak of?)

From the Daily Mirror, Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe warns Sri Lankans that the next few months will be the most difficult in our lifetimes.

From Raajje, a man is arrested for allegedly vandalizing the home of former Maldivian President Abdulla Yameen.

From The Nation, a teenager in the Nigerian state of Kaduna sues her father in sharia court for allegedly not allowing her to marry her boyfriend.

From The Straits Times, Singapore denies entry to an Indonesian Muslim preacher due to his "extremist" teachings.

From Tempo(dot)Co, Indonesian palm oil farmers protest against a government ban on exporting their product.

From Free Malaysia Today, according to Malaysia's domestic trade and consumer affairs ministry, the country is not likely to be affected by India's ban on exporting wheat.

From the Borneo Post, an Indonesian man is sentenced to three months in jail for illegally entering the Malaysian state of Sarawak.  (Apparently, some countries are allowed to have laws controlling entry across their borders, and to punish the violation of those laws, without being accused of xenophobia.)

From Vietnam Plus, Vietnamese swimmers set a record in the men's freestyle relay at the Southeast Asian Games.

From the Taipei Times, Taiwan eases its close contact coronavirus isolation rule.

From The Mainichi, a woman from Funabashi, Japan faces prosecution for allegedly selling fake "Demon Stayer" merchandise.

From Gatestone Institute, U.S. President Biden's unwise attempts to save the Iran nuclear deal.

From The Stream, accommodationist Christianity is not progressive and has nothing from Christ.

From The Daily Signal, what two pro-life women saw in the wake of attacks by pro-abortion extremists.

From The American Conservative, an opinion column against the admission of Finland and Sweden into NATO.

From Space War, trying to show aliens earth's location "is a controversial idea".

From The Blaze, U.S. and Mexican border authorities find a "fully operational" drug tunnel running between Tijuana, Mexico and San Diego, California.  (Like the second Death Star, the tunnel is "fully operational".)

From The Western Journal, billionaire Elon Musk plans to vote Republican for the first time ever.

From BizPac Review, right-wing commentator Ben Shapiro explains how the "great replacement theory" belongs to radicals on both sides of the political spectrum.

From The Daily Wire, Senator Bill Cassidy (R-LA) and other Republicans sign a letter urging the Biden administration to combat crime on the southern border.

From the Daily Caller, Senator Cynthia Lummis (R-WY) reportedly apologizes for saying that there are only "two sexes".

Form the New York Post, Biden eases sanctions on Venezuela a day after lifting some rules on Cuba.

From Breitbart, Bidenflation strikes Walmart.

From Newsmax, U.S. embassy officials in Russia claim to be barred from visiting detained WNBA player Brittney Griner.

And from The Guardian, the Taliban dissolves the Afghan human rights commission because they find it to be "unnecessary".

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