Tuesday, June 28, 2022

Tuesday Things

On a warm sunny Tuesday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, the phantom hunt for the person who leaked the draft SCOTUS decision.

From FrontpageMag, will there be hearings on the pro-abortion insurrection?

From Townhall, according to a survey, American views on gender are shifting, but not in the way that leftists want.

From The Washington Free Beacon, according to congresscritter (D-Cal) and Los Angeles mayoral candidate Karen Bass, Vice President Harris is a "petty [bleepity bleep]".

From the Washington Examiner, the White House denies that President Biden is to blame for the deaths of almost 40 illegal migrants found in a tractor-trailer in Texas.

From The Federalist, Democrat views on abortion are far too radical for them to benefit in the post-Roe v. Wade reality.

From American Thinker, the insurrection from the left intensifies.

From CNS News, the praying football coach is happy that "the First Amendment is alive and well".

From LifeZette, TV host Megyn Kelly shreds TV host Ana Navarro for using her disabled brother as a justification for abortion.

From NewsBusters, hosts on The View claim that the Supreme Court ruling in favor of the praying coach will bring animal sacrifices to football games.

From Canada Free Press, Mark Zuckerberg should tear down the "great wall" of censorship.

From TeleSUR, a possible tropical storm heads for Trinidad, Grenada and Venezuela.

From TCW Defending Freedom, don't let the eco-tyrants ban palm oil.

From Free West Media, police in the German state of Saxony drive electric cars, but have no charging stations.

From ReMix, over 100 migrant clan members brawl in Essen, Germany.

From Allah's Willing Executioners, German authorities conduct raids against an Islamist organization calling itself "Caliphate State".  (If you read German, read the story at HessenSchau.)

From About Hungary, according to Deputy Prime Minister Zsolt Semjén, Hungary is witnessing a Jewish renaissance.  (AH did not publish any articles yesterday, so I went back there today.)

From Russia Today, the vodka maker Smirnoff will gradually leave Russia.  (Although it has a Russian name, and vodka is a traditional Russian product, Smirnoff is based in the U.K.)

From Sputnik International, the U.S. bans imports of Russian gold.

From The Moscow Times, Russia tries to evade blame for a missile strike on a mall in Kremenchuk, Ukraine.

From Romania-Insider, public transport controllers in Bucharest, Romania get rid of their uniforms in order to improve their efficiency.  (If you read Romanian, read the story at Impact(dot)Ro.)

From Novinite, Bulgaria expels 70 diplomats from Russia.

From The Sofia Globe, the Bulgarian party We Continue the Change starts consultations on forming a new government.

From Radio Bulgaria, Bulgarian agricultural producers fear bankruptcy due to duty-free imports from Ukraine.

From the Greek Reporter, a 2,400-year-old Greek ship is discovered in the Black Sea.

From Ekathimerini, bus and trolley workers in Athens go on a one-day strike tomorrow.

From the Greek City Times, a history of "how Greece became Turkey".

From Balkan Insight, according to a report, victims of human trafficking in Bosnia and Herzegovina "need better protection".

From Total Croatia News, Justice Minister Ivan Malenica unveils a project for modernizing Croatia's judicial system.

From Total Slovenia News, Slovenia's Constitutional Court rejects an appeal from former Prime Minister Janez Janša.

From The Slovenia Times, Slovenia's Constitutional Court rules against the country's coronavirus-related mask and hand disinfection mandates.

From The Malta Independent, ghost nets recovered from the sea floor around Malta are reused to make bracelets and keychains.

From Malta Today, a Maltese court rules that €96 million held at the Bank of Valletta by a son of the late Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi must be returned to Libya.  (Of course, there are many ways to spell the dictator's last name, my favorite being "Khadaffyduck".)

From ANSA, Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi hopes for a price cap on Russian gas by October.

From SwissInfo, more young people in Switzerland are getting convicted of violent crimes, but fewer are convicted of drug offenses.

From France24, the French National Assembly elects Yaël Braun-Pivet as its first female president.

From RFI, President Emmanuel Macron is forced to find new allies as the new French parliament gets underway.

From El País, the NATO summit opens in Madrid, Spain to chart a course in "a more dangerous world".

From The Portugal News, Portugal keeps its hotel prices low.

From EuroNews, Turkey drops its opposition to Sweden and Finland joining NATO.

From Euractiv, the E.U. starts rolling out monkeypox vaccines.  (Remember, as I've said before, the "k" is silent.)

From The North Africa Post, "Morocco seeks to attract Japanese investors".

From The New Arab, according to the U.N., over 300,000 civilians have been killed in Syria's civil war.

From The Daily Telegraph, a former imam in Melbourne, Australia loses his right to officiate marriages after marrying off a 14-year-old girl to a man 20 years older.

From Gatestone Institute, Turkey's jihad against Cyprus.

From The Stream, will God send rain onto the states depending on their abortion policies?

From The Daily Signal, after a report from TDS itself, Instagram removes posts containing the home addresses of Supreme Court justices.

From Space War, according to NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg, Ukraine is facing the worst "brutality" seen in Europe since World War II.

From The American Conservative, the Dobbs v. Jackson decision shows the antagonism between the Church and the world.

From The Western Journal, President Biden's pick to lead ICE withdraws after an allegation of domestic violence.

From BizPac Review, Vice President Harris dismisses a plan from congresscritter AOC (D-NY) and Senator Fake Cherokee (D-MA) to use federal lands for abortions and offers a different plan.

From The Daily Wire, Amazon workers of "all genders" beg the company to stop doing business in pro-life states, and make other demands.

From the Daily Caller, Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) blasts congresscritter Ilham Omar's (D-MN) statement on the Supreme Court ruling in favor of the praying football coach.

From Fox News, two alleged drug traffickers arrested in California while in possession of 150,000 fentanyl pills are set free after just a few days in jail.  (via the Daily Caller)

From the New York Post, opinion writer Piers Morgan invites Biden's detractors to imagine President Kamala Harris.

From Breitbart, according to a poll, 69 percent of Rhode Island residents say that Biden should not run for reelection in 2024.

From The Intercept, Facebook brands the pro-abortion group Jane's Revenge as "terrorists".  (via Breitbart)

From the Austin American-Statesman, a Harris County, Texas judge rules that abortions may continue at some clinics.  (via Breitbart)

From Newsmax, Wisconsin Governor Tony Evers (D) and Attorney General Josh Kaul announce a lawsuit against their state's abortion law, dating from 1849.  (With Roe v. Wade no longer in force, can't they instead ask Wisconsin's legislature to repeal or modify the law?)

From Yahoo News, convicted sex trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell gets 20 years in prison.

And from CNN, a German court sentences a 101-year-old former guard at the Nazi concentration camp Sachsenhausen to 5 years in prison for aiding and abetting the murders of 3,518 people.

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