Friday, July 22, 2022

Friday Phenomena

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

From National Review, vaccinated and boosted President Biden has caught the coronavirus a year after claiming that the pandemic was among the unvaccinated.

From FrontpageMag, men competing against women in sports is nothing new.

From Townhall, when Dr. Fauci retires, his pension will be higher than Biden's presidential salary.

From The Washington Free Beacon, a look at the woke meltdown at a domestic violence organization.

From the Washington Examiner, only five governors are less popular than Tom Wolf (D-PA).

From The Federalist, former President Trump was right about Europe's dependence on Russian energy.

From American Thinker, Biden's new Intolerable Acts.

From CNS News, congresscritter Kat Cammack (R-FL) points out how California knows how to party, but not how to prosecute.

From LifeZette, the left denies comedian Dave Chappelle his freedom of speech.

From NewsBusters, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre has a rough time answering questions about Biden's bout with the coronavirus.

From Canada Free Press, Fox News gives "spot-on" reporting about an attack on congresscritter and gubernatorial candidate Lee Zeldin (R-NY).

From TeleSUR, a police raid in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil leaves 19 people dead.

From TCW Defending Freedom, the coronavirus vaccine propaganda machine at its worse.

From Free West Media, a laptop with classified NATO information and belonging to a German soldier is stolen at a meeting in Paris.

From EuroNews, Russia and Ukraine sign a deal to allow grain to be exported via the Black Sea.

From Euractiv, the French parliament agrees to pass a €20 billion bill to tackle inflation.  (According to some people, excessive government spending is one thing that causes inflation.)

From ReMix, according to recent data, Poland is better off now than before the coronavirus pandemic.

From Balkan Insight, Montenegro considers selling confiscated tobacco.

From Allah's Willing Executioners, Muslim employees of the airport in Düsseldorf, Germany are shown giving the ISIS salute.  (If you read German, read the story at Exxpress.)

From The North Africa Post, Egypt starts constructing its first nuclear reactor with help from the Russian company Rosatom.

From The New Arab, a Saudi citizen is arrested for helping an Israeli journalist enter Mecca, which is off limits to non-Muslims.

From Dawn, before the Assembly of the Pakistani province of Punjab elects its new Chief Minister, they fire its police chief.

From The Express Tribune, Pakistan's joint chiefs of staff meet and discuss defense and security matters.

From Pakistan Today, according to an opinion column, the Pakistani province of Balochistan "needs a paradigm shift".

From The Hans India, an Indian federal government team visits flood-stricken areas on the Godavari River.

From the Hindustan Times, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi urges people to strengthen the "Har Ghar Tiranga" movement.

From ANI, police in Ranchi, India investigate a cattle smuggling network.

From India Today, two police officers in Hathras, Uttar Pradesh, India are hospitalized after being hit by a car.

From OpIndia, Muslim youths in Alwar, Rajasthan, India allegedly attack a Sikh man and cut off his hair.

From the Dhaka Tribune, water levels rise for 25 rivers in Bangladesh due to heavy rain.

From New Age, Bangladesh observes National Public Service Day.

From the Colombo Page, security forces and police launch an operation to take control of Sri Lanka's Presidential Secretariat.

From the Daily Mirror, Sri Lanka's new cabinet is sworn in.

From Raajje, the Maldive Islands has welcomed over 900,000 visitors this year.

From the Daily Maverick, according to a U.N. report, South Africa is a growing conduit for ISIS funds.

From The Straits Times, 19 people are taken to hospitals after a double-decker tour bus in Singapore overturns.

From Tempo(dot)Co, Indonesia wants to become the qibla of fashion in the Muslim world.

From Free Malaysia Today, a Malaysian aluminum smelting is fined for causing pollution.

From the Borneo Post, a Filipino in Malaysia is fined and given prison time for possessing 1,769 green turtle eggs.

From Vietnam Plus, an endangered sunda pangolin is released into the wild in the Vietnamese province of Thua Thien-Hue.

From the Taipei Times, Taiwan endures a heat wave.

From The Mainichi, the first occultation of Mars by the moon in 24 years is observed in Japan.

From Gatestone Institute, the new government of Australia maintains the country's "hardline stance" on China.

From The Stream, more on the attack on gubernatorial candidate Lee Zeldin (R-NY).

From The Daily Signal, the left should be pleased with President Biden.

From The American Conservative, trees make cities safer.

From The Western Journal, still more on the attack on Lee Zeldin.

From BizPac Review, the Supreme Court rules to keep former President Trump's policy to deport the most dangerous illegal aliens in place.  (If the courts can force Trump to keep the Obama-era DACA policy in place, they can also force Biden to keep Trump-era policies in place.)

From The Daily Wire, more on the censorship inflicted on comedian Dave Chappelle.

From the Daily Caller, users on Twitter get fooled by a fake Trump account.

From the New York Post, Republicans accused New York Governor Kathy Hochul (R) of encouraging people to "stalk" her rival Lee Zeldin.

From Breitbart, former Trump advisor Steve Bannon is convicted of two counts of contempt of Congress.

And from Newsmax, former First Lady Melania Trump rebukes her former press secretary for creating a "false narrative" about January 6th, 2021.

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