Thursday, July 28, 2022

Thursday Things

On a warm cloudy Thursday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, we're now in a recession, and lots of people saw it coming.

From FrontpageMag, eight heroes who defended the West.

From Townhall, in an ironic twist, Mexico City residents complain about too many gringos in their country.

From The Washington Free Beacon, Pennsylvania sheriffs ask senatorial candidate John Fetterman (D) to clarify his positions on criminal justice reform.

From the Washington Examiner, congresscritter Kevin McCarthy (R-Cal) blasts Democrats for trying to redefine recession.

From The Federalist, the Biden recession has officially begun.

From American Thinker, points of agreement between Islam and the left.

From CNS News, President Biden claims that "we are on the right path".

From LifeZette, Republican congresscritters want answers from First Son Hunter Biden's financial advisors.

From Red Voice Media, the president and first lady can't even go to blue states without being heckled.  (via LifeZette)

From NewsBusters, the "Big Three" networks refuse to report on the "Big Guy" meeting with 14 of Hunter Biden's business partners.

From Canada Free Press, the Democrats know that Hunter Biden must be convicted before the upcoming elections in November.

From TCW Defending Freedom, a pox on the monkeypox fear-mongers.

From Snouts in the Trough, "some bits and pieces" about monkeypox, the coronavirus, and weather reporting.

From Free West Media, the number of Europeans aged 15 to 24 continues to decrease.

From EuroNews, in an attempt to save energy, Berlin puts out the lights.

From Euractiv, Russia has been building Potemkin villages for a long time.

From ReMix, the root cause of Europe's energy crisis is not the war in Ukraine, but the push for renewables.

From Balkan Insight, a call to rebuild the Njegos chapel on Mount Lovcen divides Montenegro.

From The North Africa Post, former parliament Speaker Rached Ghannouchi warns that President Kais Saied will change Tunisia's election code to sideline the party Ennahdha.

From The New Arab, the U.N. plans to review the new Tunisian constitution.

From Dawn, Pakistani Interior Minister Rana Sanaullah urges former Prime Minister Imran Khan to dissolve the assemblies in the provinces of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Punjab.

From The Express Tribune, elections will be held on time, says the party Pakistan Democratic Alliance.

From Pakistan Today, archaeological sites from the Gandhara civilization attracts foreign tourist to the Pakistani district of Swat.

From The Hans India, the first underwater metro line in India will open in 2023 in the city of Kolkata.

From the Hindustan Times, a MiG-21 training aircraft crashes in the Indian state of Rajasthan, killing both pilots.

From ANI, a terror cell linked to al-Qaeda in the Indian state of Assam is busted, with 11 suspected terrorists being detained.

From India Today, the Indian army gets new combat vehicles in the territory of Ladakh, to deal with Chinese transgressions.

From the Dhaka Tribune, a politician from the city of Tangail claims to be the poorest parliamentcritter in Bangladesh.

From New Age, the opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party claims that religious minorities have come under attack since the party Awami League came to power in Bangladesh.

From the Colombo Page, according to Sri Lankan President Ranil Wickramasinghe, everyone is allowed to protest peacefully.

From the Daily Mirror, a Sri Lankan animal rights activist is attacked while filming the mistreatment of a disabled elephant.

From Raajje, Maldivian President Ibrahim Solih plans to make an official visit to India.

From Al-Monitor, the Sunni Islamic authority Al-Azhar issues a fatwa commanding women to wear hijabs while praying.

From The Straits Times, President Xi (China) tells President Biden (U.S.) that the U.S. must abide by the one-China principle.

From Tempo(dot)Co, Mount Raung on the Indonesian island of Java makes an unexpected eruption.

From Free Malaysia Today, why Malaysia's bill against party-hopping should be lauded.

From the Borneo Post, an Indonesian man is given four months in jail for overstaying his pass to visit the Malaysian state of Sarawak.

From Vietnam Plus, according to President Nguyen Xuan Phuc, Vietnam values multifaceted cooperation with Hungary.

From the Taipei Times, U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's trip to Taiwan is confirmed by a fellow congresscritter.

From The Mainichi, according to government estimates, a major earthquake striking the Japanese island of Hokkaido could kill 149,000 people.

From Gatestone Institute, between China and the U.S., whose side is the Biden administration on?

From The Stream, what the phrase "not of this world" doesn't mean.

From The Daily Signal, the FDA puts out a warning about puberty blockers.

From The American Conservative, it's not the culture war, it's the politicization of everything.

From The Western Journal, Americans are desperate to get out of 10 metropolitan areas, which all have something in common.

From BizPac Review, according to right-wing commentator Larry Elder, former President Trump is not an insurrectionist.

From The Daily Wire, Biden downplays the recession.

From the Daily Caller, CNBC host Rick Santelli is shocked by negative GDP numbers.  (Yes, that's the same guy whose rant inspired the Tea Party movement.)

From the New York Post, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen can't believe that there's a recession going on.

From Breitbart, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky(y) gets "eviscerated" on social media over his photoshoot with his wife First Lady Olena Zelenska.

From Newsmax, Republicans blast Biden and other Democrats for trying to redefine "recession".

And from The Sun, after 95 of this trees are cut down, a man in Thornham, England puts up bales of hay to prevent his neighbors from viewing his property.  (via the New York Post)

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