Tuesday, July 26, 2022

Tuesday Tidings

On a cloudy and relatively cool Tuesday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, Dr. Fauci claims that coronavirus restrictions should have been "much, much more stringent".

From FrontpageMag, the modern enslavement of African Americans.

From Townhall, the Supreme Court draft decision leak reportedly doomed Chief Justice John Roberts's plan to save Roe v. Wade.

From The Washington Free Beacon, Senator Chuck Schumer (D-NY) strips an anti-China security provision from a major semiconductor bill.

From the Washington Examiner, President Biden resumes exercising as he recovers from the coronavirus.

From The Federalist, why the FBI's false labeling of the Hunter Biden laptop as "disinformation" is even worse than you might think.

From American Thinker, the silver lining to the Biden presidency is that it has exposed all that's wrong with left-wing governance.

From CNS News, former congresscritter Tulsi Gabbard (D-HI) points out the DOJ's double standards.

From LifeZette, after all the vaccinations, the coronavirus still hits numerous people.

From NewsBusters, Biden economic lackey Brian Deese nitpicks the definition of a recession.

From Canada Free Press, hold on tight to your faith.

From TeleSUR, Peru deals with the spread of monkeypox.

From TCW Defending Freedom, the debate between U.K. prime ministerial candidates Liz Truss and Rishi Sunak produces "sound and fury", but signifies nothing.

From Snouts in the Trough, how to lie by using statistics.

From Russia Today, a Ukrainian drone attacks a Russian border checkpoint in the region of Bryansk.

From Sputnik International, according to Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, Africa will have a bigger role in Russian foreign policy.

From The Moscow Times, according to new Roscosmos chief Yury Borisov, Russia will withdraw from the International Space Station "after 2024".

From Romania-Insider, Romania reports the highest daily number of new coronavirus cases in five months.

From Novinite, starting in September, all Bulgarian citizens will be able to apply for an electronic criminal record certificate.

From The Sofia Globe, the Bulgarian Socialist Party meets to discuss its exploratory mandate to attempt to form a new government.

From Radio Bulgaria, Bulgarian grain producers threaten to protest.

From the Greek Reporter, users rate the Athens airport as the best in Europe.  (I was among its users in 2006.)

From Ekathimerini, Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis hosts Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

From the Greek City Times, the bar DK Oyster on the Greek island of Mykonos is fined for ripping off two American tourists.

From Balkan Insight, the Soviet-era plane that crashed in Greece was carrying Serbian weapons to Bangladesh in a deal brokered by a Bosnian-based company owned by a Polish weapons firm.  (How many countries were involved in this incident?  I count six.)

From Total Croatia News, as the PeljeÅ¡ac Bridge opens, which Croatian government deserves the most credit?  (If you study any Slavic language, you might realize that the word "most" is a pun, because the Slavic word most means "bridge".  If you read Croatian, read the story at Faktograf.)

From Total Slovenia News, due to a strike, Lufthansa cancels over 1,000 flights, including some to and from Ljubljana, Slovenia.

From The Malta Independent, Malta secures and exemption from the European Commission's proposed gas reduction.

From Malta Today, the Maltese opposition plans to again push anti-corruption bills when parliament reopens.

From ANSA, according to Democratic Party leader Enrico Letta, the upcoming Italian election is between his party and the right-wing party Brothers of Italy.

From ReMix, Italian conservative politicians call for greater border security after a video shows an attack by a Tunisian in the city of Milan.

From SwissInfo, due to glacial melting, two thirds of an Alpine lodge originally in Italy is now in Switzerland.

From France24, French President Emmanuel Macron arrives in Cameroon.

From RFI, France opens monkeypox vaccination centers.

From The Portugal News, annual income in Portugal rises by 1.3 percent.

From Free West Media, Kalamazoo, Michigan decriminalizes getting relief in public.

From EuroNews, Airbus converts existing planes into firefighting aircraft.

From Euractiv, E.U. energy ministers greenlight a plan to reduce gas consumption.

From The North Africa Post, Algeria further undermines its share of the Spanish natural gas market.

From The New Arab, only 27.5 percent of eligible voters cast ballots in Tunisia's referendum on a new constitution.

From Firstpost, according to the Indian federal government, 28 migrant workers have been killed in the territory of Jammu and Kashmir.

From Gatestone Institute, according to Arabs, U.S. President Biden has decided to tamper with Middle Eastern security for no reason.

From The Stream, the "Respect for Marriage Act" does not live up to its name.

From The Daily Signal, the inconvenient truth about monkeypox.

From Space War, the Chinese space program envisions peaceful cooperation.

From The American Conservative, if you try to drain the swamp, the gators will bite you.

From The Western Journal, Chinese tanks roll down city streets.

From BizPac Review, former vice presidential (as in Mike Pence) Chief of Staff Marc Short reportedly cozies up to the January 6th Inquisition Committee.

From The Daily Wire, Dr. Fauci tells Senator Rand Paul (R-KY) to go ahead and investigate him.

From the Daily Caller, the Biden administration is ready to force insurance companies to pay for sex-change operations.

From the New York Post, during the debate between the aforementioned Liz Truss and Rishi Sunak, the moderator collapses.

From Breitbart, Russia again cuts its gas exports to Germany by a half.

From Newsmax, according to National Border Patrol Council President Brandon Judd, Biden's policies are making impossible for Border Patrol agents to protect Americans.

And from TMZ, reports of the death of Leave It To Beaver star Tony Dow turn out to have been greatly exaggerated.  (via the New York Post)

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