Friday, August 12, 2022

Friday Fuss

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

From National Review, if inflation cools off, what should the Republican message be?

From FrontpageMag, no Democrat senators voted to define pregnancy as being unique to biological females.

From Townhall, NPR gets wrecked over its coverage of a Florida license plate.

From The Washington Free Beacon, congressional candidate Chris Deluzio (D-PA), supports the "Inflation Reduction Act", which would increase the size of the IRS, was negligent on his property taxes.

From the Washington Examiner, Arizona starts building a border wall.

From The Federalist, the 2024 presidential election is already being rigged.

From American Thinker, the FBI and its media allies try to justify the raid on former President Trump's home at Mar-a-Lago.

From CNS News, according to former acting DHS Director Chad Wolf, the DHS was flying migrants to New York City for months, but Mayor Eric Adams (D) had no problem until they arrived on buses.

From LifeZette, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis (R) defies political correctness and backs the Gadsden flag.

From NewsBusters, Serbian tennis player Novak Djokovic is still banned from the U.S. due to his being unvaccinated against the coronavirus.

From Canada Free Press, the "Schwabian Economic Theory" is failing.

From TeleSUR, Peruvian President Pedro Castillo believes that evidence against him will be fabricated.

From TCW Defending Freedom, when it comes to the climate, viewers are turning against the BBC.

From Snouts in the Trough, a serial killer of Muslim men turns out to not be an Islamophobe.

From Free West Media, an Italian is investigated for enlisting to fight in Ukraine.

From EuroNews, author Salman Rushdie is attacked while giving a lecture in western New York state.

From Euractiv, France gets some help from other E.U. countries against wildfires.

From ReMix, Czechs flock to Poland for cheaper shopping and gasoline.

From Balkan Insight, a Serbian Orthodox bishop is criticized for a curse against a EuroPride event in Belgrade.

From The North Africa Post, the Libyan state-owned oil company National Oil Corporation plans to increase its production.

From The New Arab, why do Lebanese people sympathize with a bank robber.

From the Northamptonshire Telegraph, a Muslim woman is sickened by bacon mistakenly put into her cheeseburger.

From Allah's Willing Executioners, an Iraqi man in Grenoble, France walks into a bar, wields a knife, and accuses people there of being "bad Muslims".  (If you read French, read the story at FDeSouche and Le Dauphiné.)

From U.S. News & World Report, more on the attack on Salmon Rushdie.

From Gatestone Institute, Belgium's prisoner exchange treaty with Iran is a "deal with the devil".

From The Stream, President Biden exploits the murders of four Muslims in New Mexico to play identity politics.

From The Daily Signal, according to protesters, female athletes are "clear losers" of Biden's changes to Title XI.

From The American Conservative, we don't want a banana republic.

From The Western Journal, the FBI lists 11 sets of allegedly classified documents from Mar-a-Lago.

From Fox News, actress Anne Heche is not expected to survive from her car wreck, but she is being kept on life support so that some of her organs can possibly be donated.  (via The Western Journal)

From BizPac Review, Attorney General Merrick Garland admits that he "personally approved" of the raid at Mar-a-Lago.

From The Daily Wire, according to a survey, a huge portion of millennial workers want to leave their employers because they don't support abortion loudly enough.

From the Daily Caller, the Department of Education will investigate an alleged minority-only coping session at a middle school in South Carolina.

From Breitbart, according to congresscritter Richard Neal (D-MA), the Democrats plan to raise taxes again if they maintain control of the House after the upcoming elections.

From Newsmax, a 1952 baseball card of Hall-Of-Famer Mickey Mantle draws bids of a record $7.6 million, and there's two weeks left of bidding time.  (To see his boyhood home in Oklahoma, go to this blog's archives for August 2021.)

And from the New York Post, New York City area establishments offer up tasty tributes to the recently discontinued Choco Taco.

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