Tuesday, August 30, 2022

Some Late Stuff For Tuesday

Due to a power outage, I have not been able to post anything on the Interwebs for most of the afternoon.  But now with things apparently fixed, I present a short list of things going on:

From National Review, if New York Yankees outfielder Aaron Judge hits 62 home runs this year, he should be considered the true single-season record holder.

From FrontpageMag, in allegedly the "systemically racist" U.S., lots of whites vote for black candidates.

From Townhall, what the Biden administration won't say about financing for solar panels.

From The Washington Free Beacon, the Biden administration goes Sgt. Schulz about Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas's claim that Israel has committed "50 Holocausts" against the Palestinians.

From the Washington Examiner, the U.S. Navy stops an attempt by Iranian naval forces to steal an unmanned surface vessel in the Arabian Gulf.  (The Arabian Gulf is also known as the Persian Gulf.  When visiting Arab-majority countries in the region, using the term that includes "Arabian" is advisable.)

From The Federalist, Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg's admission of FBI meddling in the 2020 presidential election "is even bigger than it seems".

From American Thinker, trying to figure out the Democrat disdain for former President Trump and his supporters.

From CNS News, conservatives and Republicans denounce President Biden's student loan bailout.

From LifeZette, according to the Border Patrol, the border in the southwest is wide open.

From NewsBusters, four Republicans slam the censorship collusion between Facebook and the FBI.

From Canada Free Press, Trump should not let the backstabbers take him down.

From TeleSUR, Paraguayan President Mario Abdo vetoes a bill to regulate crypto assets.

From TCW Defending Freedom, if the West can beat the upcoming winter chill, the tide could turn against Russian President Putin.

From OpIndia, Islamists demolish houses in Murumatu, Jharkhand, India.

From BBC News, at least 23 people are killed in clashes in Baghdad, Iraq after the decision by Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr to quit politics.

From Gatestone Institute, Chinese military researchers threaten to destroy Elon Musk's Starlink satellites.

From The Stream, Trump responds to the ouster of the FBI agent who allegedly tried to fix elections.

From The Daily Signal, a woman and her baby find love at a pregnancy resource center.

From ITR Economics, is inflation causing consumers to spend less?

From The American Conservative, the ruling Neros fiddle while the West burns.

From The Western Journal, Republican Senators Chuck Grassley (Iowa) and Ron Johnson (Wis) call on the aforementioned Mark Zuckerberg to turn over his communications with the FBI.

From BizPac Review, in 2020, the United Mine Workers endorsed then-candidate Biden even though he declared that there would be no more coal-fired power plants in the U.S. if he won.

From the Daily Caller, Border Patrol Chief Raul Ortiz that there's a crisis on the southern border.

From The Hill, Google blocks Trump's Truth Social platform from its app store for Android devices.  (via the Daily Caller)

From the Tri-City Herald, the Kennewick, Washington school board bans teaching CRT in classrooms.  (via the Daily Caller)

From the New York Post, Governor Ron DeSantis (R-FL) calls Governor Kathy Hochul (D-NY) "ridiculous" for telling conservatives to get out of New York.  (Yours truly did that as a teenager, due to Papa Bigfoot changing jobs.)

From Breitbart, California Democrat state legislators pass a law to set up a board that would set wages for fast food workers.

From Newsmax, Mississippi calls in its National Guard to help hand out water in the capital city of Jackson after its water treatment plant breaks down.

And from The Daily Wire, according to Russian state media, Mikhail Gorbachev, the last leader of the Soviet Union, dies at age 91.

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