Tuesday, August 9, 2022

Tuesday Things

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

From National Review, the FBI should release the warrant under which former President Trump's Mar-a-Lago home was raided.

From FrontpageMag, with the raid on Trump's home, America falls into the abyss.

From Townhall, the architect of the Trump/Russia collusion hoax reveals the reason for the FBI raid.

From The Washington Free Beacon, Princeton University a "supplier diversity" tool for potential vendors.

From the Washington Examiner, Democrats worry that the FBI raid on Mar-a-Lago might "strengthen" Republicans.

From The Federalist, Americans have no reason, with or without the search warrant, to believe that the FBI raid on Mar-a-Lago is justified.

From American Thinker, remember when Mr. Bill's National Security Advisor Sandy Berger got nothing more than a $50,000 fine for stealing classified documents?

From CNS News, according to former Trump advisor Steven Miller, the "security state" has been after Trump for six years.

From Red Voice Media, the raid on Trump's home shows evidence of a weaponized government.  (via LifeZette)

From NewsBusters, on the show CBS Mornings, Senator Tim Scott (R-SC) is demanded to keep talking about Trump.

From Canada Free Press, President "Orwell" Biden's "FBI Gestapo".

From TeleSUR, over 250,000 liters of water have been thrown onto a wildfire in Cuba.

From TCW Defending Freedom, do I see a knife or a dagger?

From GBN, convicted terrorists in U.K. prisons are "refusing" to be deradicalized.

From Russia Today, Hungary offers a possible solution to allow the supply of Russian oil to Europe to resume.

From Sputnik International, according to the Russian Defense Ministry, several round of ammunition have detonated at an airfield near Novofederovka, Crimea.

From The Moscow Times, more on the explosions at a Russian airbase in Crimea.

From EuroNews, Finland and Estonia call for the E.U. to stop issuing tourist visas for Russians.

From Euractiv, two more grain-carrying ships sail from Ukraine.

From Romania-Insider, the Romanian company Transgaz seeks to buy foreign gas to balance its supply for the upcoming winter.  (If you read Romanian, read the story at Economica.)

From Novinite, Bulgaria will remove its mask requirement for some places tomorrow.

From The Sofia Globe, protests erupt over Russia's effort to extradite one of its nationals from Bulgaria.

From Radio Bulgaria, greater predictability is expected for Bulgaria's upcoming winter tourist season.

From the Greek Reporter, when using the Athens, Greece metro, beware of pickpockets.

From Ekathimerini, 65 forest fires reportedly break out in Greece in 24 hours.

From the Greek City Times, a Pakistani man who alleged killed a 17-year-old Greek girl in Athens is given pre-trial detention.

From Balkan Insight, Albania's central bank breaks rules in the renovation of a hotel in the capital city of Tirana.

From Total Croatia News, Croatia needs tourism workers.

From Total Slovenia News, according to Mayor Zoran Janković, Ljubljana, Slovenia has enough fuel for the upcoming winter.

From The Slovenia Times, the bishop of Novo Mesto, Slovenia is reportedly suspected of tax evasion.  (Novo Mesto is the birthplace of former U.S. First Lady Melania Trump.)

From The Malta Independent, Maltese authorities arrest 27 people for living in Malta illegally and prepares to deport them.  (It seems that some countries are allowed to arrest and deport illegal aliens without being accused of racism and xenophobia.)

From Malta Today, Maltese "far-right" activist Eman Cross is charged with threatening his mother and her partner, and with carrying an unlicensed gun.  (As I have before, I put quotes around the term "far-right" because it often means nothing more than wanting your country to be governed by its elected representatives instead of by international organizations such as the E.U.  As far as I can tell, the article does not specifically set forth Cross's views or why they are "far-right".  If anyone reading this knows what his views are, please leave a comment pointing them out.)

From ANSA, the Raphael painting La Fornarina returns to Rome's Palazzo Barberini National Art Gallery from London's National Gallery.

From SwissInfo, a Bronze Age burial site is discovered in the Swiss village of Savièse.

From France24, Iran gives imprisoned Iranian-French academic Fariba Adelkhah a five-day furlough.  (If my high school French serves me correctly, the sign in the article's picture says, under her name, "Researcher imprisoned in Iran.  Her fight for liberty is ours.")

From RFI, more than 3,000 people are evacuated from forest fires in the French departments of Lozère and Aveyron.

From Free West Media, France faces a milk shortage.

From El País, a medical marijuana tycoon seeks justice after his brothers death on the Spanish island of Mallorca.

From The Portugal News, Portuguese police crack down on wild camping.

From The North Africa Post, Chad's transitional authorities and opposition factions sign a peace deal mediated by Qatar, but the country's most powerful insurgent group refuses to do likewise.

From The New Arab, Hezbollah promises to "sever" Israel's hands over disputed offshore gas reserves.

From Israel Hayom, Palestinian looters damage Jewish archaeological sites in Sebastia, West Bank.

From Jewish News Syndicate, Lebanese TV captures the misfire of a rocket launched by the terror group Islamic Jihad, which landed in a Gaza neighborhood, and averts its camera.

From Gatestone Institute, being America's enemy pays Palestinians better than being its friend.

From The Stream, the act to raise your taxes.

From The Daily Signal, the public school system needs reforms.

From The American Conservative, the failure in the Uvalde, Texas school shooting was societal.

From The Western Journal, supporters of former President Trump spring into action after the FBI raid on his house at Mar-a-Lago.

From TMZ, the FBI waited for Trump to leave town before raiding his home.  (via The Western Journal.)

From BizPac Review, posters behind an pro-illegal immigration activist shows his hypocrisy.

From The Daily Wire, right-wing commentator (and TDW editor emeritus) Ben Shapiro warns of "hell to pay" if the raid at Mar-a-Lago shows no evidence of a serious crime.

From the Daily Caller, the National Education Association suggests summer reading about kneeling for the national anthem.

From the New York Post, an Egyptian-born Texas man is convicted of murdering his two daughters in 2008.

From Breitbart, never-Trumper former congresscritter Joe Walsh (R-IL) is worried that the raid at Mar-a-Lago will anger moderate Republicans into supporting Trump.  (This guy should not be confused with the musician of the same name, who once ran for president.)

From Newsmax, according to gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake (R-AZ), the raid at Mar-a-Lago shows that the justice system is "broken".

And from the Genesius Times, Trump tells the FBI that he kept all the secret files on Hunter Biden's laptop.

No comments:

Post a Comment