Tuesday, September 13, 2022

Tuesday Links

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

From National Review, worst-than-expected inflation news sends the Dow Jones down 900 points.

From FrontpageMag, the prejudice that keeps on going and going and going.

From Townhall, Senator Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) submits a bill to require to require the EPA and the Department of Energy to obey California's indoor temperature requirements.

From The Washington Free Beacon, pro-choice Republican senatorial candidate Joe O'Dea (CO) thinks that he has the formula for winning in a blue state.

From the Washington Examiner, Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan expects an update of the investigation of the leak of the Dobbs v. Jackson decision draft by the end of this month.

From The Federalist, there is little evidence that the Dobbs v. Jackson decision is sinking Republicans.

From American Thinker, the pipe bombs planted in D.C. on January 5th get curiouser and curiouser.

From CNS News, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, inflation of food prices is at its worst since 1979.

From LifeZette, President Biden thinks that there could someday be an mRNA vaccine that prevents cancer.

From Red Voice Media, a brawl breaks out at a dance club in Providence, Rhode Island in which the weapons include bottles, chairs and an unlicensed gun, but only one person is arrested.  (via LifeZette)

From NewsBusters, former First Lady/Senator (D-NY)/Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and former First Daughter Chelsea Clinton praise the "Wet [bleep-bleep]" song.  (Due to foul language, reader discretion is advised.)

From Canada Free Press and the "practice what you preach" department, since WEF leader Charles Schwab wants us to eat crickets, he should be the first to do so.

From TeleSUR, two journalists are killed in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, after which gang members burn their bodies.

From TCW Defending Freedom, how to fix the U.K.'s energy cost crisis.

From Russia Today, according to media reports, the U.S. has issued visas to Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and other diplomats, to allow them to visit the U.N.

From Sputnik International, a Russian company produces a low-cost AI-powered recycling robot.  (The word "robot" is rooted in the Slavic languages.  For example, the Polish word robota means "work".)

From The Moscow Times, according to analysts, losses around Kharkiv, Ukraine have stymied Russian offensive capabilities.

From Romania-Insider, Romania and France reach an agreement to facilitate Ukrainian grain exports.  (If you read Romanian, read the story at News(dot)Ro and a related story at Bursa.)

From Novinite, 592 Bulgarian villages have one or zero residents.

From The Sofia Globe, the subvariant Omicron BA.5 is the dominant coronavirus lineage in Bulgaria.

From Radio Bulgaria, President Rumen Radev tells Bulgarian political parties to not burn the bridges between them.

From the Greek Reporter, Greece confirms its first case of the coronavirus omicron subvariant BA.2.7, known as "Centaurus".

From Ekathimerini, Prime Ministers Kyriakos Mitsotakis (Greece) and Dimitar Kovačevski (North Macedonia) meet in Athens to discuss energy.

From the Greek City Times, a video shows Turkish military guards guiding illegal migrants into Greece.

From Balkan Insight, the Serbian government bans the EuroPride walk in the capital of Belgrade and also bans a counter-march by "right-wing, anti-LGBT groups".

From Total Croatia News, an animated six-minute video shows the history of Hvar, Croatia.

From The Malta Independent, six migrants are reported dead in the Mediterranean, while two others are flown to Malta.

From Malta Today, one in five people in Malta are at risk of poverty or social exclusion.

From ANSA, the Italian Senate approves a €17 billion aid package.

From SwissInfo, will Swiss people be jailed for heating their homes above 19°C this coming winter?

From France24, France will hold a national debate about legalizing euthanasia.

From RFI, a Canadian Inuit group goes to France to ask for the extradition of a priest accused of sexually abusing Inuit children while working as a missionary over 40 years ago.

From El País, South Africa Nobel laureate J.M. Coetzee publishes the Spanish translation of his latest novel The Pole before its release in English.  (Since the novel is obviously about a Pole, I must ask, Kiedy będzie polskie tłumaczenie? which means "When will there be a Polish translation?")

From The Portugal News, work on a new bridge to Praia de Faro, Portugal will begin "soon".

From Free West Media, the European food industry points out that without energy, there is no food.

From EuroNews, under a new law, women in Hungary will have to hear the heartbeats of their fetuses before having an abortion.

From Euractiv, the E.U. will mediate between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

From ReMix, should Europe start fracking its shale natural gas reserves to solve its energy crisis?  (I'm pretty sure that fracking has helped us Americans to produce more energy.)

From The North Africa Post, Moroccan General El Farouk Belkhir meets in Tel Aviv with Lieutenant General Aviv Cohavi, Chief of General Staff of the Israeli Defense Forces.

From The New Arab, Syrian refugees attempting to enter Turkey and eventually reach Europe are attacked by members of the hardline Islamist group Hayaat Tahrir Al-Sham.

From Middle East Eye, Saudi Arabian police arrest a Yemeni man for allegedly dedicating his Umrah pilgrimage to the late Queen Elizabeth II.

From OpIndia, police in the Indian state of Maharashtra arrest seven people in connection with the murder of a Hindu boy who had a relationship with a Muslim girl.

From Allah's Willing Executioners, at a protest in Cologne, Germany against the death sentences given to two lesbian activists in Iran, a group of Muslims object to a sign saying "Allah is a woman".  (If you read German, read the story at Philosophia Perennis.)

From Gatestone Institute, "a debt that can destroy a nation".

From The Stream, when Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev was the Antichrist.

From The Daily Signal, the media finally notice Biden's border crisis when it hits the Acela corridor.

From Space War, according to the Chinese government, China and Russia are building "more than" just a world order.

From Military History Matter, British General Bernard Montgomery and the battle of El Alamein were "the end of the beginning".

From The American Conservative, the ruins of the American coronavirus regime.

From The Western Journal, more bad news on inflation.

From BizPac Review, a 2013 video resurfaces showing then-Mayor of Braddock, Pennsylvania John Fetterman (D) chasing an unarmed black jogger while carrying a shotgun.

From The Daily Wire, what color is the sky in Vice President Harris's world?

From the Daily Caller, Democrat-run El Paso, Texas wants the Biden administration to reimburse it for its efforts to bus illegal migrants around the U.S.

From Breitbart, Senator Josh Hawley (R-MO) warns credit card companies against positioning themselves to track gun purchases.

From Newsmax, Governor Ron DeSantis (R) hands out bonus checks to Florida's first responders, due to the state's largest ever budget surplus.

And from the New York Post, for a cool $6.5 million, you can have singer Mariah Carey's Atlanta mansion.

No comments:

Post a Comment