Tuesday, September 20, 2022

Tuesday Tidings

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

From National Review, we now have Schrödinger's coronavirus pandemic.

From FrontpageMag, New Mexico allows illegal aliens to practice law.

From Townhall, Republicans in Georgia are pulling away from their Democratic opponents.

From The Washington Free Beacon, while Pennsylvania senatorial candidate John Fetter(wo)man (D) wants to "invest more" in public schools, he once failed to pay taxes on time to his own school district.

From the Washington Examiner, President Biden caused the current border crisis, so "don't fall for his new spin".

From The Federalist, the day when Democrats felt attacked by having to care for illegal migrants.

From American Thinker, the Democrats should stop using James Taylor.

From CNS News, Border Patrol encounters on the southwest border with people on the terrorist watch list increase by a factor of five from fiscal 2021 to fiscal 2022.

From LifeZette, a man claims that Beyond Meat CEO Doug Ramsey tried to eat his nose.  (And I thought that Mike Tyson's attempt to eat part of Evander Holyfield's ear was bad enough.)

From Red Voice Media, the mainstream media pushes a racism hoax against a right-leaning religion.  (via LifeZette)

From NewsBusters, CNN host Don Lemon's talking point on reparations gets demolished on air.

From Canada Free Press, the real reason why Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau sang Queen's Bohemian Rhapsody just before Queen Elizabeth's funeral.

From TeleSUR, Colombian President Gustavo Petro tells the U.N. General Assembly that "the war on drugs has failed".

From TCW Defending Freedom, the line to view the Queen as she lies in state is "British conservatism at its best".

From Snouts in the Trough, men in Britain named Mohammed just had a busy weekend.

From ReMix, dozens are arrested and 16 police officers are injured in violence between Muslims and Hindus - in Leicester, England.

From EuroNews, Catholic bishops in the Belgian commune of Flanders allow priests to bless same-sex marriages, thus defying the Vatican.

From Free West Media, a German state broadcaster falls for story about an alleged Zimbabwean television set that generates energy instead of consuming it.

From Russia Today, the breakaway Donbass republics reveal the dates of their referenda on whether to join Russia.

From Sputnik International, President Putin claims that Russian military hardware is effectively countering weapons sent by the West in Ukraine.

From The Moscow Times, Moscow will open its military recruitment center to foreigners.

From Romania-Insider, the Politehnica University in Bucharest, Romania will build a dorm to house 700 students.

From Novinite, Bulgarian authorities arrest 12 people for alleged involvement in a migrant trafficking operation, which may be connected to the murders of two policemen in the city of Burgas.

From The Sofia Globe, Bulgaria's caretaker government replaces everyone on its Consumer Protection Commission.

From Radio Bulgaria, caretaker Foreign Minister Nikolay Milkov leads the Bulgarian delegation to the 77th meeting of the U.N. General Assembly.

From the Greek Reporter, soil from the ancient Greek site of Olympia is sent to France ahead of the 2024 Olympic games in Paris.

From Ekathimerini, the largest technological park in the Balkans is planned for Thessaloniki, Greece.

From the Greek City Times, according to Greek media, the U.S. is set to take over the port of Alexandroupolis and turn it into a military base.

From Balkan Insight, Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić announces the creation of a new political "movement" within six months.

From Total Croatia News, the company Turisthotel, based in Zadar, Croatia, begins a new cycle of investment and development.  (I stayed in Zadar during my 2007 trip to Croatia.  Whether my hotel was run by Turisthotel, I have no idea.  Zadar is also the birthplace of Austrian submarine commander and noted singer Georg von Trapp.  If you read Croatian, read the story at Poslovni Dnevnik.)

From The Slovenia Times, the Slovenian government launches a website that tracks grocery prices across retailers.

From The Malta Independent, a Syrian man living in Malta is accused of coordinating the arrival of illegal migrants into the country.

From Malta Today, the Maltese islet of Qawra Point is designated as a nature reserve in a bid to stop illegal hunting.

From ANSA, according to Brothers of Italy leader Giorgia Meloni, web giants shouldn't get to decide what people are allowed to say.

From Euractiv, one cause of disastrous flooding in the Italian region of Marche was the inaccuracy of a weather-forecasting algorithm.  (If you read Italian, read the story at the Italian version of Euractiv.)

From SwissInfo, Swiss Justice Minister Karin Keller-Sutter is concerned about increasing migration through the Balkans.

From France24, a French court finds three police officers guilty of manslaughter in the death of a black man in Paris in 2015.

From RFI, French police start an investigation of an alleged plot to kill a Russian dissident.

From El País, Puerto Rico endures a "hurricane nightmare" - again.

From The Portugal News, Mayor Carlos Moedas aims to expand free travel passes to all students in Lisbon, Portugal.

From The North Africa Post, international media regard Tunisia as a vassal state of Algeria.

From The New Arab, at least 150 Iraqi families will return home from the Al-Hol refugee camp in Syria.

From the Pulse, a tribute from Liverpool soccer player Mohamed Salah to the late Queen Elizabeth draws negative reactions.

From Gatestone Institute, Palestinians cuddle up with other Arabs who would kill them.

From The Stream, on Martha's Vineyard, the volume of left-wing hypocrisy on illegal immigration gets turned up to 11.

From The Daily Signal, Republican congresscritters accuse the State Department of "radical gender imperialism".

From Space War, according to UNICEF, at least 11 schoolchildren were killed in an airstrike on a village in Myanmar.

From The American Conservative, when did Republicans become pro-choice on abortion at the federal level?

From The Western Journal, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis (R) responds to the investigation of his migrant flight to Martha's Vineyard by the sheriff of Bexar County, Texas.

From BizPac Review, more on the dispute between Governor DeSantis and the Texas sheriff.

From Fox News, an illegal alien is arrested for allegedly killing a Colorado sheriff's deputy in a bit-and-run.  (via BizPac Review)

From The Daily Wire, President Biden's latest defense of his open border policy makes no sense.

From the Daily Caller, over 50 percent of Democrats in Texas support school choice programs.

From Breitbart, congresscritter Jim Jordan (R-OH) accuses the FBI of "cooking the books" about the Capitol riot.

From Newsmax, New York City Mayor Eric Adams (D) might send illegal migrants on a cruise ship.

And from the New York Post, according to a Russian official, let them eat maggots!

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