Wednesday, October 19, 2022

I'm Back, And Some Links

Yesterday I arrived back home here in Maryland, too late to post anything to this blog.  When arranging my flights, I learned that there were no direct ones (on yesterday's date, anyway) from Philadelphia back to Washington Dulles.  The easiest way to connect was through Newark, so that's what I did.  (On the other hand, my flights from Dulles to Orlando and from there to Philadelphia were both direct.  Go figure.)  But now that I'm back, let me see if I can't give you a few things going on.

From National Review, can Florida Governor Ron DeSantis beat former President Trump for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination among non-college and rural voters?

From FrontpageMag, Muslims in Dearborn, Michigan become enraged at the LGBTQ agenda in schools, thus showing cracks in the leftist-Islamic alliance.

From Townhall, Georgia gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams (D) suggests that concerns about inflation could be addressed through abortion.

From the Washington Free Beacon, President Biden's student loan forgiveness scheme includes a bait-and-switch.

From the Washington Examiner, how the Democrats blew it on the Strategic Petroleum Reserve.

From The Federalist, hyperventilating about Kanye West won't hide the left's double standards on antisemitism.

From American Thinker, America has red states with blue cities.

From CNS News, congresscritter Byron Donalds (R-FL) dares to tell the truth about boys and girls.

From LifeZette, right-wing commentator Sydney Watson roasts an airline for placing here between two obese people.

From Red Voice Media, Arizona gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake (R) takes schools reporters on election denial.  (via LifeZette)

From NewsBusters, diversity enforcers decide that the NHL is too white.

From Canada Free Press, Canada's Emergencies Act gets invoked over parking problems and phantom microaggressions.

From TeleSUR, according to Haitian opposition leader Jean Charles Moise, the "time for revolution has come".

From TCW Defending Freedom, why have U.K. Conservatives been taxing marriage and the family for 35 years?

From Snouts in the Trough, the U.K. moves closer to "net zero", as in "net zero money".

From Free West Media, Assen, Netherlands puts some inappropriate images on billboards.  (Reader discretion is advised.)

From EuroNews, are floating "powerships" the answer to Europe's impending energy crisis?

From Euractiv, Russian President Putin declares martial law in areas of Ukraine seized by the Russian military.

From ReMix, after an illegal alien from Algeria murders a schoolgirl in Paris, data shows that only 0.2 percent of Algerians with deportation orders are actually deported.

From Balkan Insight, freedom of information in the Balkans has reportedly had no access or progress.

From The North Africa Post, Mali warns that it will defend its sovereignty against alleged violations by France.

From The New Arab, a delegation from Hamas meets with Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad to "move beyond the past".

From OpIndia, the banned terrorist organization Popular Front of India allegedly had plans to blow up the Rama temple in Ayodhya, India and replace it with a mosque.

From Jewish News Syndicate, according to Israeli media, Hamas is sending Palestinian students to Malaysia for cyber warfare training.

From Gatestone Institute, President Biden has a nuclear obsession with Iran.

From The Stream, the DOJ has become "the enforcer of the sexual revolution".

From Space War, North Korea fires artillery into the sea off its coast, to which South Korea cries foul.

From The Daily Signal, a group of Republican congresscritters calls for the Biden administration to reverse its coronavirus vaccination mandate on the military.

From The American Conservative, lessons in theocracy from Florentine ruler Fra Girolamo Savonarola.

From The Western Journal, Biden gets handsy again.

From BizPac Review, according to right-wing commentator Ben Shapiro, as long as Americans talk to each other, American democracy is not in peril.

From The Daily Wire, the CEO of Cotopaxi announces that the store is pulling out of San Francisco due to shoplifting and vandalism.

From the Daily Caller, a federal advisory group recommended that all members of two think tanks who criticized the Jones Act be charged with treason.  (Has this group forgotten about the 1st Amendment, and have they ever read the constitutional definition of treason?)

From the New York Post, the U.S. housing market is expected to continue to get worse.

From Breitbart, more on the worsening U.S. housing market.

From Newsmax, senatorial candidate J.D. Vance (R-OH) is "sick" of the "desperate" attacks on his biracial family.

And from SFGate, Massachusetts names a "swift-footed lizard" its state dinosaur.

No comments:

Post a Comment