Monday, October 24, 2022

Monday Mania

On a cloudy but mild Monday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, President Biden's team can't handle the truth.

From FrontpageMag, Virginia Military Academy goes woke, after which enrollment declines by 25 percent.

From Townhall, contrary to accusations of voter suppression from new voter integrity laws, turnout in Georgia's early voting blows past new records.

From The Washington Free Beacon, U.S. business activity declines for the fourth straight quarter.

From the Washington Examiner, exposing Biden's "Jim Crow 2.0" slander about voting in Georgia.

From The Federalist, congresscritter Liz Cheney (R-WY) fails in her effort to divide the Republican Party.

From American Thinker, the Republicans should ask one simple question in order to win in November, and it's one that they've asked before.

From CNS News, in fiscal 2022, there was a record number of encounters with illegal migrants on the southern border.

From LifeZette, Portland, Oregon Mayor Ted Wheeler (D) finally addresses his city's homeless problem.

From Red Voice Media, congresscritter Henry Cuellar (D-TX) criticizes the policies of the Biden administration.  (via LifeZette)

From NewsBusters, CBS and NBC refuse to mention plummeting student test scores due to coronavirus lockdowns.

From Canada Free Press, Joe needs to go.

From CBC News, two police officers who wrongly arrested a Heiltsuk man and his granddaughter in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada when they tried to open a bank account will not attend the apology ceremony for their actions.

From Global News, according to an interim police chief, part of what made the Freedom Convoy unmanageable was its "unlawful" activities, not its size.

From CTV News, the Bank of Canada is expected to raise its interest rates as fears of a recession grow.

From TeleSUR, Peruvian Health Minister Jorge Lopez is dismissed after a scandal.

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

From Snouts in the Trough, Brits can help their government achieve "net zero".

From the Express, Rishi Sunak becomes the leader of the Conservative Party and thus the U.K.'s new prime minister.

From the Evening Standard, Rishi Sunak becomes the first Asian and the first Hindu to serve as the U.K.'s prime minister.

From the (U.K.) Independent, King Charles will sell 14 horses which he inherited from his mother.

From the (Irish) Independent, driving a diesel-powered car in Ireland is gonna cost ya even more, pilgrim.

From the Irish Examiner, according to Irish Prime Minister Micheál Martin, "far-right" groups will try to claim that Ireland is "full".  (From what I understand, there are fewer people in Ireland now than in the 1840s before the potato famine, which means that the country can't currently be full.)

From VRT NWS, ten passengers attempting to leave Belgium using fake coronavirus tests each get six months in prison.

From The Brussels Times, Belgium's Charleroi Airport is ranked as one of Europe's ten worst.

From the NL Times, home prices in the Netherlands drop by 0.7 percent from a month earlier, the largest month-over-month decrease since May 2013.

From Dutch News, the Dutch government grants 91 waivers on its sanctions against Russia.  (If you read Dutch, read the story at RTL Nieuws.)

From Deutsche Welle, two former German soldiers receive suspended prison sentences for attempting to form a terrorist organization in Yemen.

From Allah's Willing Executioners, critics of Islam are attacked in Leipzig, Germany, with police apparently siding with the attackers, some of whom were from ProFa.  (If you read German, read the story at PINews.)

From the CPH Post, a round-up of science-related news.

From Polskie Radio, according to Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki, Poland wants more of its weapons to be made domestically.

From Radio Prague, Czech Prime Minister Petr Fiala will attend a ceremony at Prague Castle, even though he does not like President Miloš Zeman's approach to inviting guests.

From The Slovak Spectator, villages in central Slovakia have difficulty coping with high energy costs.

From Daily News Hungary, ethnic Hungarians from the region of Transcarpathia help liberate towns near Kharkiv, Ukraine.

From Hungary Today, the Hungarian parliament is ready to ratify the NATO membership of Sweden and Finland.

From About Hungary, according to prime ministerial chief of staff Gergely Gulyás, the Hungarian government supports E.U. proposals that would bring down energy prices.

From ReMix, new Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni assures Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban of continued cooperation between their two governments.

From Free West Media, a vaccine-touting body builder dies after telling the vaccine-hesitant "if I die, you were right".

From EuroNews, what's keeping Bulgaria and Romania out of the Schengen zone?

From Euractiv, a convicted criminal sponsors new protests against the Moldovan government.

From Balkan Insight, President Aleksandar Vučić continues an "east-west balancing act" with Serbia's new government.

From The North Africa Post, Arab leaders shun a summit in Algiers, Algeria.

From The New Arab, the Lebanese parliament fails to elect a new president for the fourth time.

From OpIndia, the Indian American Muslim Council regards the term "Hindu American" offensive.

From Gatestone Institute, as he embraces America's fiercest enemies, whose side is U.S. President Biden on?

From The Stream, how the U.N. turned against humanity.

From The Daily Signal, Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) gets protested while appearing on The View.

From The American Conservative, Washington has told whoppers on the war in Ukraine.

From The Western Journal, Seattle City Council member Kshama Sawant, who led a "defund the police" effort, now wants police to help her deal with solid biological waste.

From BizPac Review, Biden has a history of snapping at reporters.

From The Daily Wire, a campaign staffer for Senator Marco Rubio (R-FL) is seriously injured after being attacked for wearing a DeSantis hat and a Rubio T-shirt.

From the Daily Caller, the media fawn over Gisele Fetterman, while questions remain over her husband John Fetterman's health as he runs for Senator (D-PA).

From the New York Post, more on new U.K. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak.

From Breitbart, according to a poll, Michigan Republican gubernatorial candidate Tudor Dixon is in a dead heat with incumbent Governor Gretchen Whitmer (D).

From Newsmax, the U.S. charges two Chinese men of attempting to obstruct an investigation of the Chinese tech company Huawei.

And from The Babylon Bee, Republicans are seen while searching on Google for "what to do after winning an election".

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