Tuesday, November 15, 2022

A Few Other Things For Tuesday

On a cool rainy Tuesday, other than Russian missiles reportedly striking in Poland, here are some things going on:

From National Review, are we doomed to forever keep arguing about former President Trump?

From FrontpageMag, only the late President Nixon could go to China, but only President Biden could bow to China.

From Townhall, the Republican establishment wins in the vote for the party's House whip.

From The Washington Free Beacon, a crypto billionaire's donations put Democrats in the hot seat.

From the Washington Examiner, Senator Rick Scott (R-FL) is expected to challenged Senator Mitch McConnell (R-KY) for the Republican Senate leadership.

From The Federalist, now that the midterms are (mostly) over with, the top priority for Republican Senators is helping Democrats redefine marriage.

From American Thinker, two election officials in Maricopa County, Arizona are anything but neutral.

From CNS News, Senator Josh Hawley (R-MO) criticizes "Washington Republicanism".

From Red Voice Media, the Republicans had a red wave in the overall popular vote, but a red splash in the midterm elections.  (via LifeZette)

From NewsBusters, after co-host Whoopi Goldberg catches the coronavirus for the second time, The View goes into a panic.

From Canada Free Press, shove off, Senator Schumer.  (I can think of a harsher way to put it, but I'll refrain.)

From TeleSUR, human rights defenders condemn mass deportations of Haitians from the Dominican Republic.

From TCW Defending Freedom, the BBC makes a featherbed for eco-terrorists.

From Snouts in the Trough, did Stanley Johnson, father of former U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson, spill the beans?

From The Jerusalem Post, Georgia stops an Iranian attempt to kill an Israeli national.  (That's the Georgia of Stalin, not the Georgia of Gingrich.)

From RepublicWorld, Maldivian authorities arrest 14 people for allegedly working with Islamic extremists to carry out a bombing.

From the Midland Daily News, the beheaded bodies of two Egyptian girls are found at an ISIS camp in Syria.

From Gatestone Institute, socialized medicine is no cure for the U.K.'s broken benefit system.

From The Stream, how do you know which side it not telling the truth?

From The Daily Signal, a growing list of counties pass non-binding resolutions to secede from Illinois and form a new state.

From Space War, President Macron (France) urges President Xi (China) to urge Russia to come to the negotiating table.

From The American Conservative, "puberty blockers and medical lies".

From The Western Journal, Arizona gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake (R) will reportedly not concede the election to her rival Katie Hobbs (D).

From BizPac Review, NBC suspends Today show correspondent Miguel Almaguer after yanking his story about the attack on Paul Pelosi.

From The Daily Wire, a theoretical physicist gets slammed for promoting the widely-debunked representation that sex is a "spectrum".  (Perhaps sticking to physics and leaving biology to the biologists might be a good idea.)

From the Daily Caller, Venezuelan migrants build tent cities in Mexico near the U.S. border as the Biden administration imposes requirements to enter the U.S.

From the New York Post, the New York Yankees are reportedly ready to pay top dollar to keep outfielder Aaron Judge.

From Breitbart, Republican congresscritters nominate Kevin McCarthy (R-Cal) to be the next Speaker of the House.  (This would mean that the speakership would change parties, but stay in the same state.)

From Newsmax, according to court documents, the FBI had informants inside the Proud Boys and Oath Keepers in the events leading up to the Capitol riot.

And from Sky News, physicists describe the structure of neutron stars as being similar to that of chocolate pralines.

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