Friday, November 4, 2022

Friday Fuss

On an unseasonably warm Friday, after giving myself a day off, here are some things going on:

From National Review, the Republican wave which the pundits didn't want to see.

From FrontpageMag, the left have been the mad scientists and we have been their lab rats.

From Townhall, how many people illegally crossing the border in only one month without being apprehended?

From The Washington Free Beacon, days before the midterm elections, Georgia gubernatorial candidate Stacy Abrams's (D) voter registration group is in turmoil.

From the Washington Examiner, congresscritter and would-be Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Cal) finds an unofficial advisor in former Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-GA).

From The Federalist, free speech does not mean X-rated material in schools.

From American Thinker, Democrats attacked democracy through coronavirus tyranny.

From CNS News, according to congresscritter Chip Roy (R-TX), the Republicans should tie appropriations to border enforcement if they take the House.

From Red Voice Media, after she is badmouthed by former First Lady/Senator (D-NY)/Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Arizona gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake (R) points out that she is not suicidal.  (The story comes via LifeZette.  To my disappointment, LifeZette continues to publish nothing but reprints from RVM.  They used to have their own original stories and reprints from several sources.)

From NewsBusters, the left melts down over the Chief Twit's layoffs at Twitter.

From Canada Free Press, it's the last Friday dump before the midterm elections.

From TeleSUR, Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador wants guarantees about Twitter's operation from the Chief Twit.

From TCW Defending Freedom, the chief executive of the U.K.'s Health Security Agency makes a "nonsensical warning of doom".

From Snouts in the Trough, even GB News joins the media climate cult.

From Free West Media, pragmatic patriots in Europe push back on E.U. sanctions against Russia.

From EuroNews, Hungary and Turkey are still blocking Sweden and Finland from joining NATO.

From Euractiv, Italy plans to spend €15 billion to soften the impact of high energy costs.

From ReMix, Germany demands that Italy allows German NGO ships to dock in Italy.

From Balkan Insight, Bulgaria is "concerned" about over changes to North Macedonia's laws on associations, foundations, and political parties.

From The North Africa Post, Moroccan banks and police join forces against fraudsters and identity theft.

From The New Arab, U.N. Special Envoy Geir Pedersen tries and fails to restart constitutional talks in Syria.

From Dawn, after surviving an assassination attempt, former Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan makes some serious accusations.

From The Express Tribune, according to Pakistani Defense Minister Khawaja Asif, Imran Khan's naming of people as being involved in his assassination is like "derailing" its investigation.

From Pakistan Today, according to Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, Pakistan and China have a shared destiny.

From The Hans India, Shiv Sena leader Sudhir Suri is shot dead outside a temple in Amritsar, Punjab, India.

From the Hindustan Times, primary schools are closed and vehicle use is restricted as Delhi, India chokes on air pollution.

From ANI, 24,21,985 cattle in the Indian state of Karnataka are vaccinated against lumpy skin disease.

From India Today, is Bharat (a.k.a. India) trying to reinvent itself?

From OpIndia, in Gonda, Uttar Pradesh, India, a Muslim boy allegedly kills his sister because she dated a Hindu boy.

From the Dhaka Tribune, according to government minister Zunaid Ahmed Palak, 130 million people in Bangladesh use the Internet.

From New Age, Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina plans to inaugurate 100 bridges.

From the Colombo Page, the Sri Lankan army finds 50 kilos of cannabis hidden in a forest.

From the Daily Mirror, according to Sri Lanka's education minister, the dress code for students and teachers will not change.

From Raajje, 153,737 travelers visited Sri Lanka in October.

From The Straits Times, the opening of Singapore's new train testing facility is delayed for a year.

From Tempo(dot)Co, President Joko Widodo intends to open land in Indonesia for sugar can and bioethanol production.

From Free Malaysia Today, flood victims in the Malaysian states of Johor and Sabah continue to be housed at evacuation centers.

From the Borneo Post, the number of coronavirus cases in Malaysia makes a rebound during October 22nd to 27th.

From Vietnam Plus, a variety of rice from the Thai Binh Seed Corporation wins Vietnam's best rice contest.

From the Taipei Times, police in Taoyuan, Taiwan rescue 32 people from a torture ring.

From The Mainichi, at the Shiosai no Yado Akatsukien inn in Kitaibaraki, Japan, you will be able to buy frozen fish from vending machines.

From Gatestone Institute, why is the left afraid of Twitter under the new Chief Twit's policies?

From The Stream, using force to make people equal is evil.

From Space War, South Korea scrambles fighter jets after detecting 180 North Korean warplanes.

From Space Daily, a former U.S. Marine fighter pilot held in Australia plans to "vigorously" fight his extradition back to the U.S.

From The American Conservative, a warning from Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina about racial identity politics.

From The Daily Signal, days before the midterm elections, rules for elections are being fought out in courts.

From The Western Journal, President Biden goes off-script during a speech and hints at World War III.

From BizPac Review, right-wing commentator Tucker Carlson calls illegal border crossing the "greatest crime ever committed against the United States".

From The Daily Wire, a Chicago resident is arrested after allegedly threatening Illinois gubernatorial candidate Darren Bailey (R).

From the Daily Caller, according to a poll, small businessmen believe they will benefit if Republicans win in the midterm elections.

From Breitbart, Canadian doctors are urged to discuss medically assisted suicide with their patients.

From Bloomberg, Twitter is sued over layoffs planned by the Chief Twit.  (via Breitbart)

From Newsmax, congresscritters Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) and Adam Schiff (D-Cal) reportedly express interest in succeeding Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Cal) if she retires from politics.

And from the New York Post, Iranian female anti-hijab protesters knock turbans off the heads of Muslim clerics.  (They thus receive this blog's "badass" label.  You could say that they are exercising a type of consistency by exposing their own hair and that of the clerics.)

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