Wednesday, November 16, 2022

Trump Runs Again And Other Stories

Yesterday evening, former President Trump announced that he is running to retake his old office.  To put it one way, he's trying to become the next Grover Cleveland.

Read more at CNN, NPR, Politico, CBS News and Reuters.

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On a sunny but cool Wednesday, here are some other things going on:

From National Review, President Biden has a pen and a phone.

From FrontpageMag, a federal judge rules against Georgia's ban on abortions after a heartbeat is detected based on a constitutional interpretation which no longer exists.

From Townhall, when it comes to looking for voter disenfranchisement, the DOJ goes Sergeant Schultz on Maricopa County, Arizona.

From The Washington Free Beacon, Republican Senators vote to keep Senator Mitch McConnell (R-KY) as their leader.

From the Washington Examiner, Thanksgiving will cost 20 percent more this year due to inflation.

From The Federalist, Democrats abused Generation Z with coronavirus insanity for years, but Republican leaders refused to campaign on it.

From American Thinker, did former Vice President Pence announce that he's running for president?

From CNS News, Biden does not have any authority to forgive student loans, said Senator Ron Johnson (R-Wis) and Senator Tommy Tuberville (R-AL).

From Red Voice Media, according to right-wing commentator Jesse Watters, right-wing commentator Dan Bongino is running out of content for his show because his conspiracy theories all have come true.  (via LifeZette)

From NewsBusters, MSNBC host Joy Reid claims that Georgia will not allow early voting in the senatorial runoff in order to celebrate the birthday of General Robert E. Lee.

From TeleSUR, Brazilian President-elect Lula da Silva proposes the Amazon region as the venue to host COP30 in 2025.  (Does the Amazon have airports capable of accommodating all those private jets?)

From TCW Defending Freedom, immigration is creating an internal Islamist enemy in the U.K.

From Free West Media, the German government wants to support the rescue of migrants in the Mediterranean Sea.

From EuroNews, according to NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg, there is no indication that the missile strike near Przewodów, Poland was a deliberate attack.

From Euractiv, the French left-wing party La France Insoumise proposes a bill to reinstate unvaccinated health workers.

From ReMix, trying to cross part of the Polish-Belarusian border could be a shocking experience.

From Polskie Radio, Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki tells his fellow sejmcritters that they can't rule out the missile incident being "provocation" by Russia.  (Since the lower house of the Polish legislature is called the Sejm, a sejmcritter is the Polish equivalent of a U.S. congresscritter.)

From The Moscow Times, Russia blames Ukrainian air defenses for the missile incident in Poland.

From Balkan Insight, Serbia will try four Croatian Air Force officers in absentia for allegedly bombing Serbian refugees in 1995.

From The North Africa Post, Morocco is the world's 15th-largest exporter of fruits.

From The New Arab, a suspected ISIS cell leaves its stronghold in southern Syria after an assault by former rebel fighters.

From Firstpost, a Muslim youth throws his Hindu girlfriend off a fourth-floor balcony in Lucknow, India for refusing to convert to Islam.

From Gatestone Institute, Egyptians don't want Islamists to return to power.

From The Stream, the travesty of the January 6th Inquisition Committee.

From The American Conservative, the deep state should be blamed for the carnage in Ukraine.

From The Daily Signal, Biden's proposed student loan forgiveness collides with the rule of law.

From The Western Journal, could Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg be considering running for president?

From BizPac Review, Republican officials and operative comes out to bash former President Trump.

From The Daily Wire, the Chief Twit will reportedly find someone else to run Twitter.

From the Daily Caller, Arizona voters approve a measure to give illegal aliens in-state college tuition.

From the New York Post, a federal judge gives the Department of Homeland Security a five-week reprieve before ending Title 42.

From Breitbart, former First Daughter Ivanka Trump announces her plan to stay out of politics.

From Newsmax, a vehicle strikes 22 Los Angeles County sheriff's recruits on a training run in Whittier, California.

And from Huffpost, 500 more words will be allowed for the game Scrabble.

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