Friday, December 2, 2022

Friday Phenomena

On a cool partly cloudy Friday, after I gave myself the first day of December off, here are some things going on:

From National Review, the truth about rapper Kanye West is now perfectly clear.

From FrontpageMag, Apple suppresses dissent in both the U.S. and China.

From Townhall, rural counties in Texas declare a "local state of disaster" due to illegal immigration.

From The Washington Free Beacon, systemic racism against Asians applying to college.

From the Washington Examiner, here comes a hard winter for American wallets, for which President Biden deserves blame.

From The Federalist, while the Supreme Court has yet to rule on Biden's student loan "forgiveness" program, it may have already succeeded in one sense.

From American Thinker, Republican leaders have failed and should be replaced.

From CNS News, more people drop out of the labor force.

From Red Voice Media, former President Trump sends a message to the January 6th defendants.  (via LifeZette)

From NewsBusters, Twitter's former safety chief admits that censoring the Hunter Biden laptop story was a mistake.

From Canada Free Press, we could say that with the Inflation Reduction Act, Congress is spending like drunken sailors, except that such a comparison is unfair to drunks and sailors.

From TeleSUR, the impeachment trial of Peruvian President Pedro Castillo will start on December 7th.

From TCW Defending Freedom, how a British woman survived her coronavirus vaccine injury, which was ignored by the National Health Service.

From Free West Media, sexual violence "outside the family" increased greatly in France during 2021.

From EuroNews, a row breaks out as a monument to Soviet-era soldiers is taken down in Vilnius, Lithuania.

From Euractiv, Russian President Putin makes "unacceptable" demands in order to have negotiations for peace in Ukraine.

From ReMix, the E.U. threatens to ban Twitter.

From Balkan Insight, Bulgarian President Rumen Radev hands a mandate to form a government to the GERB party, led by former Prime Minister Boyko Borissov.

From The North Africa Post, 60 security officers from Guinea complete three months of training in Morocco.

From The New Arab, thousands of Egyptian lawyers protest against the country's new tax invoice system.

From the Daily Mail, an illegal migrant paraglides from Morocco into the Spanish enclave of Melilla.

From AP News, according to a report by a U.N. investigative team, ISIS committed crimes against humanity and war crimes against Christians in Iraq.

From the Hindu Post, a Qatari Islamic studies professor explains that war is only the third step of dawah.

From Gatestone Institute, World Cup riots in Belgium shows how its migration policy has failed.

From The Stream, archaeologists find a Christian monastery in the UAE.

From ZeroHedge, two different surveys disagree by a record amount when it comes to counting jobs.

From The Daily Signal, 10 things to do if you want to destroy the U.S.

From The American Conservative, the Dutch need farmers in order to be free.

From The Western Journal, a federal judge throws out a lower court's ruling which allowed a special master to review documents seized from Trump's home at Mar-a-Lago.

From Bloomberg, the Chief Twit suspends the aforementioned Kanye West.  (via The Western Journal)

From BizPac Review, a reparations task force decides that Californians descended from slaves are due reparations, even though California never allowed slavery.

From The Daily Wire, the Chief Twit plans to release the full details on the censorship of the Hunter Biden laptop story.

From the Daily Caller, the Nevada Democratic Party rejects Biden's call for South Carolina to hold the first primary in 2024.

From Breitbart, according to a poll, 54 percent of Britons think that migration is too high.

From Newsmax, Senator Ed Markey (D-MA) urges automakers to continue including AM radios in their vehicles.

And from the New York Post, Russian President Putin has a bad day.

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