Tuesday, December 13, 2022

Tuesday Things

On a sunny but cold Tuesday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, Department of Energy official Samuel Brinton, accused of stealing luggage at two airports, gets fired.

From FrontpageMag, the Biden administration will not seek the death penalty a terrorist allegedly involved in the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland.

From The Washington Free Beacon, universal basic income is available in the San Francisco Bay Area, for black Americans.

From the Washington Examiner, according to internal emails, the Secret Service and ICE secretly coordinated with the FBI to strip American citizens of their right own, use and buy guns.

From The Federalist, economic "experts" shilling for President Biden are again wrong about inflation.

From American Thinker, there is fascism in America, but not where you've been told.

From CNS News, according to National Security Advisor Jack Sullivan, in order to release Marine veteran Paul Whelan, Russia wanted something in exchange that the U.S. could not give.

From Red Voice Media, according to Dr. Fauci, "we are still in the middle of a pandemic".  (via LifeZette)

From NewsBusters, the Chief Twit dissolves Twitter's censorship trust and safety council.

From Canada Free Press, election fraud corruption is even worse than anyone thinks.

From TeleSUR, left-wing Latin American governments are concerned about the crisis in Peru.

From TCW Defending Freedom, climate protesters cause a huge waste of energy.

From Free West Media, the U.K. attempts to "decolonize" mathematics, which is "racist".

From EuroNews, socialist europarliamentcritters step down due to a corruption scandal.

From Euractiv, according to Slovenian Prime Minister Robert Golob, the European Commission should do more to reign in energy prices.

From ReMix, energy prices in the U.K. reach a record high.

From Balkan Insight, Bosnian authorities arrest six former soldiers for alleged involvement in the killing of 56 ethnic Serbs in the village of Jošanica in 1992.

From The North Africa Post, African countries around the Gulf of Guinea band together against illegal fishing by Chinese boats.

From The New Arab, according to a report, the E.U. is complicit in human rights abuses in Libya against migrants.

From Gatestone Institute, what visitors to the World Cup in Qatar were not shown.

From The Stream, more on the aforementioned firing of energy official Sam Brinton, and some other stuff.

From The Daily Signal, libraries which refuse actor Kirk Cameron's book reading could possibly face lawsuits.

From Space Daily, a former U.S. Marine pilot is indicted for allegedly training Chinese military pilots.

From Space War, Belarus holds surprise military "combat readiness" drills.

From The American Conservative, America's goals for Ukraine show signs of shifting.

From The Western Journal, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre gets her talking points mixed up.

From BizPac Review, congresscritter AOC (D-NY) finds the timing of the arrest of FTX cofounder and CEO Sam Bankman-Fried "interesting".

From The Daily Wire, Twitter reinstates Dr. Robert Malone and Dr. Peter McCullough.

From the Daily Caller, according to a poll, Republican voters prefer Florida Governor Ron DeSantis (R) over former President Trump.

From the New York Post, Pope Francis warns that things are going to get worse.

From Breitbart, more on the accusations against the aforementioned Sam Bankman-Fried.

From Newsmax, congresscritter Carlos Giménez (R-FL) writes a letter to the Chief Twit asking him to move Twitter's headquarters from San Francisco to Miami.

And from the Genesius Times, the U.S. faces a "massive shortage" of conspiracy theories because they've all come true.

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