Monday, January 23, 2023

Monday Mania

As the cool cloudy weather continues on a Monday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, Vice President Harris makes a glaring omission while quoting the Declaration of Independence.

From FrontpageMag, the real threat from ProFa and Black Criminal Lives Matter is "riot tourism".

From Townhall, where things stand in the race for the chairmanship of the Republican National Committee.

From The Washington Free Beacon, according to filings, the largest left-wing non-profits sent $39 million to China in 2021.

From the Washington Examiner, the grifting and selective outrage of former congresscritter Adam Kinzinger (R-IL).

From The Federalist, how the "Twitter Files" undermine the report from the January 6th Inquisition Committee.

From American Thinker, bird choppers have had some bad days.

From CNS News, President Biden's storage of classified documents is "just unacceptable", says Senator Dick Durbin (D-IL).

From Red Voice Media, naysayers owe the congressional Freedom Caucus an apology.  (via LifeZette)

From NewsBusters, TV host Whoopi Goldberg claims that Biden declassified all the documents in his house.  (As I might have said before, I liked her better as Guinan on Star Trek: The Next Generation.)

From Canada Free Press, will Biden's presidency come to an end due to his hypocrisy about classified documents?

From TeleSUR, Peruvian unions refuse to stop protesting against President Dina Boluarte.

From TCW Defending Freedom, the BBC ignores the rally on its doorstep made on behalf of vaccine-injured people.

From Snouts in the Trough, another "scorcher" from journalist Neil Oliver.

From Free West Media, about 150,000 students demonstrate in Paris against pension reform.

From EuroNews, a picture showing an incorrect map of Poland on a Polish TV channel was a photoshop.  (If you read Polish, read the story at TVP1.)

From Euractiv, how E.U. countries use firewood to inflate their renewable energy statistics.

From ReMix, according to Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki, "Ukraine and Europe will win this war", with or without help from Germany.

From Allah's Willing Executioners, a former terrorist who led a cell in Verviers, Belgium becomes a youth soccer coach in Liège, Belgium.  (If you read French, read the story at SudInfo and FDeSouche.)

From Balkan Insight, Kosovo police confirm shooting at a car driven by Serbs, claiming that it had struck a police vehicle.

From Morocco World News, former Arizona state Attorney General Mark Brnovich labels the Polisario Front as a terror group.

From The North Africa Post, the Algerian government dissolves the human rights group LADDH.

From Hürriyet Daily News, Turkish President Erdoğan announces that he will call for elections on March 10th, to be scheduled for May 14th.

From Rûdaw, Turkish-backed fighters reportedly cut olive trees in the Syrian region of Afrin.

From Armenpress, Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo expresses her support of the people of Artsakh in a phone conversation with the region's President Arayik Harutyunyan.  (Artsakh, a.k.a. Nagorno-Karabakh, is a region in Azerbaijan which has an ethnic Armenian majority population.)

From In-Cyprus, Russians demonstrate against Russia's invasion of Ukraine in Limassol, Cyprus.

From The Syrian Observer, two members of the Assad militia commit suicide.

From Arutz Sheva, according to (former and current) Prime Minister Netanyahu, the Israeli government will not allow illegal construction by either Israelis or Arabs.

From The Times Of Israel, Israel and the U.S. start massive joint war games, in an "apparent message to Iran".

From the Egypt Independent, Egypt extends its high-speed electric train from Giza to Aswan to the ancient site of Abu Simbel.

From the Ethiopian Monitor, Africa ministers plan to meet in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia to discuss economic and social development.

From the Saudi Gazette, residents of Mecca, Saudi Arabia can now rent out their housing units to Hajj pilgrims.

From The New Arab, the Lebanese judge who was investigating the 2020 explosion at the port of Beirut, Lebanon resumes the investigation after a 13-month hiatus.

From RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty, Iran charges 16 people, including some teenagers with planning demonstrations and spying, amid reports of forced confessions.

From Khaama Press, acting Afghan Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi calls on Uzbekistan to restore the electricity sent to Afghanistan under an agreement signed by the two countries.

From RAIR Foundation USA, Turkey rejects Sweden's bid for NATO membership unless it submits to Islamic blasphemy laws.

From Gatestone Institute, the latest from Iran.

From The Stream, the U.S. was founded by conspiracy realists.

From The Daily Signal, the National Archives goes Sergeant Schultz on Biden's classified documents.

From The American Conservative, what was the tipping point for wokeness?

From The Western Journal, left-wingers don't like Biden's choice for the new White House chief of staff.

From BizPac Review, Biden's immigration disaster is leading border cities to the brink of collapse.

From The Daily Wire, congresscritter Michael McCaul (R-TX) points out that Watergate started out as a small burglary.

From the Daily Caller, a former BFI agent is charged with illegally working for a Russian oligarch.

From the New York Post, four illegal migrants who were bussed from Texas to New York City are arrested for allegedly shoplifting from a Macy's store on Long Island.

From Newsmax, the Peruvian government shuts down the ancient site of Machu Picchu and evacuates tourists after left-wing rioters shut down highways and burn government buildings.

And from The Babylon Bee, a box containing classified documents is found on a Walmart clearing shelf.

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