Tuesday, January 24, 2023

Tuesday Tidings

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

From National Review, classified documents are found at the home of former Vice President Pence in Indiana.

From FrontpageMag, the emerging American politburo.

From Townhall, congresscritter Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) has some big news for Fox News host Tucker Carlson about ProFa.

From The Washington Free Beacon, the Biden-related think tank and the University of Pennsylvania which housed classified documents also promoted closer engagement with China.

From the Washington Examiner, President Biden's pick for the next White House chief of staff reportedly met with his son Hunter at least three times in 2016.

From The Federalist, Biden and the FDA push chemical abortion pills that endanger women.

From American Thinker, how the U.S. is becoming more like a Muslim country, without even becoming more Muslim.

From CNS News, according to a poll, almost 900 million people wanted to migrate in 2021.

From Red Voice Media, two more verdicts in the Capitol riot come out today.  (via LifeZette)

From NewsBusters, CNN host Don Lemon wrongly claims that Governor Ron DeSantis (R) has forbidden Florida's schools from teaching about slavery.

From Canada Free Press, the U.S. Postal Service denies a religious accommodation for one of its workers.

From TeleSUR, Bolivian President Luis Arce shows his dismay at the political crisis in Peru.

From TCW Defending Freedom, for the first time since records were started in 1845, over 50 percent of live births in England and Wales during 2021 were out of wedlock.

From Free West Media, the German government wants to incinerate 800 million expired coronavirus face masks.

From EuroNews, no, a Ukrainian soldier did not pose next to the dead body of a Russian soldier.

From Euractiv, Finland could lose its patience waiting for Sweden to join NATO.

From ReMix, former Polish Foreign Minister Radosław Sikorski provokes outrage by claiming that Poland considered partitioning Ukraine after Russia started its invasion.  (In its history, Poland has been partitioned four times, most recently between Germany and the Soviet Union at the start of World War II, although there are different opinions as to what constituted the "fourth partition of Poland".)

From Balkan Insight, drug smuggling networks exploit ports in the Balkans, which requires a regional response.

From The North Africa Post, Algerian President Tebboune manipulates economic statistics.

From Turkish Minute, two people are dead and two others injured in a fire that broke out in an Armenian church in İstanbul, Turkey.

From Public Radio Of ArmeniaArmenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan tells the European Parliament's Committee on Foreign Affairs that Azerbaijan needs to understand that there are international rules that everyone should obey.

From North Press Agency, the Syrian Democratic Forces captures three ISIS terrorists near Deir ez-Zor, Syria.

From The Jerusalem Post, Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu and Jordanian King Abdullah meet amid tensions over the Temple Mount.

From YNetNews, Israeli citizens might soon be able to visit the Saudi Arabian (and formerly Egyptian) islands of Tiran and Sanafir, in the Red Sea.

From The New Arab, more on the meeting between Prime Minister Netanyahu and King Abdullah.

From Egypt Today, the ship known as the "world's largest floating library" arrives at the Suez Canal in Egypt.

From IranWire, an Iranian soccer player is kicked off his team after criticizing the Iranian government's violent response to nationwide protests.

From Iran International, according to new data, more people died during protests in Iran than what was previously estimated.

From Hasht e Subh, the Afghanistan Journalists Center calls for the release of journalists from Taliban custody.  (What is this "freedom of the press" you speak of?)

From the Afghanistan Times, Afghanistan extends its electricity supply agreement with Turkmenistan.

From Gatestone Institute, the line between civil and criminal wrongdoing is getting blurred.

From The Stream, a writer explains why she might again eat "(a few)" peanut M&Ms.

From The Daily Signal, the U.K.'s "single-payer" health program is cratering, which should be a wake-up call for U.S. liberals.

From The American Conservative, some credit for sanity about Ukraine.

From The Western Journal, according to an opinion column by former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee (R), things are getting insane at the FBI.

From BizPac Review, as with the first mass shooting in California, an elderly Asian man is the suspect in the second.

From The Daily Wire, the woke cartoon show Velma makes history for its bad reviews.

From the Daily Caller, predictions of the 2024 elections results are bad news for Democrats.  (Wasn't the same thing said about the 2022 elections?)

From Breitbart, former President Trump will visit New Hampshire and South Carolina as he starts laying the groundwork for his 2024 campaign.

From Newsmax, the aforementioned Florida Governor DeSantis explains why he rejected an Advanced Placement course on African American studies.

And from the New York Post, just before you go to bed, say "cheese".

No comments:

Post a Comment