Saturday, February 11, 2023

Saturday Stuff

On a cool cloudy Saturday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, illegal entries into the U.S. from Mexico drop to their lowest level in two years.

From Townhall, Republicans give President Biden an "I told you so" after the military shoots down something flying over Alaska.

From The Washington Free Beacon, Republican congresscritters push to ban China from purchasing farmland in the U.S.  (In the name of reciprocity, how much farmland in China is owned by the U.S. or by any American person or business?)

From The Federalist, according to a poll, Senator Mitch McConnell (R-KY) has a worse unfavorable rating than congresscritter George Santos (R-NY).

From American Thinker, we should pay attention to the experts who challenged the coronavirus narrative.

From NewsBusters, the NPR show Pop Culture Happy Hour is upset that Beyonce lost out to "very white" artists at the Grammy Awards.

From Canada Free Press, what would war with China look like?

From TCW Defending Freedom, a report of a future trip on the U.K.'s HS2 Line.

From Free West Media, sanctions against Russia keep on failing.

From EuroNews, Moldovan President Maia Sandu nominates defense adviser Dorin Recean to become the country's next prime minister.

From The North Africa Post, according to a report, Nigeria could become Africa's biggest oil refiner in 2025.

From The New Arab, the Tunisian National Syndicate of Journalist documented at least 40 attacks on journalists in January.

From OpIndiaJamiat Ulema-e-Hind chief Mahmood Madani claims that "India is the first homeland of Muslims".  (This may sound confusing since the historical founding prophet of Islam was an Arab man named Mohammed.  However, according to Islamic teaching, there were many prophets who preceded Mohammed, going all the way back to Adam.  Madani appears to state that Adam lived in India.)

From Gatestone Institute, the Iranian military is present at the Panama Canal.

From The Stream, Las Vegas Raider quarterback Derek Carr is commended for honoring God and his wife by a sports reporter - who's only 10 years old.

From The American Conservative, of unassimilated immigrants in Sweden, the Catholic sex abuse scandal, and Britain's "white slags".

From The Western Journal, according to a Dallas Cowboy linebacker, that "95%" of NFL teams push their players to use drugs to play through injuries.

From BizPac Review, after a complaint from the Freedom From Religion Foundation, new Colorado football coach Deion Sanders undergoes "training" about religious expression.

From The Daily Wire, according to a report, names of people allegedly associated with the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein will be revealed.

From the Daily Caller, the FBI directs its crosshairs onto Catholics who attend Latin Mass.

From Breitbart, former German Chancellor Angela Merkel is awarded UNESCO's Félix Houphouët Boigny peace prize for opening her country's borders to migrants.

From Newsmax, carrying out an order from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, a U.S. warplane shoots down an unidentified object flying over northern Canada.

And from the New York Post, a secretive group in Arizona hunts for rare cacti in the Sonoran desert.

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