Tuesday, February 14, 2023

Stories For Valentine's Day

As we celebrate love and marriage on the feast day of a third-century Roman saint, here are some things going on:

From National Review, no, "love your enemies" is not "fascism".

From FrontpageMag, how a small group of patriotic Americans in Grand Forks, North Dakota stood up to the Chinese Communist Party, and won.

From Townhall, according to an opinion column, President Biden has told some "damnable" lies about Catholicism.

From The Washington Free Beacon, Senator Diane Feinstein (D-Cal) decides to not run for reelection in 2024.

From The Federalist, true believers in the organization Black Lives Matter finally realize that they've been scammed.

From American Thinker, Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC) once again earns the nickname "Grahamnesty".  (I learned of this term listening to the BlogTalkRadio show "Southern Sense", whose host lives in South Carolina and is thus one of Graham's constituents.  To learn more about her, go to this blog's archives for January 2019 and the post "Beaufort, With A Local Resident".)

From CNS News, according to Senator Tom Cotton (R-Ark), "the American people deserve an explanation from the president" about what he thinks the recent unidentified flying objects are.

From NewsBusters, despite continued fallout, the media go Sergeant Schultz about the train disaster in East Palestine, Ohio.

From Canada Free Press and the "I'm not saying it's aliens" department, are Americans being prepared for a fake alien invasion?

From TeleSUR, Peruvian security forces are investigated over a massacre in the city of Ayacucho.

From TCW Defending Freedom, the real duty that the U.K.'s King Charles III has to his people.

From Snouts in the Trough, a previously unnoticed trick from the "climate catastrophists".

From Free West Media, it's springtime for nuclear power in the E.U. and Sweden.

From Polskie Radio, two Dutch NATO F-35 fighter jets intercept three Russian military jets near Poland and escort them away.  (If you read Polish better than I do, read the story at Polska Agencja Prasowa.)

From Radio Prague, apartment prices decrease in the Czech Republic for the first time since 2013.

From The Slovak Spectator, Christmas shopping by Slovaks made them poorer, but helped Slovakia's economy.

From Daily News Hungary, a Hungarian military jet collides with an airport tanker in the U.S.  (If you read Hungarian, read the story at 24HU.)

From Hungary Today, Hungary's new child protection law is under attack.  (If you read Hungarian, read the story at Mandiner.)

From About Hungary, according to Hungarian Foreign Minister Szijjarto, peace talks are the only way to save lives in Ukraine.

From Russia Today, the Russian government reacts to the "spy balloon" episode in the U.S.

From Sputnik International, the Russian government claims that the Ukrainian government is planning to set off a dirty bomb and blame it on Russia.

From The Moscow Times, Wagner group leader Yevgeny Progozhin admits being behind Russia's infamous troll farms.

From EuroNews, the E.U. puts Russia on its blacklist of tax havens.

From Romania-Insider, a magnitude-5.7 earthquake strikes in Gorj County, Romania.  (If you read Romanian, read the story at Biziday.)

From Novinite, Bulgarians celebrate Tryphon Zarezan as a holiday of love and wine.  (Tryphon was a martyr and saint venerated by the Eastern Orthodox Church.)

From The Sofia Globe, according to U.S. sanctions coordination chief Jim O'Brien, sanctions against corrupt Bulgarian officials are necessary.

From Radio Bulgaria, a look at the Archaeological Museum in Sandanski, Bulgaria.

From Balkan Insight, Serbia and Montenegro demand an explanation after Moldovan President Maia Sandu claims that citizens of those countries and of Russia and Belarus tried to oust the Moldovan government.

From ReMix, more on President Sandu's claim of a Russian-backed effort to overthrow the Moldovan government.

From Euractiv, decoding France's proposed pension reforms.

From The North Africa Post, muzzling his critics, Tunisian President Kais Saied follows the example of the Algerian government.

From The New Arab, the dual heritage of Hebron/Al-Khalil, West Bank.

From the Daily Mail, three men convicted of stealing gas cylinders in Omdurman, Sudan are sentenced to have their hands amputated.

From Palestinian Media Watch, Fatah praises a terrorist who killed two young boys.

From Gatestone Institute, is the E.U. making more empty promises?

From The Stream, the ad campaign "He gets us" doesn't "get" Jesus.

From The Daily Signal, inflation in January was "hotter than expected".

From The American Conservative, cracking down on legal gun owners.

From The Western Journal, the news outlet CNN accidentally reveals what it thinks of the little people.

From The Detroit News, the Michigan State University mass shooter pleaded guilty to a gun-related offense in 2019, but was not sent to prison.  (via The Western Journal)

From BizPac Review, more on the Michigan State University shootings and the deceased suspect.

From The Daily Wire, former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper tries out a new alleged lie about Hunter Biden's laptop.

From the Daily Caller, CNN host Don Lemon grills security official John Kirby for dodging a question about a missile that was shot at an object floating over Lake Huron but missed.

From the New York Post, Ukraine boasts about casualties inflicted on Russian troops, but is also losing a lot of its own.

From Breitbart, the U.S. military says that it has recovered sensors and other "significant debris" from the downed Chinese balloon.

From Newsmax, according to a report, Russia has been holding 6,000 Ukrainian children for "reeducation".

And from the Genesius Times, CNN reports that the nation mourns the horrible tragedy that the aforementioned Michigan State University shooter wasn't white.

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